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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The benzodiazepines are widely prescribed by many physicians for patients with
depression
, anxiety reaction, circulatory disorders, digestive disorders,
tension headache
, and pain in chest and back. According to various studies there is reason to believe that benzodiazepines not only possess the anxiolytic effects universally attributed to them but may also ameliorate somatic complaints affecting such systems as the cardiovascular and the gastrointestinal. twhether the bensodiazepines affect organ systems known to be linked in important pathophysiological ways to the nervous system deserves further study.
...
PMID:The role of benzodiazepines in nonpsychiatric medical practice. 1 3
Clomipramine is the most potent 5-HT reuptake blockade agent among the antidepressants. A comparison between the effect of clomipramine and a less powerful 5-HT reuptake blockade agent (amitriptyline) could test the hypothesis that brain 5-HT is a mediator of pain sensation. Groups of patients of either sex, with pain indication of trigeminal neuralgia,
tension headache
or postherpatic neuralgia, received doses of clomipramine or amitriptyline in a single blind clinical experiment. The results after three months of treatment showed that clomipramine: (1) was better than amitriptyline in treating trigeminal neuralgia; (2) tended to be better in the treatment of
tension headache
; and (3) amitriptyline is better in treating postherpatic neuralgia. Clomipramine was better tolerated. The results support the hypothesis that in certain pain situations, clomipramine exerts a beneficial effect, not only because of its effect on the
depression
and anxiety level of the patient, but also via its effects on the 5-HT brain system.
...
PMID:Clomipramine and amitriptyline in the treatment of severe pain. 48 62
Older people often describe their headaches as starting with vague neck discomfort and eventually moving to the temples and forehead. These are muscle-
tension headaches
, by far the most common type in the elderly. Although cervical osteoarthritis often is at fault,
depression
can be a significant factor, patricularly when headaches are chronic. There is no sure cure for
tension headache
, and often, several of the many remedies-ethyl chloride spray, moist heat, massage, antidepressant drugs, analgesics, local anesthetics, etc.-must be tried before an effective one is found. But just as important to successful therapy are concern, compassion, and a willingness to listen on the part of the physician. True migraine headaches are rare in the elderly. More prevalent is the type of vascular headache associated with giant cell arteritis, which is severe and resistant to any form of analgesic except the strongest narcotics. Vascular headaches also may result from congestive heart failure (which produces venous congestion in the cranial cavity), transient ischemia, increased intracranial pressure, and a variety of metabolic disturbances.
...
PMID:The types of headache that affect the elderly. 95 13
That the 'primary' phenomenon in migraine with aura is neuronal ('spreading
depression
') seems increasingly probable, but the relationship of migraine with and without aura and of both to
tension headache
remains uncertain.
Depression
and migraine are related, but other psychological correlates are controversial. Two new therapeutic agents, with action on 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT; serotonin) receptors are of promise.
...
PMID:Headache and migraine. 132 Apr 35
The biochemistry of migraine is complex. Many contradictory or never replicated findings in often small patient groups have been published. The following observations in the platelet-free plasma and urine appear to have some solid basis and will be discussed: 1) systemic derangement of 5-HT metabolism, relevant to the peripheral vascular component of migraine pathophysiology, 2) changes in neuroexcitatory amino acids and magnesium, which may reflect a predisposition of the migraine patient, notably those having attacks with aura, to develop spreading
depression
, 3) alterations in methionine-enkephalin levels, which may be a useful marker to discriminate between
tension headache
and migraine, 4) hormonal fluctuations which seem important to set the threshold for an attack, 5) changes of vasoactive peptides in the cranio-vascular circulation, providing the first human evidence that the trigemino-vascular system indeed is relevant in migraine, and 6) catecholaminergic changes suggesting sympathetic overactivity. Finally distinct biochemical differences between patients with migraine without aura and patients with
tension headache
on one hand, and between patients with migraine with aura and patients with migraine without aura on the other hand will be emphasized. Findings in platelets will be discussed only if they are complementary and supportive to the plasma and urine data.
...
PMID:Biochemistry of migraine. 137 6
Psychiatric disorders and behaviour problems were found to be commoner in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) than in matched comparison groups with
tension headache
and diabetes as well as in healthy children.
Depression
, anxiety and low self-esteem were common. Many children denied their problems. This may be due to the type of illness, its social consequences and the embarrassment experienced by the children. Discrepancies were found between the children's and their mothers' replies. These results are discussed in terms of their implication for paediatric practice.
...
PMID:Mental health and psychological functioning in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease: a comparison with children having other chronic illnesses and with healthy children. 157 99
Platelet [3H]imipramine binding was measured in 40 migrainous (7 classical and 33 common) and 17
tension headache
patients and in 28 normal controls. A significant reduction in Bmax was found in migraine compared with controls (p less than 0.05) but not in
tension headache
. In migraine, there was no significant relationship between Bmax and
depression
or anxiety score on the self-rating Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
(HAD) Scale, suggesting that the reduction in Bmax is a concomitant of migraine itself rather than a manifestation of associated
depression
. Preliminary evaluation using the Schedule of Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Version (SADS-L) tended to confirm this conclusion.
...
PMID:Platelet [3H]imipramine binding in migraine and tension headache in relation to depression. 166 98
1. Three oral glucose tolerance tests were performed in each of 32 symptomatic postprandial hypoglycaemic patients (before placebo, before doxepin therapy and after doxepin therapy). Plasma neurotransmitters were determined in parallel with assays of plasma insulin and glucose levels. 2. Three different types of patients were distinguished. Type I showed a low noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio, high dopamine levels and low platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) levels during basal periods. After a glucose load, late peaks of dopamine and free 5-hydroxytryptamine, which coincided with the symptoms but not with the nadir of plasma glucose, were observed. Type II showed a low basal plasma noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio. After a glucose load, progressive increases in adrenaline and decreases in glucose were seen. Adrenergic symptoms coincided with the nadir of glucose. Although type III patients showed hyperinsulinaemia after a glucose load similar to the other types of patient, they did not show hyperglycaemia, but rather exhibited a sustained and progressive reduction in plasma glucose. These patients were characterized by a high basal plasma noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio, high basal plasma levels of 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenylethyleneglycol and high basal levels of platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine, all of which increased after a glucose load. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure decreases paralleled reductions in heart rate and glucose. The nadir of plasma glucose occurred simultaneously with the appearance of symptoms (weakness, heartburn, oppressive chest pain,
tension headache
, abdominal cramps, dizziness, etc.). Therapy with doxepin led to disappearance of the symptoms within 3-4 weeks. Normalization of all other disordered variables (cardiovascular, metabolic and neurochemical, and the clonidine test) paralleled the disappearance of the symptoms. 3. Symptoms varied in the three types of patients and we conclude that they are related to hypoglycaemia-induced disorders of plasma neurotransmitters, rather than to hypoglycaemia per se. We postulate that an uncoping stress situation (type I and II patients) and
depression
(type III patients) underlie the physiopathological mechanisms.
...
PMID:Doxepin therapy for postprandial symptomatic hypoglycaemic patients: neurochemical, hormonal and metabolic disturbances. 167 82
The aim of the present study was (a) to investigate the relative efficacy of autogenic training and future oriented hypnotic imagery in the treatment of
tension headache
and (b) to explore the extent to which therapy factors such as relaxation, imagery skills, and hypnotizability mediate therapy outcome. Patients were randomly assigned to the 2 therapy conditions and therapists. 55 patients (28 in the autogenic therapy condition and 27 in the future oriented hypnotic imagery condition) completed the 4 therapy sessions and 2 assessment sessions. No significant main effect or interaction effects for treatment condition or therapist was revealed. A significant effect for time in analyzing scores for headache pain, pain medication usage,
depression
, and state anxiety was found. In the self-hypnosis condition, pain reduction proved to be associated with depth of relaxation during home practice (as assessed with diaries) and capacity to involve in imagery (as assessed with the Dutch version [van der Velden & Spinhoven, 1984] of the Creative Imagination Scale [Barber & Wilson, 1978/79; Wilson & Barber, 1978]). After statistically controlling for relaxation and imagery, hypnotizability scores (as assessed with the Dutch version [Oyen & Spinhoven, 1983] of the Stanford Hypnotic Clinical Scale [Morgan & J.R. Hilgard, 1975, 1978/79]) were significantly correlated with ratings of pain reduction. Results are discussed in the context of the neo-dissociation and social-cognitive model of hypnoanalgesia. The clinical relevance and the methodological shortcomings of the present study are also critically assessed.
...
PMID:Autogenic training and future oriented hypnotic imagery in the treatment of tension headache: outcome and process. 170 21
The problem of headache in the elderly, especially in Thailand, has yet to be probed, fully. The prevalence, clinical characteristics and precipitating correlates of headache in this population may be different from other groups. The objective of this study was to examine the epidemiology of headache in a selected subgroup of the elderly, in order to create a foundation for further studies in the general population. The data were gathered by an interviewer-administered questionnaire method. The study population consisted of 241 persons (male:female = 1:5.7). The reported prevalence of headache over a 1-year period was 54.8% (132/241 cases). The prevalence of migraine, episodic
tension headache
, chronic
tension headache
and unclassified headache were 2.9, 16.2, 2.1 and 33.6%, respectively. The reported prevalence tended to decline with increasing age. Physical disorders, including pain in the paracranial structures, chest pain and arthralgias, as well as
depression
, were all significantly associated with the occurence of headache. The prevention and treatment of these aggravating factors should be considered as one strategy for management of this problem.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of headache in the Thai elderly: a study in the Bangkae Home for the Aged. 176 25
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