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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Abdominal and mental symptoms were assessed in 103 outpatients with chronic peptic ulcer disease. Patients with present symptoms and a history of duodenal or prepyloric ulcer were included if they had no other disorder requiring treatment. A normal female population was used for comparison of mental symptoms. Besides the cardinal ulcer or acid-related symptoms, there was a high rate of indigestion and bowel dysfunction symptoms, usually associated with the irritable bowel syndrome. Mental symptoms were reported by almost all patients. Symptoms of anxiety,
depression
, and
neurasthenia
were seen significantly more often among the female patients than in the normal women. We conclude that a wide range of both abdominal and mental symptoms should be taken into account in the therapeutic management of peptic ulcer disease, in evaluation of clinical trials, and in studies of the natural history.
...
PMID:Symptom profiles in chronic peptic ulcer disease. A detailed study of abdominal and mental symptoms. 389 80
The authors conducted a study of psychiatric consultation in a Chinese general hospital. Seventy-five inpatients (0.74% of the patients in the hospital) were referred by different services over a 1-year period. Internal medicine referred the most patients, and organic brain syndromes were the most common diagnoses.
Depression
was not a frequent diagnosis, but
neurasthenia
was a fairly common one. None of the referred patients had a diagnosis of alcoholism, drug abuse, or personality disorder. The authors compare these data with those of Western studies and discuss the possible factors influencing psychiatric consultation in China.
...
PMID:Patterns of psychiatric consultation in a Chinese general hospital. 402 29
The author reviews conceptual and empirical issues regarding the interaction of
neurasthenia
, somatization and
depression
in Chinese culture and in the West. The historical background of
neurasthenia
and its current status are discussed, along with the epidemiology and phenomenology of somatization and
depression
. Findings are presented from a combined clinical and anthropological field study of 100 patients with
neurasthenia
in the Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic at the Hunan Medical College. Eighty-seven of these patients made the DSM-III criteria of Major Depressive Disorder; diagnoses of anxiety disorders were also frequent. Forty-four patients were suffering from chronic pain syndromes previously undiagnosed, and cases of culture-bound syndromes also were detected. For three-quarters of patients the social significances and uses of their illness behavior chiefly related to work. Although from the researcher's perspective 70% of patients with Major Depressive Disorder experienced substantial improvement and 87% some improvement in symptoms when treated with antidepressant medication, fewer experienced decreased help seeking, and a much smaller number perceived less social impairment and improvement in illness problems (the psychosocial accompaniment of disease including maladaptive coping and work, family and school problems). These findings are drawn on to advance medical anthropology and cultural psychiatry theory and research regarding somatization in Chinese culture, the United States and cross culturally. The author concludes that though
neurasthenia
can be understood in several distinctive ways, it is most clinically useful to regard it as bioculturally patterned illness experience (a special form of somatization) related to either
depression
and other diseases or to culturally sanctioned idioms of distress and psychosocial coping.
...
PMID:Neurasthenia and depression: a study of somatization and culture in China. 711 9
"Nerves" represents a common complaint among individuals from Appalachia. It appears to be a conglomerate term to encompass chronic anxiety without panic, mild
depression
without despair,
neurasthenia
without malaise, a smattering hypochondriasis and a surfeit of illness behavior, all superimposed on passive, dependent individuals with borderline normal intelligence and exposed to profound sociocultural deprivation. Definitive treatment of this disorder entails major changes or modifications in almost every aspect of their lives, including family structure, education, vocational training, and basic value systems. This may eliminate "nerves" but will not prevent the development of the more conventional psychiatric disorders to which more educated, middle-class individuals are vulnerable.
...
PMID:"Nerves": a sociomedical diagnosis ... of sorts. 714 84
Cluster analysis was carried out on a sample of 92 patients with behavior disorders caused by degenerative, vascular, (alcohol) toxic, and other diseases of the brain. Rating variables of the AMDP system concerning mental state, social behavior, need for special care, sleep disorders, autonomic, physical, and neurologic symptoms were used in the absence of severe degrees of disordered consciousness such as stupor, coma, delirium tremens, and gross cerebral lesions. Results suggested the existence of four major groups of global cognitive impairment combined with
neurasthenia
and irritability in the first, hypochondriasis and
depression
in the second, withdrawal symptoms in the third, and severe disorientation in the fourth. At the seven-group level the groups were further distinguished according to severe withdrawal, amnestic syndrome, and dementia by various social and illness behaviors, sleep-wakefulness pattern, hypo- or hyperactivity, additional physical, and neurologic symptoms. Other minor types of organic brain syndromes were identified as individual cases by hallucinations or other circumscribed cognitive, psychomotor, affect, motivation, personality, and/or behavior disorder, symptomatic manic, or schizophreniform psychosis. The findings lent support to old classifications and new ones of organic mental syndromes (DSM-III).
...
PMID:Classification of organic brain syndromes by cluster analysis. 742 21
Symptom expression or the manifestation of distress is greatly influenced by one's cultural background. This exploratory study investigated symptom presentation of distress among a community sample of Vietnamese, Chinese-Vietnamese, Cambodian, and Lao refugees. The study examined whether or not the Western-designed distress measure used in the study was culturally sensitive enough to accurately capture culturally framed expressions of distress. The results of the factor analyses showed that the four Southeast Asian refugee groups did not express distress in three separate factors as devised in the original measure. Instead, a single robust factor emerged. The single factor comprised items from the
depression
, anxiety, somatic, and psychosocial dysfunction subscales. The items that made up the single factor strongly resemble the construct for the diagnosis of
neurasthenia
. Researchers have found
neurasthenia
to be a culturally sanctioned Asian cultural idiom of distress. The findings strongly suggested that this Southeast Asian refugee population expressed distress in a pattern of symptoms more consistent with Asian nosology. The clinical and research implications of the results of this exploratory study are also discussed.
...
PMID:Interpretation of symptom presentation and distress. A Southeast Asian refugee example. 756 10
Neurasthenia
is both a Western disease construct and a popular Chinese illness concept (shenjing shuairuo, SJSR). Using a self-report questionnaire, we examined 148 Hong Kong Chinese undergraduates' concept of its epidemiology, symptomatology, etiology and treatment. Notwithstanding that fatigue is the sine qua non of
neurasthenia
in Western nosology, subjects believed that SJSR was compatible with a diversity of symptoms which fell, on factor analysis, into the "neurotic," "psychotic," "somatic" and "dysfunctional" subgroups. Contrary to the popular portrayal of SJSR as a physical or chronic fatigue disorder, the most common perceived symptoms were anxiety, insomnia,
depression
and fright. Logically, psychological etiology and remedy were highly emphasized. The perceived high prevalence, non-aggressive nature and symptomatic diversity of SJSR attested to the notion that it might camouflage and destigmatize psychiatric labels of insanity. The contextual study of
neurasthenia
illustrates how in its search for legitimacy an originally Western concept adapts, transforms, and acquires distinctive local meanings in a non-Western culture.
...
PMID:Rethinking neurasthenia: the illness concepts of shenjing shuairuo among Chinese undergraduates in Hong Kong. 767 22
The term of
depression
applies to two syndromes at least; one is associated with a reduction in interests, activities and with a withdrawal; the other consists of a moral pain, a pessimism, a guilty feeling, an irritability. In each case the depressive mood corresponds to the subjective state. A first survey concerning 3,000 outpatients in general practice allowed us to identify 16.5 of depressed subjects, with 3% showing a pure painful syndrome, 7% showing a syndrome that we described as thymasthenia, and 6% showing the two syndromes (this last group consists probably of major depressive states). This new study, organized by the WHO and concerning 2,000 consecutive patients in primary care, permitted to precise the definition of thymasthenic subjects. The prevalence of current major depressive states is 13.7% and that of dysthymic disorders is 3.6%. Thymasthenia is observed in 9.2% of patients (mean age: 38 years; 60% of women). Among them, 62% show major depressive states, 18% dysthymic disorders, 16% panic disorders, and 11% pure thymasthenia, corresponding to a prevalence of 1%. It should be noted that the prevalence of
neurasthenia
(according to the definition given by IDC-10) is of 2.9% and that 36% of thymasthenic subjects show also
neurasthenia
(according to IDC-10). The qualitative content of these two syndromes will be compared.
...
PMID:[Neurasthenia and thymasthenia]. 784 51
This study examines the concept of
neurasthenia
in a longitudinal cohort of young adults selected from a community sample of the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. The major focus is on the validity of the case definition of
neurasthenia
. Close approximations of the proposed descriptive and research definitions of the ICD-10 are employed as well as the concept of 'irritable weakness' as described in 1831 by Kraus (1926-1932). The prevalence of
neurasthenia
defined according to the ICD-10 criteria was: 1% across 10 years and 0.9% in 1988 for a duration criterion of > or = 3 months; and 8.1% across 10 years and 12% in 1988 for a duration criterion of > or = 1 month. The duration criterion of > or = 3 months appeared to be excessively restrictive to represent individuals with
neurasthenia
in the community. Subjects with 1 month episodes of
neurasthenia
exhibited sufficient differences from controls and similarities to subjects with anxiety or depressive disorders to justify a 1 month duration criterion for
neurasthenia
in community samples. The clinical significance of
neurasthenia
was indicated by the magnitude of subjective distress, and occupational and social impairment reported by the majority of the cases. Prospective assessment of the longitudinal course of
neurasthenia
revealed that approximately 50% of the cases continued to exhibit this disorder at follow-up. Our findings suggest that
neurasthenia
is equally likely to represent an early manifestation of affective illness as it is a consequence in those neurasthenic subjects who exhibited comorbid affective disorders. The magnitude, chronicity, impairment, longitudinal stability and distinction from anxiety and
depression
associated with this condition in the general population, suggest that
neurasthenia
is an important diagnostic entity for which additional validation studies should be undertaken.
...
PMID:Neurasthenia in a longitudinal cohort study of young adults. 789 46
The chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) including myalgic encephalomyelitis and the postviral syndrome is a term used today to describe a not fully recognized disease characterized primarily by chronic or recurrent debilitating fatigue and various combinations of neuromuscular and neuropsychological symptoms. The term CFS has been introduced and defined by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta. Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms in medicine, but CFS as defined by CDC has appeared to be quite rare in the general population. Researchers have suggested that the syndrome is a heterogenous immunologic disorder that follows viral infection, but despite numerous studies on the subject the etiologic factor of the syndrome is unknown. CFS is a controversial diagnosis. In a very high percentage of patients with the CFS
depression
, phobias or anxiety disorders have frequently preceded the onset of the chronic fatigue. There are many overlapping symptoms between CFS and major depression. Some clinicians suggest that it is not obvious that CFS can be distinguished from
neurasthenia
.
...
PMID:[The chronic fatigue syndrome]. 813 94
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