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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A previously healthy middle aged man died following a 6 month illness which presented with middle ear symptoms, apparently resolved, and then 2 months later manifested as
encephalitis
. The illness was characterized initially by
depression
and intellectual deterioration. No family member or working associate was affected. The clinical diagnosis of viral
encephalitis
was confirmed by brain biopsy but no virus was isolated in the laboratory. Numerous intracisternal toroidal virus-like particles were demonstrated by electron microscopy in the perikarya and dendrites but not in glia. The particles resemble, but are not identical to, the oncornaviruses associated with spontaneous and induced murine neoplasms. The resemblance of these structures to the intracisternal toroidal type "A" virus of murine leukemia is noted and other possible causes for this atypical meningoencephalitis are discussed.
...
PMID:Meningoencephalitis with toroidal virus-like particles. 115 39
We report 2 patients with AIDS who developed Chagas infection, one with
encephalitis
, the other with acute myocarditis. The implications of immune
depression
for the manifestations and course of Chagas disease are discussed. Chagas disease should be considered in patients with AIDS who live in endemic zones and who develop cerebral or cardiac manifestations.
...
PMID:[Chagas disease with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Clinical cases]. 134 May 56
Nuclear medicine has a place in the study of brain trauma, brain tumours, stroke, dementia epilepsy and
depression
. The development of new tracers labelled with widely available radionuclides, such as technetium-99m (99Tc) and iodine-123, has played a key role here. Practical methodology can now be implemented in the routine setting. Additional applications are reviewed in the context of brain death,
encephalitis
, post-viral fatigue syndrome, Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia.
...
PMID:The role of nuclear medicine in neurology and psychiatry. 146 80
To date, positron emission tomography (PET) has been the only technology for the quantitative imaging of the changes of regional cerebral glucose (rCMRGl) or oxygen metabolism and blood flow (rCBF) associated with psychophysical stimulation and with the performance of mental tasks. So far, the majority of studies performed in healthy subjects demonstrated activation patterns involving not only certain limbic structures, most of all hippocampus, amygdala, parahippocampus, and cingulate, but also temporal, parietal, and occipital association cortex, depending on the applied paradigm. Indeed, the closest correlation between regional metabolism and memory test scores was found in mesiotemporal structures during the performance of memory tasks. Metabolic or CBF studies also seem to indicate that memorizing strategies may differ among individuals. PET was repeatedly used to investigate metabolic and/or blood flow abnormalities in patients with various amnestic syndromes. In cases with uni- or bilateral lesions of mesiotemporal structures, caused by surgery, herpes simplex
encephalitis
, or permanent ischemic, anoxic, or toxic damage, disturbances of metabolism and blood flow typically extended far beyond the morphological defects detected by computed tomography or magnetic resonance. In acute transient global amnesia, CBF and metabolism were decreased bilaterally in the mesiotemporal lobes, where hypometabolism persisted for some time, while higher values were observed in thalamus and some cortical areas. Diencephalic lesions causing Korsakoff's syndrome were associated with decreased rCMRGl in the hippocampal formation, upper brainstem, cingulate, and thalamus. Discrete thalamic infarcts caused amnesia and metabolic
depression
in the morphologically intact ipsilateral thalamus and in various projection areas of the infarcted nuclei. In ischemic forebrain lesions, amnestic deficits could be related to involvement of the anterior cingulate and of basal cholinergic nuclei. A large number of pathologies are diffusely spread out in the brain and affect partially or predominantly structures in memory processing. This holds true especially in the various dementias where memory disturbances are a consistent and often leading feature. Notably, Alzheimer's disease can be distinguished from other dementias by its characteristic pattern of metabolic dysfunction, with the most prominent changes occurring in parietotemporal and frontal association cortex whose residual metabolism is related to the severity of the disease. Therefore, activation studies using paradigms involving memory functions enhance that typical pattern. Only in the activated state is metabolism of mesiotemporal structures significantly correlated with the performance in memory tests. Other dementias also affect some of the distributed memory networks, with Huntington's disease suggesting a role of the striatum in memory processing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:PET correlates of normal and impaired memory functions. 156 50
A complete search of the literature concerning Lyme borreliosis as it relates to horses and cattle was done. The epidemiology, pathogenesis, immunological response to the disease, diagnosis and treatment are discussed. A review of clinical cases in horses and cattle is presented. Clinical signs of Lyme borreliosis in horses include: chronic weight loss, sporadic lameness, laminitis, low grade fever, swollen joints, muscle tenderness, and anterior uveitis. In addition to those clinical signs, neurological signs such as
depression
, behavioral changes, dysphagia, head tilt and
encephalitis
can be seen in chronic cases. Borreliosis occurs in cattle, usually as a herd problem. In acute Lyme borreliosis, cattle often will show a fever, stiffness, swollen joints, and decreased milk production. Chronic weight loss, laminitis and abortion are also possible outcomes of borreliosis in cattle. Diagnosis of clinical Lyme borreliosis is difficult and depends upon recognition of clinical signs, a history of possible exposure, and identification of the spirochete in the affected animal. Since the spirochete is very difficult to culture, confirmation of B. burgdorferi infection often relies on serologic testing. Subclinical seropositive animals do occur, thus confusing the diagnosis. An approach to treatment of cattle and horses with Lyme borreliosis is outlined.
...
PMID:Lyme borreliosis in cattle and horses: a review of the literature. 164 76
A series of 325 or 31.11% children out of 1045 inpatients of neurological cases diagnosed as
encephalitis
was reviewed in Pediatrics Neurology Subdivision Child Health Department, Medical School, University of North Sumatera/Dr. Pirngadi Hospital Medan since 1985 to 1988. Boys were more than girls with the ratio of 4:3. Most
encephalitis
cases (249 or 76.80%) of children occurred in the early age namely before 3 years. Associated diseases were respiratory disease in 61 (45.61%) cases, gastrointestinal disease in 48 (34.67%) cases and measles in 13 (9.35%) cases. There were three mayor clinical features of
encephalitis
i.e. sudden fever, convulsion and consciousness
depression
. The cerebrospinal fluid investigation might be normal. There was however mild to moderate lymphocitic pleiositosis with cell numbers varying from 20-200 per cubic mm. The protein content was slightly elevated. The mortality rate was 21.53% (70 cases). There was no significant difference (P greater than 0.05) found between mortality rate of boys and girls. There was no significant difference (P greater than 0.05) found between mortality rate below and above 3 years of age.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of encephalitis. 207 9
Rectal administration of diazepam is a good alternative to intravenous acute treatment in severe epileptic crises, but there is scarce information about its usefulness in status epilepticus. Treatment with rectal diazepam, 0.6 to 0.8 mg x kg of body weight as a single drug, in 10 children with 13 episodes of status epilepticus, defined as epileptic crises lasting 30 or more minutes (ten of these were generalized tonic and clonic, two were unilateral tonic and clonic, and one was of the partial complex type) is described. Nine status epilepticus episodes subsided at an average 4.4 minutes after the drug was given; in 3 cases there were no favourable effects, and one case recurred after initial response. There were no significant complications, with the exception of slight respiratory
depression
in a patient with
encephalitis
. In spite of the small size of the sample, these results suggest that rectal diazepam is an effective alternative to intravenous drug administration in the management of status epilepticus whenever venous access is difficult.
...
PMID:[Treatment of status epilepticus with rectally administered diazepam]. 207 82
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has been spreading in Africa and other continents of the world. While there is a dearth of information on AIDS-related neuro-psychiatric disorders in the African population, data from Europe and America indicate that patients with AIDS experience a lot of psycho-social difficulties and suffer from a variety of psychiatric syndromes such as anxiety state,
depression
, manic illness and schizophreniform disorder. Neurological sequelae of AIDS include acute and sub-acute
encephalitis
, meningitis, myelopathy, chorioretinitis and peripheral neuropathy. These changes may occur from direct neuropathic effects of human immuno-deficiency virus (HIV) or secondary to opportunistic infections and neoplasms involving the central nervous system. It is suggested that psychiatrists need to be fully involved at all levels of clinical care, education and research on AIDS. Attention should be focussed on the neuro-psychiatric consequences of AIDS in the African population to allow for cross-cultural comparison. In addition, the need to incorporate information and education programmes on AIDS into the primary health care programmes of developing countries is emphasised.
...
PMID:Neuro-psychiatric manifestations of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). 228 34
An epidemiological community-based study of incident cases with non-provoked epileptic seizures, using case-referent methodology, was carried out to explore possible risk factors for epileptic seizures. 83 cases, between 17 and 74 years of age, of whom 67.4% had seizures of localized onset, were compared with 2 age- and sex-matched referents. Higher birth weight, movement disabilities, mental retardation, head trauma, brain tumor,
depression
, a period of unemployment during the previous 6 months and a history of epilepsy in relatives were more common in cases than in referent subjects. No difference was found in the socioeconomic factors investigated, except that the cases belonged to smaller households. Prematurity, home or hospital birth, parents' age at birth of cases or referents, febrile convulsions in relatives, various infections including meningitis and
encephalitis
, cerebrovascular disease, and alcohol, tobacco, sleep and nutritional habits were not found to be associated with development of seizures. The recent life events investigated, at home or at work, occurred as often in cases as in referents, except that significantly fewer cases had received any increase in salary during the last 6 months. The relationship between
depression
and development of seizures should be explored further. Moreover, the possibility of false negative results should be considered because of the sample size.
...
PMID:An incident case-referent study of epileptic seizures in adults. 235 57
The EEG findings in 9 patients with a subdural empyema are reported. In all cases the EEG, recorded before the diagnosis had been established, contained focal zeta waves, extensive unilateral
depression
of cortical activity and, in all but one, a diffuse slowing of the background activity. This combination has not been reported before in the literature and it is concluded that in its presence the existence of a subdural empyema should be seriously considered. Comparison with CT scan findings in 3 cases indicated that sometimes EEG may be more sensitive than CT scanning in the diagnosis of subdural empyema. The value of EEG and CT scan in the diagnosis of patients presenting with an acute or subacute bacterial meningo-
encephalitis
is briefly discussed.
...
PMID:The EEG in the diagnosis of subdural empyema. 243 Jul 73
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