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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As part of a general health survey of a small New Zealand town, the Crow-Crisp Experiential Index, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, a shortened version of the Hostility and Direction of Hostility Questionnaire, and the Zung Self-rating
Depression
Scale were administered to 1173 subjects over the age of 15. Blood pressure was moderately correlated with age and Quetelet's Index, a measure of obesity. Low but significant correlations were found between Somatic Anxiety,
Hysteria
, and the Urge to Act-out Hostility scale. However, when effects of age were controlled for, in a series of multiple regression analyses, the correlations with psychometric test scores were no longer significant. This study confirms several previous reports that neuroticism, anxiety,
depression
, and hostility are of little significant in predicting levels of blood pressure in the general population.
...
PMID:The relationship between blood pressure and personality in a large unselected adult sample. 373 80
The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) scales for Hypochondriasis,
Depression
, and
Hysteria
were studied in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The RA patients showed elevated scores on these scales, and these results are similar to those reported in each of 6 published studies. The elevated MMPI scale scores can be explained largely by 5 "disease-related" MMPI statements which met 2 criteria: they were among 11 of the 117 MMPI statements that two-thirds of rheumatologists predicted would be RA-associated; and RA patients and normal subjects differed significantly in their responses to these statements. The responses of RA patients and normal subjects to most other statements in the MMPI Hypochondriasis,
Depression
, and
Hysteria
scales were quite similar. In RA patients, responses to "disease-related" statements were correlated with results of measures of disease activity, which indicates that responses to these MMPI items reflect the severity, as well as the presence, of RA. These findings suggest that new criteria are needed for validation of the MMPI as a clinical tool for the recognition of hypochondriasis,
depression
, and
hysteria
in a patient who has RA.
...
PMID:Elevated MMPI scores for hypochondriasis, depression, and hysteria in patients with rheumatoid arthritis reflect disease rather than psychological status. 380 Oct 70
One hundred six patients with disc herniation who underwent lumbar laminectomy and discectomy and 51 patients with spinal stenosis who underwent decompressive lumbar laminectomy were evaluated for surgical outcome at least 1 year postoperatively (mean: 18 months). All had completed the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) as part of the preoperative evaluation. The Hypochondriasis (Hs),
Depression
(D),
Hysteria
(Hy), Psychopathic Deviate (Pd), Psychasthenia (Pt), and Schizophrenia (Sc) scales were found to be predictive of surgical outcome in the herniation group. However, no MMPI scale was related to outcome in the stenosis group. Analysis of covariance showed this fact to be related to the differences in age between the two groups of patients, rather than a result of the differing diagnoses. The MMPI appears to be more useful in predicting surgical outcome in the young and middle-aged adult patient population with disc herniation and is not of predictive utility in the older stenosis population.
...
PMID:The differential utility of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. A predictor of outcome in lumbar laminectomy for disc herniation versus spinal stenosis. 381 Mar 3
The myofacial pain-dysfunction syndrome and atypical facial pain are the most prevalent chronic pain disorders of the facial region. Previously, the myofacial pain-dysfunction syndrome included all TMJ/masticatory muscle pain, jaw dysfunction, and joint clicking. We have segregated two major subgroups subsumed within this diagnostic classification and have assigned them to a myogenic facial pain (MFP) group and a TMJ internal derangement (TMJID) group. Significant age and personality differences were uncovered when these subpopulations were compared to subjects with atypical facial pain (AFP). Both MFP and TMJID groups are relatively homologous, involving younger persons than AFP subjects. Alternatively, when MFP, TMJID, and AFP subjects were compared for differences in MMPI psychometric scales, MFP and AFP subjects exhibited significantly higher scores, particularly for hypochondriasis,
depression
, and
hysteria
, than did TMJID subjects. It is concluded that subcategorization of myofascial pain-dysfunction patients into a myogenic pain group and a TMJ internal derangement group is justified on the basis of psychometric differences. Furthermore, psychopathologic factors are more significant among MFP and AFP subjects than among TMJID patients.
...
PMID:Psychometric profiles and facial pain. 386 39
The term pseudodementia is applied to the range of functional psychiatric conditions such as
depression
, schizophrenia and
hysteria
that may mimic organic dementia, but are essentially reversible on treatment.
Depression
is the commonest cause of pseudodementia in the elderly and is also the commonest treatable condition misdiagnosed as dementia. Diagnosis and management of depressive pseudodementia are discussed, and the systematic and thorough treatment of the
depression
is emphasized. Issues such as the diagnosis of early dementia, mental stress in the elderly resulting in confusion, patients with nonprogressive intellectual or neurological deficits, patients with a diagnosis of mixed
depression
and dementia, and
depression
as a precursor of dementia are all briefly considered.
...
PMID:Pseudodementia. 391 Dec 80
Since there is very little available systematic information on the psychological profile of patients with cardiac arrhythmia, a battery of 12 standardized personality inventories was administered to 102 patients ranging in age from 19 to 69 years. Thirty-eight patients with frequent ventricular premature beats (more than 30 per hour) without myocardial infarction were significantly more psychologically symptomatic than 34 age- and sex-matched general medical/surgical patients. The variables found to be significant portray the patient with frequent ventricular premature beats without myocardial infarction: high scores for
hysteria
, less moral orientation, more anxiety,
depression
and social alienation, and an inhibited and low respectful style. This combination of psychological variables produced a discriminant function (p less than 0.001) that accounted for 53 percent of the variance between the arrhythmia/no myocardial infarction group and the medical/surgical control group and could correctly predict group membership in 83.3 percent of cases. These results may have further implications in nonpharmacologic and psychotropic adjuncts to antiarrhythmic therapy.
...
PMID:Relationship of psychologic factors to frequent symptomatic ventricular arrhythmia. 398 36
The Faschingbauer Abbreviated MMPI (FAM) was utilized to compare diabetic (N = 39) with non-diabetic chronic illness patients (N = 20) and healthy controls (N = 24). The healthy controls were significantly different from the diabetic and chronic illnesses groups, but the latter two groups were not significantly differentiated. Similarly, in comparison with the healthy groups, both the chronic illnesses group and the diabetic group had significant elevations on the first three clinical subscales of the FAM: Hypochondriasis,
Depression
, and
Hysteria
. On the basis of the FAM results, the diabetic patients were divided into a "well" adjusted and a "poorly" adjusted group, and comparisons were made on a variety of neuropsychological measures, including the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Wechsler Memory Scale, and Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Test Battery. Results demonstrated negligible effect of poor adjustment on neuropsychological performance.
...
PMID:Psychological adjustment and neuropsychological performance in diabetic patients. 399 63
Seventy-nine patients with a diagnosis of
hysteria
were compared, on a number of variables, with a control group of neurological patients without psychiatric morbidity, and with psychiatric patients free from somatic complaints. Demographic information was obtained, and rating scales for the assessment of personality and mood, were administered, as well as Pilowsky's illness Behaviour Questionnaire. The data confirm the high incidence of affective disturbance in particular,
depression
and anxiety in patients with
hysteria
. There was no link between
hysteria
and early hospitalisation, although associations were found with sexual disturbances, a past history of vague or undiagnosed illness, affective inhibition, and denial. Relationships between personality and illness behaviour reveal links between personality dimensions and the reporting of illness.
...
PMID:An investigation of hysteria using the Illness Behaviour Questionnaire. 401 71
The Crown-Crisp Experiential Index (CCEI) was administered to 472 patients complaining of tinnitus who took part in a multi-centre study on tinnitus masking (Hazell et al., 1985). This inventory includes scales of anxiety, phobic anxiety, obsessionality, somatic anxiety,
depression
and
hysteria
. The scores on the CCEI scales for patients with and without 'dizziness' as an additional symptom were compared. In the non-dizzy patients, scores on the anxiety and
depression
scales were consistently elevated compared with the published normative values. In the dizzy patients scores on all scales except
Hysteria
were elevated. The most pronounced and consistent difference between the dizzy and non-dizzy patients was in the Somatic Anxiety scale. The presence of dizziness also obscured the relationship between the CCEI scales and measures of tinnitus. In contrast, however, hearing disability did not appear to influence the results.
...
PMID:The Crown-Crisp Experiential Index in patients complaining of tinnitus. 402 40
The present investigation was designed to study the role of stress on the physiologic mechanisms of the colon in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Patients with IBS were compared with normal controls during resting and stress (mental arithmetic, cold pressor, and fear stressor). The results indicated that IBS patients had significantly higher motor activity than normals in the resting state but did not differ from them in the mean dominant frequency of the basal electrical rhythm (BER) or the proportion of the time they had 2-4 cycles per minute (cpm) slow-wave activity. Stress significantly increased motor activity in both groups although they did not differ significantly from each other during stress. Stress increased the proportion of 2-4 cpm slow-wave activity in IBS patients, but decreased in the controls. The type of stressor, however, did not influence either motor or electrical activity. Although IBS patients were significantly older than the controls and scored higher on the MMPI scales of Hypochondriasis,
Hysteria
, and
Depression
, these factors did not significantly influence differences in motor or electrical activity between the groups. The results are discussed in terms of the role of learning in the colon.
...
PMID:The effect of stress on colon motor and electrical activity in irritable bowel syndrome. 404 60
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