Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four patients, 64-80 years of age, with severe renal dysfunction and heart disease received conventional doses of procainamide as treatment for cardiac arrhythmias. Serum procainamide concentrations at these times ranged from 6.2 to 13.3 micrograms/ml and were within the recently expanded therapeutic range for resistant ventricular arrhythmias. All 4 patients demonstrated marked and delayed accumulation of the active metabolite N-acetylprocainamide, with highest observed serum concentrations ranging from 42.0 to 59.4 micrograms/ml. Cardiotoxicity associated with these levels included progressive widening of the QRS and corrected Q-T intervals, induction of polymorphic non-sustained ventricular tachycardia (torsades de pointes), and severe depression of left ventricular function which appeared to be important factors in the deaths of these patients. The use of lower procainamide doses and careful anticipatory monitoring of serum concentrations of procainamide and N-acetylprocainamide are essential in this high-risk group.
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PMID:Lethal accumulation of procainamide metabolite in severe renal insufficiency. 242 35

In principle there should not be any increase of blood viscosity factors (plasma viscosity, blood viscosity, aggregation of red blood cells, rigidity of red blood cells, dynamic thrombus formation) with aging in a healthy population. Such an increase would be due to pathological caused and not to aging per se. The pathological causes of the increase in the blood viscosity factors often observed in the elderly could be ascribed to the following: use of drugs (e.g. cigarette smoking); lack of exercise; unbalanced diet; psychological states such as anxiety and depression; presence of diseases such as heart disease or cancer or diabetes (although these disorders have the same effect in a younger population). The principal viscosity factors are explained, and their role in tissue perfusion, occlusions, infarctions and other disorders is described. This review will hopefully serve as an introduction to the studies of the haemorheology of aging. A counteraction of the elevation of blood viscosity factors might be helpful in ameliorating many diseases typical of aging, and should allow elderly people to remain active much longer.
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PMID:Modifications of blood rheology during aging and age-related pathological conditions. 248 13

Primary care physicians have a vital role to play in identifying depression in their elderly patients. Diagnosis may be difficult, because symptoms are atypical and frequently include psychomotor agitation, somatic symptoms, and complaints of memory loss. Patients with medical illnesses, such as cancer, postmyocardial infarction, stroke, Parkinson's disease, and early Alzheimer's disease are particularly vulnerable to depression. Drugs that may cause depressive symptoms are digitalis at toxic levels, beta-blockers, centrally acting antihypertensives, immunosuppressants, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents. Cyclic antidepressants are the drugs of first choice. Selection depends on the patient's physical health and current medications and the side effect profile of the drug. Side effects are more pronounced in old age because of drug accumulation owing to slowed clearance. Troublesome side effects are anticholinergic effects, orthostatic hypotension, sedation, cardiotoxicity, and weight gain. The most useful antidepressants for geriatric patients are the secondary amines, desipramine and nortriptyline. The second-generation drug trazodone has the advantage of causing the least anticholinergic effects, but it is very sedating. Before treatment, the patient should have an electrocardiogram, liver function tests, tonometry, sitting and standing blood pressures, evaluation of urinary symptoms for outflow obstruction, review of current medications, and estimation of suicide risk. Cyclic antidepressants are contraindicated during recovery from myocardial infarction, in heart disease when there is severe impairment of myocardial performance, in seizure disorders, and in the presence of glaucoma or a large prostate. Drug interactions that may cause trouble can occur with epinephrine, MAO inhibitors, thyroid hormone, cimetidine, and centrally acting antihypertensives. Dosage should start low, increasing usually by 25 mg every 4 to 5 days until a therapeutic level is reached. Failure of a noradrenergic antidepressant after 4 to 5 weeks can be followed by a trial of a serotonergic drug. Drug serum level monitoring is useful for imipramine, desipramine, and nortriptyline. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors are effective in many elderly patients who are resistant to TCAs. Sympathomimetic drugs must be avoided with MAOIs. Elderly patients are at high risk of toxicity and drug interactions with lithium. Electroconvulsive therapy is useful for patients who do not respond to drug treatment, but medical complications, particularly cardiovascular, often occur in patients 75 or older. Many patients relapse after ECT. Psychotherapy together with pharmacotherapy may be the optimal treatment for elderly depressives. Older patients are more likely to become chronically depressed than younger patients. The risk of suicide in depressed elderly males is high, particularly in those with psychosocial problems, and depression rises with age.
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PMID:Management of depression in the elderly. 266 41

Short-term and long-term use of physician consultations and rehospitalizations were studied in 383 myocardial infarction (MI) patients in relation to demographic, medical, and psychological factors. Short-term (i.e. within 6 months post-MI) utilization of physicians was only related to patients' health locus of control. In comparison, a higher number of physician consultations 3-5 years after the MI was independently related to female sex, more non-cardiac limitations before the MI, more complications during hospitalization, less cardiac lifestyle knowledge, and higher levels of anxiety and depression short time after the MI. Every second patient was readmitted to the hospital before the 3-5 years follow-up but only 14% suffered a non-fatal reinfarction. More rehospitalizations were independently related to a higher number of previous hospitalizations for heart disease, more pre-MI cardiac limitations, less cardiac lifestyle knowledge, and higher initial level of emotional distress. Discriminant analysis identified female sex and patients' initial expectations of reduced emotional control as the best predictor variables for a rehospitalization caused by chest pain without a new infarction, whereas a reinfarction was best discriminated by the number of previous hospitalizations for heart disease. We conclude that psychological factors influence health services utilization to a comparable extent as medical factors. These findings may indicate a greater need for long-term professional support in patients with less initial cognitive and emotional control.
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PMID:Use of health services after a myocardial infarction. 271 Nov 51

Eighty-nine patients were prospectively studied to determine psychological and psychosocial impairment prior to and after coronary artery graft surgery (CAGS). Psychological morbidity prior to surgery was high, with one-third having clinically significant levels of depression and/or anxiety symptoms. Scores on the Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale indicated a generally high level of psychosocial impairment pre-operatively, with vocational and domestic functioning being most severely affected, social and sexual functioning being less impaired, and extended family relationships being largely unaffected. In general, there was a significant reduction in psychological morbidity and an improvement in psychosocial functioning at 6 months, which remained at 12 months. Vocational and domestic functioning showed the greatest improvement. Sexual and social functioning showed modest improvements overall, with significant numbers reporting residual impairment due to their heart disease. These findings add to a growing body of evidence demonstrating generally favourable psychological and social outcome following CAGS.
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PMID:A prospective evaluation of the psychosocial effects of coronary artery bypass surgery. 278 3

The anti-anginal effect of the ACE inhibitor enalapril, at a dosage of 5 mg twice a day, was tested in a randomised, placebo-controlled double-blind trial on 12 normotensive patients with proven coronary-heart disease. There was a reduction of exercise-induced ST depression by 22% already after the first dose of 5 mg. After 15 days of treatment the ST depression had decreased by 35% (P less than 0.05).
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PMID:[Anti-ischemia effect of enalapril in coronary heart disease. A randomized placebo-controlled double-blind study]. 283 91

Profound myocardial depression developed in 2 patients after severe anaphylactic reactions following the induction of anaesthesia in 1 case and a bee-sting in the other. Neither patient had pre-existent cardiac disease. In both patients haemodynamic assessment, radionuclide ventriculography, and two-dimensional echocardiography confirmed the clinical impression of profound systolic myocardial dysfunction. Haemodynamic stability was attained by intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation, which was probably life-saving in both cases. Cardiac function improved rapidly although some contractile depression persisted for several days. At follow-up both patients had normal cardiac function with no evidence of underlying heart disease.
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PMID:Profound reversible myocardial depression after anaphylaxis. 289 92

The study of the tapes of ambulatory patients who died while wearing Holter devices allows us to know the terminal electrical events of death in these cases and which are the electrical triggering mechanisms leading to the terminal event. From the evaluation of seven published series with 10 or more cases, we can see that the most frequent causes of sudden death are ventricular tachyarrhythmias (84% of cases) and bradyarrhythmias (16%). VF was the most frequent ventricular tachyarrhythmia, usually secondary to VT. The rest were due to torsades de pointes in patients often without heart disease but who were taking antiarrhythmic drugs. The VT leading to VF was often preceded by sinus tachycardia or new atrial tachyarrhythmia. Only a small percentage of patients presented ischemic ST changes. In patients who died due to bradyarrhythmias, this was more often due to sinus depression than to atrioventricular block.
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PMID:Ambulatory sudden cardiac death: mechanisms of production of fatal arrhythmia on the basis of data from 157 cases. 291 68

Fourteen patients with chronic aortic regurgitation (AR) underwent radionuclide angiography at rest and during supine exercise with ergometric controls. Ten subjects without evidence of heart disease were taken as controls. The behavior of heart rate, ST segment and R wave amplitude were analyzed at peak exercise in relationship with ejection fraction (EF) changes. Abnormal EF, (defined by an increase less than 10%, no change or decrease respect EF control), was present in 9 of 14 patients. Five of 14 patients had normal EF response to exercise defined by an increase of 10% or more than control value. Sensitivity and specificity of heart rate changes at exercise (abnormal: less than 10 beats to MET) to identify abnormal EF were 10% and 100%, respectively. The analysis of ST segment alterations at peak exercise (abnormal more than 2 mm ST depression) to the same objective showed 33% of sensitivity and 80% of specificity. Changes in R wave amplitude (abnormal: increase, no change or decrease less than 22% R wave amplitude at control) at peak exercise had 100% sensitivity and 80% of specificity to identify abnormal EF. Our results suggest that exercise test could be useful to analyze the response to left ventricular function during stress in patients with AR. Changes in R. wave amplitude at peak exercise appeared the best parameter.
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PMID:[Use of ergometry for evaluating left ventricular function in chronic aortic insufficiency]. 293 76

One of the leading causes of mortality in diabetics is myocardial disease. In the past few years this subject has generated a significant amount of interest with the result that myocardial problems associated with diabetes are far better understood. Though originally thought to occur as a result of atherosclerosis, various studies have shown that heart disease can occur in the absence of atherosclerosis, suggesting a diabetic cardiomyopathy. Using diabetic animals, it has been possible to characterize diabetes-induced myocardial abnormalities. Diabetic rat hearts do not respond to conditions of high stress as well as controls. The functional depression is accompanied by altered cardiac enzyme systems. A decrease in myosin ATPase activity which appears to be a result of diabetes-induced hypothyroidism is seen. Also, a depression of sarcoplasmic reticular calcium ATPase, along with a depression of calcium uptake by the SR, is seen in diabetic rat hearts. Na+, K+ ATPase activity has also been shown to be depressed and the depression appears to correlate with depressed atrial contractility. High levels of circulating fats in diabetics may alter the integrity of membranes leading to altered enzyme activities. Insulin treatment has been relatively successful at reversing or preventing myocardial changes in the diabetic rat. Other treatments that have been studied include thyroid hormone treatment, since the depression of myosin ATPase can be corrected by such treatment; and carnitine treatment, as the elevation of long chain acyl carnitines (LCAC) and the resulting depression of calcium uptake in the SR can be so normalized. These treatments have not been successful at normalizing cardiac function. A combination of the two treatments normalized function only partially, suggesting that factors besides myosin ATPase and SR calcium uptake are involved. Other treatments that have been tried include vanadate, methyl palmoxirate, and choline and methionine. Vanadate treatment has proved to be encouraging in that it normalizes both function and hyperglycemia. Methyl palmoxirate, a fatty acid analog, normalized only the elevation of LCAC but did not affect function. Methionine and choline were only partially successful in preventing the functional alterations of diabetic rat hearts. The purpose of the present article is to review our understanding of diabetes-induced myocardial problems and their possible causes. Findings from our laboratory and others are described in which attempts have been made to normalize cardiac function.
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PMID:Diabetes-induced abnormalities in the myocardium. 293 41


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