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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bone marrow fragments from 10 patients with a megaloblastic anaemia due to vitamin B12 or
folate deficiency
were studied by electron microscopy and electron microscope autoradiography. A proportion of the erythroblasts showed ultrastructural abnormalities. Some of the cells containing autophagic vacuoles, large siderosomes, iron-laden mitochondria, irregularly shaped nuclei, membrane-bound nuclear clefts, or incomplete nuclear membranes were found to be capable of DNA, RNA and protein synthesis. Other cells showed advanced degenerative changes such as the distension of the perinuclear space, the clumping of cytoplasmic organelles near the nucleus and a reduction in the electron density and ribosome content of the cytoplasm. Most of these grossly abnormal cells suffered from either a marked
depression
or an arrest in protein and RNA synthesis, and were presumably destined for phagocytosis by reticulum cells.
...
PMID:Electron microscope and high resolution autoradiographic studies of megaloblastic erythropoiesis. 40 60
During a six-month period, physical disorder was found among 50 per cent of the 133 patients at a day hospital. Few of these cases (5) had organic brain syndromes. Among the remainder (62) physical disorder was not associated with sex, formal psychiatric diagnosis or time of referral to the hospital; of those 33 patients with a neurological disorder, one-third had previously been diagnosed to be hysterical. For this 'hysterical' group, however, associations with
folate deficiency
, organic brain disease, and
depression
were noted. The need is demonstrated for routine investigations among day hospital patients with particular attention for those with atypical features.
...
PMID:Physical disorder among day hospital patients. 66 4
Rates of glucose, glycine, and folic (pteroylglutamic) acid absorption were determined for a 30 cm jejunal segment in vivo, with a double-lumen tube perfusion system, in 10 Zambian African women with a mean haemoglobin concentration of 5-1 (3-5-9-2) g/dl. In four the anaemia was megaloblastic (due to
folate deficiency
) and in six hypochromic. Perfusion solutions contained (1) glucose 200 mmol/1, (2) glycine 100 mmol/1, and (3) folic acid 250 mug/1. D-xylose absorption after a 25 g oral load was determined in them, and also in 18 additional patients (11 had megaloblastic and seven either hypochromic or haemolytic anaemia). Xylose absorption tests were significantly impaired in the patients with megaloblastic compared with hypochromic or haemolytic anaemia (P less than 0-001); those with untreated megaloblastic anaemia had a greater abnormality than those who had started treatment. Mean glucose, glycine, and folic acid absorption rates were similar to those in controls, and the rates in patients with megaloblastic and hypochromic anaemia were not significantly different. Correlation between glucose absorption rate and xylose excretion was, however, significantly (P less than 0-02). If more patients had been studied it seems likely therefore that a significant impairment of glucose absorption rate in the presence of megaloblastic anaemia would also have been demonstrated. In this investigation anaemia per se did not affect glucose, glycine, or folic acid absorption rates or xylose absorption, but xylose absorption was reduced in patients with megaloblastic anaemia. That abnormality was probably related to
folate deficiency
, and the underlying mechanism seems to be different from that causing impairment of monosaccharide absorption in patients with systemic bacterial infections. Mean glycine and folic acid absorption rates were not altered by megaloblastic anaemia, indicating that
folate deficiency
does not cause a general
depression
of absorption.
...
PMID:Absorption of xylose, glucose, glycine, and folic (pteroylglutamic) acid in Zambian Africans with anaemia. 97 99
Folate metabolism was studied in normal, folate-deficient and alcoholic man by tracer measurements of plasma clearance, urinary excretion, tissue storage and release of folate using both [3H]pteroylglutamic acid (3H-PteGlu) and 14C-methyl-H4PteGlu. Alcohol ingestion did not adversely affect tissue uptake of folates. Whether in normal or folate deficient subjects, the relative clearance rates of 3H-PteGlu and 14C-methyl-H4PteGlu were maintained in the face of alcohol ingestion and there was no evidence of increased urinary loss of intact vitamin or labelled breakdown products. As measured by the flushing technique, the rate of storage or tissue binding of 3H-PteGlu was not influenced by
folate deficiency
, folate store depletion or alcohol ingestion. However, alcohol may retard the release of methyl-H4PteGlu from tissue stores to plasma. A significantly greater recovery of 14C-methyl-H4PteGly with flush was observed in those normal subjects who ingested alcohol for 6 d. A partial block in the rate of release of tissue folate stores would be a possible mechanism behind the rapid
depression
in serum methyl-H4PteGlu levels and early induction of megaloblastic erythropoiesis which has been observed following acute alcohol ingestion.
...
PMID:Folic acid metabolism in normal, folate deficient and alcoholic man. 99 Jan 85
Cell-mediated immunity has been studied in patients with 1) megaloblastic anemia of folic acid deficiency, 2)megaloblastic anemia of pregnancy, or 3) iron-deficiency anemia. Using dinitrochlorobenzene skin tests, phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocyte transformation, and rosette inhibition by antilymphocyte globulin, we have shown that cell-mediated immunity is depressed in megaloblastic anemia due to
folate deficiency
; this
depression
was reversed by folate treatment. Cell-mediated immunity was not impaired by iron-deficiency anemia. Suggested interactions between iron deficiency and folate metabolism were not clarified by these studies.
...
PMID:Depressed cell-mediated immunity in megaloblastic anemia due to folic acid deficiency. 111 20
Seven (21%) of 34 patients with a severe DSM-III diagnosis of major depression had red-cell folate levels below 150 ng/ml. This subgroup with
folate deficiency
had significantly lower CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5HIAA) compared to neurological controls. For all depressed patients red-cell folate was significantly correlated with CSF 5HIAA and homovanillic acid (HVA). CSF tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) was significantly correlated with CSF 5HIAA and HVA and red-cell folate. Our observations provide further evidence of the links between folate, biopterin and monoamine metabolism in
depression
.
...
PMID:Folate deficiency, biopterin and monoamine metabolism in depression. 128 23
1. The incidence of folic acid deficiency is high in patients with various psychiatric disorders including
depression
, dementia and schizophrenia. 2. In epileptics on anticonvulsants,
folate deficiency
often occurs because anticonvulsants inhibit folate absorption. In these patients
folate deficiency
is often associated with psychiatric symptoms. 3. In medical patients psychiatric symptoms occur more frequently, and in psychiatric patients symptoms are more severe, in those with
folate deficiency
than in those with normal levels. 4. Many open studies have demonstrated therapeutic effects of folate administration on psychiatric symptoms in folate deficient patients. 5. Several placebo-controlled studies have not demonstrated therapeutic effects, possibly because the doses they used (15-20 mg/day) are known to be toxic and to cause mental symptoms. 6. Two placebo-controlled studies have demonstrated beneficial effects of folic acid administration, one in patients with a syndrome of psychiatric and neuropsychological changes associated with
folate deficiency
and the other in patients on long-term lithium therapy. In the latter study the dose was only 0.2 mg/day. 7.
Folic acid deficiency
is known to lower brain S-adenosylmethionine and 5-hydroxytryptamine. S-Adenosylmethionine, which has antidepressant properties, raises brain 5-hydroxytryptamine. Thus,
depression
associated with
folate deficiency
is probably related to low brain 5HT. 8. S-Adenosylmethionine is involved in many methylation reactions, including methylation of membrane phospholipids, which influences membrane properties. This may explain the wide variety of symptoms associated with
folate deficiency
. 9. Because the costs and risks associated with low doses of folic acid (up to 0.5 mg/day) are small, folic acid should be given as an adjunct in the treatment of patients with unipolar or bipolar affective disorders and anorexia, epileptics on anticonvulsants, geriatric patients with mental symptoms and patients with gastrointestinal disorders who exhibit psychiatric symptoms. 10. Although the majority of the patients listed above will probably not be helped by folic acid therapy, a significant minority are likely to have folate-responsive symptoms.
...
PMID:Folic acid and psychopathology. 268 87
1. Haematological, histological and ultrastructural findings in young chicks fed on a purified diet severely deficient in folate are reported. 2. Growth of the birds was greatly depressed and they had a macrocytic anaemia. Other haematological changes included abnormal nuclear formations in erythrocytes, numerous mitoses and hypersegmented granulocytes. 3. Megaloblasts were observed in bone marrow and their fine structure is described for the first time in an avian species. 4. Morphological changes occurred also in the liver. The parenchyma had damaged sinusoidal endothelium, inflammatory cells and no glycogen. Mitochondria were damaged and many were associated with unusual crystalline structures. 5. Chickens fed on a semi-purified diet of low folate content showed no growth
depression
or clinical signs of deficiency but had abnormal haematological values and morphological changes that resembled those seen in birds fed on the purified diet. 6. These abnormalities responded to dietary supplements of pteroylmonoglutamic acid in a dose-related manner and may be useful in diagnosing subclinical
folate deficiency
.
...
PMID:Haematological and tissue abnormalities in chicks caused by acute and subclinical folate deficiency. 334 7
Folate deficiency
is a common occurrence in psychiatric disorders, whether organic or functional, particularly in depressive illness. We have shown that
folate deficiency
is a common association of depressive symptoms in a variety of settings including primary endogenous or non-endogenous depression, and in alcoholic, lithium-treated and anorexic patients. Possible pathogenetic mediating mechanisms for this association are methylation and hydroxylation and the implications for nutritional hypotheses of the psychoses are discussed. We suggest that
folate deficiency
, with or without deficiencies of other nutritional factors such as monoamine precursors, vitamins B6, B12 and C, may predispose to or aggravate psychiatric disturbances, particularly
depression
and a model for these interactions is proposed.
...
PMID:The biology of folate in depression: implications for nutritional hypotheses of the psychoses. 352 19
Dementias which are either reversible or avoidable are discussed in the light of the literature. The frequency is between 6 and 32%. The most important etiological groups are immunological vasculopathies, hyperlipidemia, some types of encephalitis and, mainly, progressive dementia of the insane, benign tumors and in particular meningioma, low pressure hydrocephalus, intoxications due to drugs, industrial products and alcohol, metabolic disturbances, encephalopathy in dialysed patients, ileo-jejunal-bypass encephalopathy and encephalopathy due to neoplasms. Dementias are also seen in endocrinological disturbances and particularly in hypothyroidism. Vitamin B12 and
folate deficiency
, as well as epilepsy, may be causes of dementia.
Depression
may mimic a state of dementia. Some features of reversible dementias are listed, including in particular the somewhat more rapid onset, the younger age of patients, and accompanying neurological symptoms such as headache, gait disturbances, ataxia, polyneuropathy, myoclonus or epileptic fits.
...
PMID:[Reversible and preventable dementias]. 361 87
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