Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

13 patients with generalized hyperergic vasculitides and 20 patients with rheumatism were examined for antibodies against antigens of viruses of hepatitis B and C. In the majority of patients with vasculitides and almost half of those with rheumatism, there have been revealed antibodies against antigens of hepatitis B or C. These findings allow some judgement about importance of viral infection in the development of autoimmune and infectious and allergic diseases, which observation may be related to a significant depression of the suppressor function of T-lymphocytes by viral infection.
...
PMID:[Viral infection and rheumatic diseases]. 922 Nov 40

Alpha interferons have been used widely to treat chronic hepatitis C virus infection. These include recombinant interferons, purified natural leukocyte, and lymphoblastoid interferons. Alpha interferon is administered by subcutaneous or intramuscular injection either daily or three times weekly for a period of 6 to as long as 24 months. A wide array of adverse effects of alpha interferon have been described. Several side effects such as fever, headache fatigue, arthralgias, and myalgias are common, especially with the initial injections. These early side effects of interferon are predictable and are encountered in the majority of patients. These may not require dose modification, but can be problematic for a significant proportion of patients. Other adverse events effects may require dose modification or even discontinuation of therapy in 2% to 10% of patients. Neuropsychiatric side effects such as depression and irritability can be most troublesome; their mechanisms are not well understood. Granulocytes, platelets, and red blood cell counts decrease during treatment, but the decreases are usually mild, although they can be dose limiting if cell counts are low initially. Interferon has important immunomodulatory properties, and treatment can induce autoimmune phenomena, the most frequent being autoimmune thyroiditis with either hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism, especially in predisposed patients. Other autoimmune disease can be aggravated by interferon therapy. Severe and even life-threatening side effects of interferon occur in 0.1% to 1% of patients; these include thyroid, visual, auditory, renal, and cardiac impairment, and pulmonary interstitial fibrosis. Some of these side effects may be irreversible. Higher doses of interferon (above 5 million units three times weekly) cause higher rates of adverse events than standard doses. Contraindications to alpha interferon have been recognized.
...
PMID:Side effects of alpha interferon in chronic hepatitis C. 930 75

Fatigue and depression have devastating and debilitating effects on functional status, social and occupational functioning, and quality of life in persons with human immunodeficiency virus disease. Contributing factors involved are multifaceted and bidirectional in nature. Thorough assessment of fatigue and depression are essential elements of practice leading to symptom management.
...
PMID:Fatigue and depression: assessment in human immunodeficiency virus disease. 938 88

The science of psychoneuroimmunology looks at the role of the mind in the cause of disease. A number of studies have demonstrated that stress increases the risk of viral infection. Stress and depression can depress immunity whereas stress reduction can enhance immunity. Preliminary data suggest that cancer prognosis can be improved by enhanced immunity as a result of stress reduction. An understanding of psychoneuroimmunology should contribute to significant changes in the management of many diseases, especially cancer and infection.
...
PMID:Psychoneuroimmunology. Fact or fiction? 938 11

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), a recently named heterogeneous disorder, is an illness of unknown etiology. The association between CFS and several viral infection has been suggested. Here, we centered on the possible link between CFS and Borna disease virus (BDV) infection. BDV is a neurotropic, nonsegmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA virus. Recent epidemiological data have suggested that BDV may be closely associated with depression and schizophrenia in humans. In Japanese patients with CFS, the prevalence of BDV infection was 34% (30/89) and 12% (7/57) by immunoblotting and PCR analysis, respectively. Furthermore, anti-BDV antibodies and BDV RNA were detected in a family cluster with CFS. These results suggested that this virus contributes to or initiates CFS, although the single etiologic role of BDV is unlikely.
...
PMID:[Demonstration on Borna disease virus in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome]. 939 13

Following infection with influenza virus, animals display decreased locomotor activity and feeding behavior and loss of body weight. It has been suggested that these effects may be mediated by cytokines, such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), induced by the infection. To assess the potential role of IL-1, we tested the ability of a naturally occurring IL-1-receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) to antagonize the changes in feeding behavior induced by IL-1, endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS), and infection with influenza virus. Feeding behavior was assessed by measuring the daily intake of food pellets and sweetened milk in a 30-min period. Acute injection of IL-1 beta decreased milk intake, but mouse IL-6 and mouse TNF-alpha did not. However, TNF-alpha decreased food pellet intake slightly, especially when it was injected at the beginning of the dark phase. The reductions in milk intake induced by mouse IL-1 beta were largely prevented by IL-1ra pretreatment (100 micrograms/mouse i.p.). The LPS-induced reductions in milk intake were attenuated, but not blocked, by IL-1ra treatment (300 micrograms/mouse). LPS still induced significant decrements in the presence of the antagonist. In influenza virus-infected mice, IL-1ra was administered either by repeated subcutaneous (s.c.) injections, or by continuous s.c. infusion from osmotic minipumps. These IL-1ra treatments produced small, but statistically significant, attenuations of the depression in milk and food pellet intake in the virus-infected mice. In several experiments, IL-1ra treatment increased the survival of influenza virus-infected mice. Thus the attenuation of the hypophagia may have been caused by this IL-1ra-induced increase in survival. The results suggest that IL-1 contributes to sickness behavior induced by LPS and influenza virus infection, but it is not the only factor involved.
...
PMID:The role of cytokines in the behavioral responses to endotoxin and influenza virus infection in mice: effects of acute and chronic administration of the interleukin-1-receptor antagonist (IL-1ra). 943

To investigate the involvement of various cellular and humoral aspects of immunity in the clearance of rabies virus from the central nervous system, (CNS), we studied the development of clinical signs and virus clearance from the CNS in knockout mice lacking either B and T cells, CD8+ cytotoxic T cells, B cells, alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) receptors, IFN-gamma receptors, or complement components C3 and C4. Following intranasal infection with the attenuated rabies virus CVS-F3, normal adult mice of different genetic backgrounds developed a transient disease characterized by loss of body weight and appetite depression which peaked at 13 days postinfection (p.i.). While these animals had completely recovered by day 21 p.i., mice lacking either B and T cells or B cells alone developed a progressive disease and succumbed to infection. Mice lacking either CD8+ T cells, IFN receptors, or complement components C3 and C4 showed no significant differences in the development of clinical signs by comparison with intact counterparts having the same genetic background. However, while infectious virus and viral RNA could be detected in normal control mice only until day 8 p.i., in all of the gene knockout mice studied except those lacking C3 and C4, virus infection persisted through day 21 p.i. Analysis of rabies virus-specific antibody production together with histological assessment of brain inflammation in infected animals revealed that clearance of CVS-F3 by 21 days p.i. correlated with both a strong inflammatory response in the CNS early in the infection (day 8 p.i.), and the rapid (day 10 p.i.) production of significant levels of virus-neutralizing antibody (VNA). These studies confirm that rabies VNA is an absolute requirement for clearance of an established rabies virus infection. However, for the latter to occur in a timely fashion, collaboration between VNA and inflammatory mechanisms is necessary.
...
PMID:Collaboration of antibody and inflammation in clearance of rabies virus from the central nervous system. 955 53

An outbreak of disease, characterized by depression, anorexia, fever, limb oedema and lymphocytopenia, occurred on a farm for thoroughbreds in India in 1990. Twenty-six of the 88 horses on the farm were affected, predominantly adults. Signs were present in affected horses for 7-10 days, and the outbreak lasted 21 days. Seven of the 26 affected horses were tested for exposure to Getah virus using paired serum samples, acute and convalescent. Four of the 7 horses seroconverted to Getah virus, and the other three showed a 4-fold or greater rise in titre. The clinical and laboratory findings were similar, but not indentical, to those described in natural and experimental infections in Japanese horses. This is the first description of disease caused by Getah virus infection in horses outside Japan. In addition serum samples from 152 horses from 3 regions of India were evaluated for the presence of antibodies to Getah virus. The seroprevalence was found to be 17%, indicating exposure to the virus elsewhere in Indian horses.
...
PMID:Getah virus infection of Indian horses. 976 Jul 16

There is increasing evidence suggesting that several mediators are involved in the cascade of events leading to the depression of the cytochrome P450 (P450) by an inflammatory reaction. The present study aimed to confirm the presence of mediators in the serum (RS(INFLA)) and hepatocytes (H(INFLA)) of rabbits with an acute inflammatory reaction, and in the serum of humans with an acute upper respiratory tract viral infection (HS(URTVI)). The inflammatory reaction was induced by the s.c. injection of 5 ml of turpentine. Incubation of RS(INFLA) or HS(URTVI) with H(INFLA) depressed the P450, diminished the formation of theophylline metabolites (3-methylxanthine, 1-methyluric acid, and 1,3-dimethyluric acid), and increased lipid peroxidation. The addition of preheated RS(INFLA) or HS(URTVI) to H(INFLA) did not diminish the amount of P450 or theophylline metabolites, and prevented the increase in lipid peroxidation. Incubating the filtrate of RS(INFLA) or HS(URTVI) dialyzed through membranes with cut-off of 10, 30, 50 and 100 kd, with H(INFLA) showed that rabbit and human mediators have molecular weights ranging from 10 to 30 kd. Incubation of H(INFLA) with hepatocytes from control rabbits (H(CONT)) did not decrease further the P450. However, when RS(INFLA) was added to co-cultured H(CONT) + H(INFLA), the depression of P450 was 37% greater (p<0.05), and the amount of theophylline metabolites generated was around 30% (p<0.05) smaller than that observed when H(CONT) or H(INFLA) were incubated with RS(INFLA). Based on the present results we may speculate that human and rabbit serum mediators are proteins of molecular weights ranging from 10 to 30 kd, and in addition, primed hepatocytes once exposed to the serum mediators release mediators able to depress the P450 in H(CONT).
...
PMID:Depression of the hepatic cytochrome P450 by an acute inflammatory reaction: characterization of the nature of mediators in human and rabbit serum, and in the liver. 976 74

Pseudomigraine with pleocytosis is a benign and autolimited syndrome. The etiology has been related to viral infection, but its pathophysiology is not yet well identified. To investigate this point, and to see if there were changes in cerebral blood flow (as in migraine), we performed single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies in four patients who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for this syndrome. This was done during the acute phase and we repeated SPECT after resolution of the syndrome in two of them. We found a reduction in brain blood flow on the side of origin of the neurological deficits during the acute phase. This normalized after recovery of the syndrome. The finding suggests that the neurological deficits in this syndrome could be produced by a spreading depression-like mechanism similar to that proposed for migraine with aura.
...
PMID:Cerebral blood flow changes in pseudomigraine with pleocytosis analyzed by single photon emission computed tomography. A spreading depression mechanism? 982 50


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10