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)

From 1976 to 1980, there were 3,193 admissions due to acute drug overdosage at the Resuscitation Center of the Klinikum Charlottenburg of Berlin, Free University. We determined the frequency and characteristics of self-poisoning with antidepressants and some low potency neuroleptic drugs (perazine and thioridazine). These drugs were involved in 92 cases (i.e., 3%) during a 5-year period. Amitriptyline - in combination with a benzodiazepine - was the most common antidepressant taken by the patients. 10 of the patients required assisted ventilation. Complete ECG recordings were carried out in 24 patients; 21 of them had abnormalities comprising prolonged QTC and PR intervals (19, 15 and 8 patients, respectively). Sinus tachycardia was present in half of those patients. In no cases were convulsions or cardiac arrhythmias requiring special treatment described in the medical records. The percentage of patients showing ECG changes and respiratory depression was higher when other drugs such as ethanol were ingested along with antidepressants than when only antidepressants were taken. The incidence of antidepressant self-poisoning in this area was relatively low compared to the results of other studies. Possible explanations for its low frequency could be a low rate of prescription of antidepressants, a low dosage prescribed or the success of antidepressants in the treatment of depression and thereby in the prevention of attempted suicide.
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PMID:Poisoning with antidepressive drugs: a five-year retrospective study. 406 78

11 patients with chronic, stable, effort angina, off medication apart from glyceryl trinitrate, were monitored continuously by electrocardiogram (ECG) during normal, unrestricted daily activity. Computerised ECG analysis demonstrated during 33 twenty-four hour periods of monitoring, 278 episodes of transient ischaemic ST segment depression of which 52 were associated with angina. In the 15 minutes preceding the onset of ischaemia, heart rate did not increase in 164 episodes, increased slightly (greater than or equal to 5 beats/min) in 61, and increased moderately or markedly (greater than or equal to 10 beats/min) in 53. Findings were similar when episodes with or without angina or episodes of different severity were analysed separately. In all patients, periods of sinus tachycardia exceeding the control rate by more than 30 beats/min and lasting more than 10 minutes, often occurred in the absence of angina and/or ST segment depression. Also, in 65% of the ischaemic episodes, heart rate at the beginning of the ST change was either below or less than 10 beats/min above the modal value of the twenty-four hour heart rate. This suggests that increased myocardial demand is not necessarily the only or the most common cause of acute ischaemia in patients with chronic effort angina during unrestricted daily activity. Factors which only transiently interfere with myocardial oxygen supply are probably important in this syndrome.
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PMID:Role of heart rate in pathophysiology of chronic stable angina. 615 Mar 63

In a retrospective study of 89 patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), the frequency and specificity of changes in the electrocardiogram (ECG) were determined, as well as electrocardiographically established arrhythmias. The ECG changes were correlated with neurological as well as angiographic findings (localization of the aneurysm and vascular spasm). Abnormal ECGs were found in about 80% of the patients. The following abnormalities were found with decreasing frequency: depression and elevation of the ST segment, prolongation of the QT interval, flattening and inversion of the T wave, U waves and TU fusion waves, and arrhythmias (sinus tachycardia and bradycardia, extrasystole). A verified correlation (chi-square test) was shown between angiographically demonstrated spasm of the brain arteries of the left side and negative T waves as well as a prolongation of the QT interval. These results are related to the causal role of the left stellate ganglion in the generation of ECG changes and arrhythmias (animal experiments, and the success by blockade or surgical removal of the stellate ganglion in hereditary QT prolongation.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic alterations in subarachnoid haemorrhage. Correlation between spasm of the arteries of the left side on the brain and T inversion and QT prolongation. 618 Jan 45

Increased heart rate and catecholamine secretion are induced by certain emotions. Automobile driving in busy city traffic, racing driving, speaking before an audience, and parachute jumping are associated with sinus tachycardia 120-180 per minute, and increase in the plasma levels of adrenaline and/or noradrenaline. Electrocardiographic changes, chiefly ST depression, may occur in a small proportion of persons without ischemic symptoms and with normal resting tracings. Patients with clinical coronary disease, angina, and ischemic ST changes and arrhythmias may be induced by the emotional stimuli associated with car driving and public speaking; plasma catecholamine levels are increased in proportion to the intensity of the stimulus. beta-blockade reduces the tachycardia, and prevents in whole or in part the ST changes, arrhythmia and symptoms associated with emotional challenge to the heart. We would like to leave the reader with a final morsel of food for thought. Emotion may parallel exercise in its ability to accelerate the heart rate up to 180 per minute in healthy subjects, comparable to the maximum reached during physical exertion. Thus, there are good grounds to advise persons at risk not only against violent exercise but also against exposing themselves to intense emotion. At the same time, we would not advocate emotional overprotection, and we believe our ideas would be misinterpreted if healthy persons were to be deterred on the grounds of apprehension or nervousness from facing up to reasonable everyday professional or social challenges.
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PMID:Some effects of emotion on the normal and abnormal heart. 640 Jun 82

This paper reports a study of the effects of ECT (electroconvulsive therapy) upon cardiac function (as judged by electrocardiographic changes) in 24 patients who were given 139 treatments in all. Of the 24 patients 13 were studied over a 24-h period using monitoring equipment. No potentially dangerous arrhythmias were encountered. Modified ECT was found to give rise to sinus tachycardia, which was considerably more prolonged than previously reported. The tachycardia was shown in some cases to be accompanied by a depression of the ST segment and may hence be potentially harmful to those with pre-existing ischaemic heart disease. In such patients consideration should be given to the prior administration of beta-adrenergic blocking drugs and/or oxygen.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic changes following electroconvulsive therapy. 648 2

Premature uterine contractions were treated by intravenous beta-mimetics in 190 patients during a 2-year period. History and physical examination were directed toward identification of patients with cardiac problems. Unexpected cardiac pathology was discovered in 14 patients, all of whom exhibited severe and continuous nausea, retrosternal pain, or dyspnea during beta-mimetic administration. Treatment was immediately discontinued in the presence of S-T depression, supraventricular tachycardia, nonspecific T wave changes, and sinus tachycardia with right axis deviation. Further investigation revealed obstructive cardiac myopathy in one case and atrial septal defect in another. Such changes might be identified earlier by more extensive screening procedures (such as electrocardiogram) before drug administration. Administration of beta-mimetic agents may uncover previously unexpected cardiac pathology. Continuation of ritodrine in such cases is contraindicated and potentially hazardous.
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PMID:Unexpected cardiac pathology in pregnant women treated with beta-adrenergic agents (ritodrine). 668 69

Four patients with an acute overdose of carbamazepine were examined with serial blood level determinations. The clinical spectrum consisted of coma, respiratory depression, seizures, myoclonus, nystagmus, hyperreflexia, hyporeflexia, delayed gastric emptying with cyclic coma, ataxia, sinus tachycardia, and atrioventricular conduction delay. Carbamazepine elimination half-lives varied from 10 to 29 hours, and in one case carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide was measured and had a half-life of 24 hours.
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PMID:Acute carbamazepine toxicity resulting from overdose. 719 79

The author reviewed records of 10 patients who had experienced acute loxapine overdose. The most frequent medical complications were CNS depression, sinus tachycardia, hypertension, and hypothermia; 6 patients had had generalized major motor seizures, 1 had had recurrent paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, and 2 had had transient renal insufficiency from rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria. Other clinical effects from loxapine overdose were predominantly anticholinergic. The author recommends that loxapine-overdose patients receive ECG monitoring and treatment of medical complications in an intensive care unit.
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PMID:Seizures induced by acute loxapine overdose. 725 88

We describe the electrocardiographic changes during everyday activities recorded by ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring in 67 patients with neurocirculatory asthenia. The findings were compared with the results of ambulatory monitoring in 33 healthy controls. We observed episodes of sinus tachycardia > 120/min unrelated to effort in 60 of the patients, 35 had frequent episodes of pronounced sinus arrhythmia, 16 showed transient ST depression, and six transient ST elevation. All these changes appeared during the patients' routine activities, without any unusual exertion and frequently at rest. Periods of sinus tachycardia and sinus arrhythmia were recorded from the patients during sleep. Cardiac arrhythmias, especially ventricular premature beats, were also much more common in those with neurocirculatory asthenia than in the control subjects. These findings indicate that ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring provides important information on the electrocardiographic characteristics of patients with neurocirculatory asthenia and helps to establish this diagnosis in obscure cases.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic characteristics of neurocirculatory asthenia during everyday activities. 742 6

In 103 out of 220 alcoholics (46.8%) with no heart disease electrocardiographic abnormalities were found, sinus tachycardia, T-wave irregularities and intraventricular conduction disturbances being the most common features. Comparing 138 chronic alcoholics with those of 134 healthy abstainers for the systolic time-intervals, the following abnormalities were found in the former group: prolonged PEP and ICT, shortened LVET, increased PEP/LVET and heart rate. Correction of the time intervals for heart-rate left the direction of the changes unaffected. Nor was the age of the subjects found to affect the intervals to any significant degree either in the alcoholics or in the control group. It is therefore assumed that the effect of alcohol on the time-intervals operates through at least two mechanisms, an increase in heart-rate, and a depression of myocardial contractility.
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PMID:Changes in cardiac function in the "preclinical" stage of alcoholic heart disease. 745 29


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