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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The epilepsies are a complex group of disorders commonly associated with brain dysfunction, social isolation, and vocational difficulty. Each of these factors may contribute to increased prevalence of depressive disorders in epilepsy, but the specific mechanisms are not completely understood. The brain regions commonly involved in various types of epilepsies, such as the hippocampus and amygdala in
temporal lobe epilepsy
and subcortical nuclei in idiopathic generalized epilepsies, are important components of current models of
depression
. Increased understanding of mechanisms of
depression
in epilepsy is not only crucial for improving care of many persons with seizures, but may also yield useful information about principal mechanisms underlying both
depression
and epileptogenesis.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of depression in epilepsy from a clinical perspective. 1459 37
Major depression (MD) is underdiagnosed and undertreated in patients with
temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE). Side effects of some antidepressants, like increased risk of seizures and drug-drug interactions with anticonvulsants, contribute to undertreatment of MD in patients with TLE. We analyzed post hoc the data from 2 years of treatment of inpatients with MD and TLE. Seventy-five patients received standard treatment with citalopram, mirtazapine, or reboxetine, respectively, at recommended dosage. Examinations were done with the Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
at admission and after 4 and 20-30 weeks. Plasma levels of anticonvulsants were examined at admission and discharge. Seizures were documented. The antidepressive treatment was efficacious in all antidepressant groups. No case of serious adverse event or drug interaction occurred. There was no increase in frequency or severity of seizures. At endpoint the dropout rate for mirtazapine was significantly higher than that for reboxetine or citalopram. Reboxetine showed a trend to be more efficacious than citalopram but not mirtazapine at Week 4.
...
PMID:Antidepressive treatment in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and major depression: a prospective study with three different antidepressants. 1469 1
Sexual behavior changes as well as
depression
, anxiety, and organic mood/personality disorders have been reported in
temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE) patients before and after epilepsy surgery. The authors describe a 14-year-old girl with symptoms of excessive masturbation in inappropriate places, social withdrawal, irritability, aggressive behavior, and crying spells after selective amygdalohippocampectomy for medically intractable TLE with hippocampal sclerosis. Since the family members felt extremely embarrassed, they were upset and angry with the patient which, in turn, increased her depressive symptoms. Both her excessive masturbation behavior and depressive symptoms remitted within 2 months of psychoeducative intervention and treatment with citalopram 20mg/day. Excessive masturbation is proposed to be related to the psychosocial changes due to seizure-free status after surgery as well as other possible mechanisms such as Kluver-Bucy syndrome features and neurophysiologic changes associated with the cessation of epileptic discharges. This case demonstrates that psychiatric problems and sexual changes encountered after epilepsy surgery are possibly multifactorial and in adolescence hypersexuality may be manifested as excessive masturbation behavior.
...
PMID:Excessive masturbation after epilepsy surgery. 1475 Dec 19
Mesial
temporal lobe epilepsy
(MTLE) is associated with high rates of
depression
and anxiety. A bidirectional causal relationship has been suggested, with these psychiatric comorbidities themselves enhancing epileptogenesis, possibly via hypercortisolemia. We examined the effects on epileptogenesis of chronic supplementation with low-dose corticosterone (CS) in the electrical amygdala kindling rat model. Adult Wistar rats were ovariectomized and implanted with bipolar electrodes into the left amygdala. After 1 week recovery, one group (n=7) had CS (3 mg/100 ml--approx. 4.5 mg/kg/day) and a control group saline (n=7) added to their drinking water, and both groups underwent twice daily electrical stimulations. Rats were culled 2 weeks after reaching the fully kindled state. A stereological optical fractionator technique was used to estimate the number of CA1 pyramidal cells in the hippocampus ipsilateral to the stimulations. Fewer stimulations were required in the CS-supplemented rats than in controls to reach the fully kindled state (32 vs 81, p<0.03, Student's t-test) and the first Class V seizure (14 vs 57, p<0.05). The mean after-discharge length was greater in the CS group (p=0.03, repeated measures analysis of variance). There was no difference in the mean number of CA1 neurons (1.05 x 10(5) vs 1.04 x 10(5), p=0.98). These data demonstrate that low-dose CS enhances epileptogenesis in this model of MTLE. This provides support for the hypothesis that chronic hypercortisolemia, as a result of stress, anxiety, and/or
depression
, may facilitate the development and progression of epilepsy in patients with MTLE. The lack of difference in hippocampal CA1 neurons indicates that the mechanism does not primarily involve pyramidal cell loss.
...
PMID:Chronic low-dose corticosterone supplementation enhances acquired epileptogenesis in the rat amygdala kindling model of TLE. 1577 Feb 35
Although studies of epileptic human hippocampus suggest changes of synaptic and intrinsic excitability, few changes, save the appearance of spontaneous field/synaptic potentials, are known in epileptic neocortical tissue. However, invasive EEG and histological studies suggest that neocortical tissue, even in mesial
temporal lobe epilepsy
, can play an important role as an irritative zone or extrahippocampal focus. We hypothesized that intrinsic neuronal and synaptic excitability, as well as short-term plasticity, are altered in neocortical areas, particularly with elevated K+ levels as occur during seizures. We analyzed neuronal firing properties, synaptic responses, and paired-pulse plasticity in human neocortical slices from tissue resected during epilepsy surgery, both under normal and under pathological conditions, i.e., after elevating K+ (4/8 mM), with rat neocortical slices as controls. Neuronal firing properties were not different. We did find, however, alterations of synaptic responsiveness in epileptic tissue, i.e., an elevated network excitability with K+ elevations, and reduction of paired-pulse
depression
.
...
PMID:Intrinsic excitability, synaptic potentials, and short-term plasticity in human epileptic neocortex. 1588 Mar 82
The tragic life of Vincent van Gogh is summarized, emphasizing his early departure from formal education, failure as a successful salesman in the art world, attempt at religious studies, difficulty with female and family relationships, return to the art world, and tendencies toward extremes of poor nutrition or near self-starvation and excessive drinking and smoking. In Paris he joined the Impressionists, but drank very heavily both absinthe and cognac. Southward he went to Arles and was joined by Paul Gauguin, with whom he had major personality problems, causing van Gogh to cut off part of his left ear. He experienced paranoid ideation and confinement in mental institutions in Arles, and then returned to Paris and onto Auvers-sur-Oise, where he committed suicide at age 37. Possible physical diagnoses include glaucoma, Meniere's disease, acute intermittent porphyria, and chronic lead poisoning, but these diagnoses seem unlikely. Possible psychiatric diagnoses include borderline personality disorder, anxiety-depressive disorder with episodes of
depression
and hypomania, and also paranoid schizophrenia. Van Gogh did not have spontaneous seizures and, therefore, did not have epilepsy. Before he began to drink heavily, when he was near starvation, he had "fainting fits," and after drinking, especially absinthe, a convulsant drug, he continued to have similar attacks. His episodes of unconsciousness can be well explained by chronic malnutrition and alcohol abuse, only possibly exacerbated by drinking large quantities of absinthe. Although van Gogh is an excellent example of the Geschwind syndrome, at times associated with
temporal lobe epilepsy
, this fact does not establish such an epilepsy. Thus, the syndrome is an orphan without the parent condition.
...
PMID:A reappraisal of the possible seizures of Vincent van Gogh. 1590 45
Depression
has a major impact on quality of life in patients with epilepsy and is also the main risk factor for the increased suicide rate in epilepsy. The frequency of depressive disorders depends on the severity of epilepsy and the localization of the epileptogenic focus, with a prevalence of <or=50% in patients with intractable
temporal lobe epilepsy
. The diagnosis of
depression
in epilepsy may be difficult because symptoms of
depression
may be fluctuating, and some symptoms, such as memory complaints, may be misinterpreted as being a consequence of drug treatment or the epilepsy per se. Affective disorders in epilepsy may differ from those seen in patients without epilepsy. A possibility exists that patients with epilepsy will develop a specific interictal dysphoric syndrome related to limbic system dysfunction. Recent epidemiologic studies suggest a bidirectional relation between
depression
and epilepsy.
Depression
does not necessarily occur after the onset of epilepsy; the sequence may as well be the other way round, suggesting a common underlying mechanism for both disorders. Classic bipolar disorder type I is rarely seen in epilepsy, and manic episodes occur almost exclusively in the setting of postictal psychosis or after epilepsy surgery. This article explores the clinical manifestations of depressive and manic disorders in epilepsy and the differences from bipolar disorder.
...
PMID:Depression and mania in patients with epilepsy. 1593 9
We evaluated the prevalence of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in patients with
temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE) and we investigated the hypothesis that obsessionality may represent a trait in TLE. Eighty-two consecutive patients with epilepsy, 62 with TLE and 20 with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE), and 82 matched healthy controls were evaluated using the SCID-IP, Y-BOCS, MMPI-2 (specifically the Psychasthenia and Obsessiveness scales), BDI, and STAI Y1 and Y2. Nine of the TLE patients, none of the IGE patients, and one of the controls had a diagnosis of OCD. Psychasthenia and Obsessiveness scores were significantly higher in the TLE than in the IGE and control groups. Patients with TLE and OCD differed significantly with respect to history of
depression
when compared with patients with TLE without OCD, whereas there were no differences in age at onset and duration of epilepsy, seizure pattern and frequency, MRI features, laterality of the EEG focus, antiepileptic drug therapy and combinations, and BDI scores.
...
PMID:Obsessionality, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and temporal lobe epilepsy. 1615 Jun 51
This study examined whether patients with
temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE) and ictal fear (IF) show emotion recognition deficits similar to those associated with amygdala damage. Three groups of patients (13 with TLE and IF, 14 with TLE and nonfear auras (non-IF), and 10 with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE)) completed tests of visual and face processing, face emotion recognition and social judgment, together with measures of psychological adjustment (Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
Scale; SCL-90-R) and Quality of Life (QOLIE-31). All three epilepsy groups had fear recognition deficits, with relatively greater impairments in the IF group. Fear recognition deficits were associated with impaired social judgment of trustworthiness, duration of epilepsy, and a measure of quality of life. Social cognition impairments previously associated with amygdala dysfunction are also a feature of the neuropsychology of TLE, and extend the hypothesis in that they may additionally play a role in IGE.
...
PMID:Investigation of social and emotion information processing in temporal lobe epilepsy with ictal fear. 1617 89
Temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE) is often accompanied by interictal behavioral abnormalities, such as fear and memory impairment. To identify possible underlying substrates, we analyzed long-term synaptic plasticity in two relevant brain regions, the lateral amygdala (LA) and the CA1 region of the hippocampus, in the kindling model of epilepsy. Wistar rats were kindled through daily administration of brief electrical stimulations to the left basolateral nucleus of the amygdala. Field potential recordings were performed in slices obtained from kindled rats 48 h after the last induced seizure, and in slices from sham-implanted and nonimplanted controls. Kindling resulted in a significant impairment of long-term potentiation (LTP) in both the LA and the CA1, the magnitude of which was dependent on the number of prior stage V seizures. Saturation of CA1-LTP, assessed through repeated spaced delivery of high-frequency stimulation, occurred at lower levels in kindled compared to sham-implanted animals, consistent with the hypothesis of reduced capacity of further synaptic strengthening. Furthermore, theta pulse stimulation elicited long-term
depression
in the amygdala in nonimplanted and sham-implanted controls, whereas the same stimulation protocol stimulation caused LTP in kindled rats. In conclusion, kindling differentially affects the magnitude, saturation, and polarity of LTP in the CA1 and LA, respectively, most likely indicating an activity-dependent mechanism in the context of synaptic metaplasticity.
...
PMID:Kindling-induced changes in plasticity of the rat amygdala and hippocampus. 1620 4
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