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)

A hundred patients scheduled for cholecystectomy were randomized to either thoracic epidural anaesthesia and analgesia for 24 h with bupivacaine intraoperatively about 100 mg and 15 mg/h thereafter (TEA) for postoperative analgesia, TEA combined with general anaesthesia (low dose fentanyl) (TEA + GA) and general anaesthesia (GA) (low dose fentanyl). During TEA and TEA + GA the arterial pressure was significantly decreased as compared with GA. TEA was associated by an intense haemodilution in comparison with GA. Blood glucose and plasma cortisol responses were significantly suppressed by TEA. The decreases in peripheral blood lymphocyte and eosinophilic counts observed after operation under GA was significantly reduced by TEA. The increase in the neutrophil count was inhibited by TEA but the increase in non-filamented neutrophils was significantly augmented by TEA. The postoperative alleviation of the alteration of the above mentioned parameters by TEA was slightly diminished in the TEA + GA group. However, we found no significant reduction in cardiac dysrhythmias (TEA 7%, TEA + GA 7% and GA 10%), ST-segment depression (TEA 17%), TEA + GA 3.3% and GA 12.5%), wound complication (TEA 3%, TEA + GA 0%, GA 0%), pneumonia (TEA 3%, TEA + GA 3% and GA 0%), subphrenic abscess (TEA 6%, TEA + GA 0%, GA 3%), mortality (TEA 0%, TEA + GA 3%, GA 0%), and urinary tract infect (TEA 17%, TEA + GA 7% and GA 2.5%). Since an equal number of patients in each group, about 30%, suffered one or more of the postoperative complications this epidural analgesia was not effective in reducing postoperative morbidity albeit the significant alleviation of the postoperative stress response.
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PMID:The effect of thoracic epidural analgesia on postoperative stress and morbidity. 343 97

A prospective prognostic study of all admissions to a geriatric assessment and rehabilitation unit was carried out which analysed the medical profiles of 205 patients admitted for the first time during a four month period. All patients were followed up for at least six months after discharge. Particularly poor prognosis was noted among patients with renal failure, ischaemic heart disease, depression, pneumonia, congestive cardiac failure, trauma, mental disorder and dementia. Good prognosis was reported in patients with Parkinson's disease, faecal impaction, stroke and adverse drug reactions. Multiple diagnoses were common, and only nine patients had no active medical problems during their admission. The implications for adequate training of geriatricians in medicine are discussed.
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PMID:Medical profiles of patients admitted to a geriatric assessment and rehabilitation unit. 345 Nov 40

Five children treated for acute myeloid leukemia according to the BFM protocol AML 83 experienced first bone marrow relapse after 7, 10, 14, 18, and 30 months and were retreated for second remission induction. The chemotherapy consisted of mAMSA (100 mg/m2 per day i.v., days 1-3), ARA-C (100 mg/m2, twice daily, days 1-6), and VP 16 (150 mg/m2 per day, days 4-6). Four of the children achieved a complete second remission after one course of chemotherapy, and the fifth child died of pneumonia during bone marrow aplasia. All surviving children received an identical second course within 4-5 weeks, followed by maintenance chemotherapy. Remission duration was 0, 3, 4, 5, and 5 months. Toxicity was confined to heavy bone marrow depression with thrombocytopenia (nadir 2-7000, days 7-13) and leukocytopenia (nadir 0-400, days 8-14). Bleeding episodes could be prevented by substitution with platelets. Four patients experienced infections (pneumonia, septicemia). We conclude that combination chemotherapy using mAMSA, ARA-C, and VP 16 is effective in inducing a second remission in patients with early bone marrow relapse. The main side effect was considerable bone marrow toxicity.
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PMID:Effective remission induction in children with recurrent acute myeloid leukemia by mAMSA, Ara-C, and VP 16. 347 74

A 42-year-old woman with extensive pemphigus vulgaris failed to respond to high-dosage systemic steroids, immunosuppressive drugs and plasmapheresis. The treatment resulted in severe depression of the immune system, without marked effect on the disease activity. Eleven weeks after onset of disease she died of pneumonia and sepsis.
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PMID:[Pemphigus vulgaris--malignant course]. 353 47

Bulimia is an eating disorder characterized by episodic, uncontrollable overeating and frequently by purging after binges. It appears to afflict approximately 5 percent of female college students in the United States. Most sufferers are high-achieving but passive and unassertive young women from similarly high-achieving but disorganized families. Confusion over social roles for women is common in bulimic patients. Bulimia shows a strong association with affective disorders; depression is common in both bulimic patients and their close family members. Bulimic patients seem to have a pronounced affective vulnerability to rejection, loss, and failure. Bulimia presents a special diagnostic challenge to the primary care physician because of the paucity of clues provided by a typical review of systems and a physical examination, even a very thorough one. Making the diagnosis requires persistent and thorough history-gathering and is best accomplished through special attention to the psychosocial history (particularly history of depression and substance abuse, family dynamics, and recent stressors) as well as pointed questioning regarding eating behavior. Because of the severe, potentially lethal complications that may attend bulimia (including fluid and electrolyte imbalance, cardiac conduction abnormalities, gastric rupture, pneumonia), diagnosis and appropriate referral by the primary care physician may have a critical impact on the patient's life and health.
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PMID:Bulimia: diagnosis and management in the primary care setting. 354

We report the total clinical experience for one family medicine resident who documented every patient encounter during his three years of residency training, and compare experience with model practice patients with that in other training sites. There were 7,671 encounters with 4,449 patients, for 17,660 problem contacts and 679 procedures. Encounter and problem activity for model practice patients constituted one fifth of the total experience. Model practice patients were older than patients, and were seen more often in the office than in the hospital. Most clinical experience with acute infections, depression, and obesity was gained with model practice patients. Most experience with pneumonia, normal delivery, myocardial infarction, and chronic lung disease was acquired with other patients, and most procedures were performed on them. Personal patients of the resident within the model practice provided the greatest experience with continuity of care. These data support the value of the model practice as an important supplement to traditional hospital-based patient populations for training family physicians.
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PMID:Clinical experience during family medicine residency training. 360 11

There is evidence from pediatric tertiary care centers in the United States that childhood deaths from asthma in hospitalized patients are becoming increasingly rare, while asthma mortality outside the hospital appears to be on the rise. When a young outpatient with asthma dies, the event is apt to be sudden and unanticipated and the victim is likely to be a preadolescent or adolescent who has suffered from asthma most of his or her life and who, despite ongoing bronchodilator therapy, requires hospitalizations for treatment of status asthmaticus. Patients in this age cohort have a strong tendency to underuse, overuse, or neglect to use prescribed medications, possibly as a gesture of emerging independence or because of the depression engendered by a chronic illness. In some instances serious psychosocial pathology accounts for noncompliance. For a patient with chronic asthma with a high-risk profile, any departure from an ongoing treatment regimen may result in respiratory failure. Pathologic complications of asthma may also act to upset the precarious physiologic equilibrium these patients have established. Unsuspected chronic pneumonia may lead to further increases in a chronically high degree of oxygen desaturation. Hypoxic seizures during an asthma attack may precipitate pulmonary edema. Tension pneumothorax has an even greater fatality potential for high-risk patients with asthma than it has for other patients with asthma, and pulmonary hypertension with cor pulmonale may develop because of chronic hypoxia. Some sudden deaths in children with chronic, severe asthma are unassociated with any of the above, making it necessary to entertain still other hypotheses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:An analysis of fifteen childhood asthma fatalities. 362

A prospective multicenter study concerning the incidence, onset time, risk factors and mortality of pneumonia was carried out by the Intensive Care Units Collaborative Group for Infection Control in Lombardy, Northern Italy. Out of 1304 patients admitted over 3 months in 16 intensive care units (ICUs), 441 met the criteria for the protocol (no previous pulmonary infection or irreversible terminal illness, ICU stay greater than 48 h). The incidence of acquired pneumonia was 21.3% (94/441), with 54.2% of cases diagnosed within 4 days of admission (early onset pneumonia). Impairment of airway reflexes on admission and more than 24 h respiratory assistance were shown as significant risk factors (RR) for early onset pneumonia (respectively RR = 12.4, with 95% confidence interval (CI) = 5.3-28.9 and RR = 3.3, with 95% CI = 1.8-5.9). A suggested pathogenetic mechanism is aspiration of oropharyngeal contents at the onset of acute illness, due to depression of protective reflexes with delayed clearance of bacterial contamination. No protection was offered by routinely applied prophylactic antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Early onset pneumonia: a multicenter study in intensive care units. 365 99

To select topics for quality assurance activities focusing on older patients, we convened a 14-member panel of physicians and experts in quality assurance. In two rounds of ratings, panelists rated 42 medical conditions (eg, pneumonia) in terms of their effects on patient outcomes, the availability of beneficial interventions, and the health benefits from improving current quality. They rated 27 health services (eg, adult day-care) on similar dimensions. The feasibility of doing quality assurance work on each condition and service also was rated. Using the ratings, the conditions selected for quality assurance work were congestive heart failure, hypertension, pneumonia, breast cancer, adverse effects of drugs, incontinence, and depression. Health care services selected were hospital discharge planning, acute inpatient care for the frail elderly, long-term-care facilities (intermediate-care facilities and skilled nursing facilities), home health care services, and case management.
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PMID:Assuring the quality of health care for older persons. An expert panel's priorities. 365

During a two-year period we admitted 13 respirator-dependent quadriplegic patients to the spinal cord injury service at Wood VAMC for weaning from a mechanical ventilator, and rehabilitation. The patients were sent to the Spinal Cord Injury Center because initial weaning attempts from the respirator at other medical centers were unsuccessful. We successfully weaned them from the respirator, and at the time of discharge, only two patients required an indwelling tracheostomy tube for suction. The time required for weaning off the respirator varied from two days to 14 months. Most of the patients were discharged and many of them could independently perform the activities of daily living. We conclude that are four main factors which influence the successful weaning of dependent quadriplegics from the mechanical ventilator: alleviation of patient's anxiety and depression; family support; close working relationship between staff; prevention of complications such as pneumonia and urinary tract infections.
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PMID:Respirator-dependent quadriplegics: problems during the weaning period. 384 80


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