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)

Physicians may have the opportunity to prevent suicide. An awareness of suicide risk factors, such as depression, alcoholism, drug abuse, schizophrenia, and chronic pain or disease, may facilitate suicide prevention. Recognition of acute and chronic suicidal vulnerability occurs through direct questioning. Psychiatric consultation is indicated for patients exhibiting clear self-injury risk, as exemplified by expressed suicide intent, an overt plan for death, or a "gesture." Hospitalization is usually recommended for socially isolated patients presenting with overt suicidal ideation, complicated by injurious self-harm, encephalopathy, or substance abuse. Family involvement and a "no-suicide" contract with the patient, coupled with close outpatient follow-up appointments, should suffice for those exhibiting milder or transient thoughts of suicide without manifest intent to die.
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PMID:A preventive approach to the suicidal patient. 327 11

The multisystem involvement in acute pancreatitis (AP) is a reflection of the pancreatic gland's capacity to produce a number of potent vasoactive peptides, hormones, and enzymes. The various prognostic criteria are early evaluations of these metabolic derangements. The pathogenesis of hypocalcemia, long recognized as an indicator of severity of AP, is multifactorial. Imbalances of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-calcitonin, the interactions of glucagon, gastrin and other pancreatic hormones with PTH-calcitonin, the role of free fatty acids in binding serum calcium with albumin, and the translocation of calcium ion in muscles and liver, have been recently described but remain conflicting theories. Yet, the time-honored theory of calcium-soap formation enjoys wide acceptance. Hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, and occasional ketoacidosis in acute pancreatitis have been studied thoroughly. The complex cause-and-effect relationship between hyperlipidemia with acute pancreatitis needs further study. The coagulation abnormalities seem to be initiated by activated trypsin, and their role in microvascular coagulation appears to form a unifying hypothesis for major organ dysfunction, but this requires further investigation. Adult respiratory distress syndrome may be the result of active enzymes that digest pulmonary surfactant and/or microvascular thrombosis. The depression of cardiac function and shock are suspected to be secondary to vasoactive peptides such as bradykinin, or myocardial depressant factor, whose structure has yet to be elucidated. The renin-angiotensin alterations and renal complications in acute pancreatitis have received scant attention in the literature. The onset of moderate visual disturbances, or even blindness, in a patient with acute pancreatitis as a result of retinal vessel thrombosis is fortunately uncommon. Rare but interesting are the manifestations such as subcutaneous fat necrosis, arthralgia, and pancreatic encephalopathy. Despite the extensive literature on the complexities of the pathogenesis of complications of acute pancreatitis, there have been very few advances in the prevention and management of specific complications. It is hoped that further work on modification of enzymatic disturbances induced in acute pancreatitis will result in its effective treatment and prevention of serious complications.
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PMID:Systemic complications of acute pancreatitis. 328

A pilot-study to explore the efficacy of oral hydergine in seven cases of alcohol-related encephalopathy was undertaken. It showed significant improvement in symptoms of depression, plus some improvement in sleep disturbance and agitation, as measured by the Geriatric Profile (GP).
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PMID:Efficacy of oral hydergine (ergoloid mesylates) in alcohol related encephalopathy. 329 96

The first cases of fulminant hepatic failure due to paracetamol poisoning were reported in 1966, and in the United Kingdom this condition is now responsible for more cases of acute hepatic failure than any other cause. Adults account for the majority of serious and fatal cases of paracetamol poisoning and it is extremely rare for young children to ingest sufficient paracetamol to cause more than minimal liver damage. A single measurement of the plasma paracetamol concentration is an accurate predictor of liver damage provided that it is taken not earlier than 4 hours after ingestion of the overdose. Peak disturbance of liver function occurs 2 to 4 days after the overdose, often accompanied by mild jaundice, after which recovery is usually rapid and complete. In a few patients, fulminant hepatic failure, manifested by increasing jaundice and encephalopathy, may develop by the third to fifth day. Acute renal failure may complicate paracetamol poisoning, often in the context of severe liver damage. Renal failure, which is often non-oliguric, typically becomes apparent 24 to 72 hours after overdosage. The treatment of paracetamol intoxication should include gastric lavage, which has been shown to be of value for up to 6 hours after ingestion of a paracetamol overdose. Further general treatment may include parenteral fluid replacement and a prophylactic infusion of dextrose (5-10%) in patients at risk of hepatic failure. Specific protective agents in those patients at risk of paracetamol-induced liver damage include N-acetylcysteine and methionine which are most effective if given within 8 to 10 hours of ingestion of the overdose. Hepatic and renal failure should be managed conventionally. In recent years in the United Kingdom there has been a gradual decline in the number of hospital admissions and the number of deaths from aspirin poisoning. Salicylates in overdose directly stimulate the respiratory centre and so cause a respiratory alkalosis. Metabolic acidosis occurs in severe poisoning because of impairment of the oxidative metabolism of energy substrates. At very high salicylate concentrations respiratory depression may occur, possibly associated with neuroglycopenia, adding respiratory acidosis to the worsening metabolic acidosis. In addition to a mixed acid-base disturbance, hypokalaemia and hypoglycaemia may be present. Nausea and vomiting increase the fluid deficit. If dehydration is sufficiently severe, decreasing cardiac output may hasten development of lactic acidosis and acute renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Non-narcotic analgesics. Problems of overdosage. 355 83

Ammonia intoxication has been shown to decrease excitatory synaptic transmission in several regions of the central nervous system. To investigate the relation between an effect of ammonia on excitatory synaptic transmission and the behavioral depression in the encephalopathy due to ammonia intoxication, this study examined in the rat the effects of ammonia intoxication on the H-reflex, the behavioral and neurological signs of the encephalopathy due to ammonia intoxication, and correlated the effects on the H-reflex with the signs of encephalopathy. Ammonia intoxication abolished the H-reflex without affecting the M-response. This indicated that ammonia intoxication decreased spinal excitatory synaptic transmission without affecting neuromuscular excitatory synaptic transmission. In the encephalopathy due to ammonia intoxication, the H-reflex disappeared only during a very advanced stage of behavioral depression, i.e., coma. During early stages of behavioral depression, i.e., during a decrease of reactions to sensory stimuli, the H-reflex was not affected by ammonia intoxication. Therefore, mechanisms other than a decrease of excitatory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system may be responsible for the behavioral depression seen in early stages of the encephalopathy due to ammonia intoxication.
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PMID:The H-reflex in the encephalopathy due to ammonia intoxication. 358 47

Dementias which are either reversible or avoidable are discussed in the light of the literature. The frequency is between 6 and 32%. The most important etiological groups are immunological vasculopathies, hyperlipidemia, some types of encephalitis and, mainly, progressive dementia of the insane, benign tumors and in particular meningioma, low pressure hydrocephalus, intoxications due to drugs, industrial products and alcohol, metabolic disturbances, encephalopathy in dialysed patients, ileo-jejunal-bypass encephalopathy and encephalopathy due to neoplasms. Dementias are also seen in endocrinological disturbances and particularly in hypothyroidism. Vitamin B12 and folate deficiency, as well as epilepsy, may be causes of dementia. Depression may mimic a state of dementia. Some features of reversible dementias are listed, including in particular the somewhat more rapid onset, the younger age of patients, and accompanying neurological symptoms such as headache, gait disturbances, ataxia, polyneuropathy, myoclonus or epileptic fits.
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PMID:[Reversible and preventable dementias]. 361 87

Among 53 cases of failed forceps occurring in 6524 uncomplicated primiparous deliveries, depression at birth and encephalopathy occurred with similar frequency as when cesarean section was done for failure to progress in the second stage, and birth trauma was no more common than that with successful midforceps delivery. Factors predisposing to or associated with midforceps deliveries or second stage cesarean sections were short mothers, heavy babies, induced or prolonged labors, and fetal distress or meconium release in labor.
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PMID:Failed forceps. 378 89

Acute hepatic failure is characterized by a sudden catastrophic compromise of hepatic failure that causes clinical signs such as anorexia, depression, vomiting, diarrhea, icterus, and encephalopathy. Injurious hepatotoxins, drugs, infectious agents, or metabolic disturbances can cause acute hepatic failure; however, in many cases, the inciting cause is not determined. Treatment is aimed at controlling complications such as fluid-electrolyte imbalances, hepatic encephalopathy, hypoglycemia, bleeding diathesis, gastric ulcer, sepsis, and endotoxemia, in order to provide time for liver regeneration and recovery.
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PMID:Acute hepatic failure. 387 99

The outcome of two populations of twins delivered at the same hospital, numbering 554 in 1963 to 1972 and 614 in 1978 to 1984, was reviewed to determine the factors contributing to depression at birth, trauma, and mortality in each period. The cesarean section rate had increased from 3% in the early period to 51% in the later period, with 92% of the later cases in which the first twin presented abnormally being delivered by cesarean section. Among infants of greater than 28 weeks' gestation the incidence of severe depression at birth was not reduced with the increased cesarean rate, remaining at 2% in both populations; none developed encephalopathy or died as a result of birth asphyxia or trauma. Neonatal mortality was markedly reduced in the second period, primarily because of a reduction in deaths resulting from respiratory distress syndrome. It is not possible to show that the marked increase in the rate of cesarean delivery has improved the condition of twin infants at birth.
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PMID:Birth asphyxia, trauma, and mortality in twins: has cesarean section improved outcome? 394 9

The effect of cesarean section on the condition at birth in cases of preterm breech presentation was studied in consecutively delivered infants in two time periods. Delivery was rarely (8%) by cesarean section in 1961 to 1974 and usually (89%) by cesarean section in 1978 to 1984. The increased cesarean rate did not reduce the incidence of severe depression, which was double that in control cases with cephalic presentations in both periods. Breech births did not have a higher mortality rate than cephalic births in either period; birth trauma and encephalopathy were similar in both periods. Cesarean section was therefore not found to reduce either the incidence of depression at birth or the mortality. However, head entrapment was responsible for the deaths of seven of 55 live-born infants delivered vaginally at 25 to 28 weeks' gestation, all weighing less than 1000 gm. Although cesarean section is at present performed least often among these extremely premature infants, it is in these cases that it may prove most beneficial.
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PMID:Has use of cesarean section reduced the risks of delivery in the preterm breech presentation? 394 10


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