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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Depression
, anxiety, irritability with unpredictable explosions of aggressive behaviour, impulsivity, suicidal actions and substance abuse have been repeatedly observed among ex-servicemen from World War II in psychiatric treatment settings. In the most recent American Psychiatric Association classification of mental disorders the category of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) was introduced, replacing the earlier Traumatic War Neurosis and the above cluster of symptoms were included as associated features of this disorder. Two recent uncontrolled studies on U.S. Vietnam veterans receiving psychiatric care supported the linkage of PTSD with these abnormalities. However, the present controlled study found these associated features occurred with equal frequencies among one group of psychiatrically hospitalised Australian Vietnam veterans with PTSD and another group not so afflicted. Reservations, then, should be harboured about ascribing all the presented psychopathology and behavioural abnormalities of ex-servicemen to the stress of their war service.
...
PMID:Post-traumatic stress disorder (traumatic war neurosis) and concurrent psychiatric illness among Australian Vietnam veterans. A controlled study. 408 37
This paper reviews different psychotherapeutic and drug treatments for Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD). Psychotherapeutic treatments have changed from the abreaction technique to more classical psychodynamic approaches and recently to cognitive and behavioral techniques. Many drugs have been used in the treatment of PTSD but most of the studies were not controlled and included very few patients. More recently, double blind controlled studies have been performed comparing imipramine, desipramine, amitriptyline, phenelzine and placebo. A global efficacy has been found but the improvement was more closely related to associated symptoms, namely anxiety and
depression
, than to the core symptoms of PTSD.
...
PMID:[Treatment of post-traumatic stress syndrome]. 803 Apr 27
Three Cambodian patients with
Depression
and Post-traumatic
Stress Disorder
(PTSD) presenting with somatic complaints are described. Their case histories support previous observations that somatisation is the most common presentation of Cambodian patients with
Depression
and PTSD. The probable reasons why depressed, traumatised Cambodian patients somatise their psychiatric problems are discussed. These cases illustrate the difficulties involved in engaging such patients in Western style psychotherapy, but show the effectiveness of small doses of antidepressants in treating the depressive and post-traumatic stress symptoms.
...
PMID:Somatisation as a presentation in depression and post-traumatic stress disorder among Cambodian refugees. 825 Jul 85
A sample of 170 Cambodian youth and 80 of their mothers were interviewed regarding DSM-III-R diagnoses of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) and depressive disorders, and the stress of war trauma, resettlement, and recent life events. A consistent relation between earlier war trauma, resettlement stress, and symptoms of PTSD was found. In contrast, the strongest relation with depressive symptoms was found for recent stressful events. Despite the long interval of time since the occurrence of the war trauma, these youth and their parents reported these experiences in a highly consistent fashion. PTSD and
depression
in refugee youth appear to be different conditions following different pathways during adolescent development.
...
PMID:Multiple forms of stress in Cambodian adolescent refugees. 860 22
Research on the psychological impact of burn injuries has concentrated on major burns, while small burns have been largely neglected. In a prospective study, 45 patients with burn injuries ranging from 1 per cent or less up to 40 per cent total body surface area were assessed using semi-structured interviews within 2 weeks of sustaining the burn, and followed-up at approximately 3 months postburn to investigate the prevalence of mental health problems. The prevalence of clinically significant levels of anxiety, intrusions and avoidance remained similar at 2 weeks and 3 months postburn, however, the prevalence of
depression
and Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) increased 6- and 4-times, respectively, by 3 months. Patients with small burn injuries of 1 per cent or less also experienced clinically significant levels of psychological difficulties postburn. The implications for the identification of patients at risk of future psychological morbidity are discussed.
...
PMID:An investigation of the prevalence of psychological morbidity in burn-injured patients. 956 22
This paper examines risk factors for the development of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD), and its severity and chronicity, in a group of 217 young adults who survived a shipping disaster in adolescence. The survivors were followed up 5 to 8 years after the disaster. Risk factors examined fell into three main categories: pre-disaster child and family vulnerability factors, including childhood psychopathology; objective and subjective disaster-related experiences; and post-disaster factors, including results from screening questionnaires administered 5 months post-disaster, coping mechanisms adopted subsequently, life events, and availability of social supports. Developing PTSD following the disaster was significantly associated with being female, with pre-disaster factors of learning and psychological difficulties in the child and violence in the home, with severity of exposure to the disaster, survivors' subjective appraisal of the experience, adjustment in the early post-disaster period, and life events and social supports subsequently. When all these factors were considered together, measures of the degree of exposure to the disaster and of subjective appraisal of life threat, and ratings of anxiety obtained 5 months post-disaster, best predicted whether survivors developed PTSD. For those survivors who developed PTSD, its duration and severity were best predicted not by objective and subjective disaster-related factors, but by pre-disaster vulnerability factors of social, physical, and psychological difficulties in childhood together with ratings of
depression
obtained 5 months post-disaster, and whether survivors received post-disaster support at school. The implications of these findings are considered for targeting assessment and intervention efforts at survivors most at risk of developing difficulties in adjustment following similar traumatic experiences.
...
PMID:Risk factors for long-term psychological effects of a disaster experienced in adolescence: predictors of post traumatic stress disorder. 1109 14
The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are rapidly emerging as preferred first-line drugs in the pharmacological management of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Citalopram, an SSRI with highly potent and selective serotonin reuptake inhibition, may be a useful agent for treating the intrusive, avoidance, and arousal symptoms that characterize PTSD. Fourteen adult subjects (12 with civilian-related post-traumatic stress disorder, and 2 with combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder) were entered into an 8 wk, open- label, fixed-dose trial of citalopram, commencing with 20 mg/d, and increasing to 40 mg/d after 2 wk. Eleven subjects completed 8 wk treatment and were included in the data analysis. Based on the Clinician-Administered Post-traumatic
Stress Disorder
Scale (CAPS-2), there was significant reduction in all core PTSD symptoms (re-experiencing, hyperarousal, and avoidance) by week 8. Nine of the 11 completers were classified as 'responders' on Clinical Global Impression Improvement scores. Secondary measures of
depression
(Montgomery-Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale) and anxiety (Hamilton Anxiety Scale) also improved significantly by week 8. Citalopram was tolerated well, and there were no dropouts due to adverse effects. Data from this preliminary open trial suggests that citalopram, an SSRI, may be effective for reducing the key symptoms of PTSD, however, these findings need confirmation in double-blind, placebo-controlled trials.
...
PMID:Open trial of citalopram in adults with post-traumatic stress disorder. 1134 90
The outcome of a 12-week interpersonal process group therapy for women with postraumatic
Stress Disorder
(PTSD) related to childhood sexual abuse with and without borderline personality disorder (BPD) was assessed by comparing three naturally occurring treatment conditions: groups that did not have any members with borderline personality disorder (BPD-) (n = 18), groups in which at least one member carried the diagnosis (BPD+)(n = 16), and a 12-week waitlist (WL) (n = 15). PTSD, anger,
depression
, and other symptoms were significantly reduced in the BPD- groups. However, the BPD+ and WL conditions did not show any pre- to posttreatment improvements. Furthermore, the BPD+ condition showed a significant worsening on measures of anger. Analyses within the BPD+ condition indicated that women with and without the diagnosis experienced equal posttreatment increases in anger problems. These latter results suggest the presence of an anger "contagion" effect. That is, women without BPD did well in the BPD- groups but showed increased anger similar to the BPD+ women when treated in groups with them. Implications for client-treatment matching considerations in PTSD group therapy are discussed.
...
PMID:The impact of borderline personality disorder on process group outcome among women with posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood abuse. 1144 86
The devastating impact of substance abuse on American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs) is reviewed with an emphasis on psychological and physical effects. Co-morbidity of substance abuse, trans-generational trauma, Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
, and
depression
among AI/ANs is also discussed since each condition may cause, impact, and/or exacerbate the others. The Medicine Wheel, one respected and accepted treatment approach developed by AI/AN communities, is described in detail since it helps address all of the co-morbid issues discussed.
...
PMID:American Indian and Alaska Native substance abuse: co-morbidity and cultural issues. 1169 84
The effectiveness of Stress Inoculation Training with Prolonged Exposure (SITPE) was compared to Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Twenty-four participants who had a diagnosis of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) were randomly assigned to one of the treatment conditions. Participants were also their own wait-list control. Outcome measures included self-report and observer-rated measures of PTSD, and self-report measures of
depression
. On global PTSD measures, there were no significant differences between the treatments at the end of therapy. However on the subscale measures of the degree of intrusion symptoms, EMDR did significantly better than SITPE. At follow-up EMDR was found to lead to greater gains on all measures.
...
PMID:Treatment of PTSD: stress inoculation training with prolonged exposure compared to EMDR. 1220 66
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