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)

It is possible that some "postpsychotic depressions" may be a toxic effect of antipsychotic drugs. Out of a total of 94 schizophrenic patients, 28 developed a mild akinesia and 32 never developed extrapyramidal symptoms. Those who developed akinesia became less psychotic, but they also experienced a significant, although modest, increase in depression ratings. Successful treatment of the akinesia resulted in significant improvements in depression, somatic concern, anxiety, emotional withdrawal, blunted affect, and motor retardation on both physicians' and nurses' ratings. A high association between akinesia and both objectively rated and subjectively experienced sedative effect indicates that an 'akinetic depression' is not likely if the patient does not look or feel drowsy. The 32 nonakinetic patients also became less psychotic, but not more depressed.
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PMID:"Akinetic depression" in schizophrenia. 2 11

In a double-blind crossover trial, (-)-deprenyl, a fast-acting selective monoamine-oxidase-B inhibitor without a "cheese effect", was given to 41 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease who were receiving maximum tolerated doses of levodopa either alone or combined with carbidopa ("Sinemet"). In a dose of 10 mg, daily or on alternate days, (-)-deprenyl prolonged the therapeutic effect of levodopa and was effective in mild "on-off" disabilities with end-of-dose akinesia; the majority of patients with nocturnal and early-morning akinesia also improved. No statistically significant improvement occurred in diurnal akinesia, and there was no improvement in patients with severe on-off disabilities with freezing and rapid oscillations ("yo-yo" effect). Levodopa-induced dyskinesias were aggravated in 14 patients. In 5 previously untreated patients, (-)-deprenyl alone gave no benefit, but when it was used with levodopa and carbidopa a mean dosage reduction of 200 mg levodopa daily was possible. Depression, present in 15 patients, was unchanged. (-)-Deprenyl in combination with smaller total daily doses of levodopa and a peripheral decarboxylase inhibitor may prove useful in reducing the frequency and severity of some types of on-off effect with overall benefit comparable to that obtained with larger doses of levodopa.
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PMID:Deprenyl in Parkinson's disease. 7 2

This work is based on the results of a systematic scheme of investigation consisting of an exercise test on the bicycle ergometer with analysis of the ECG and of the pulmonary arterial pressure measured by cardiac micro-catheterisation, and of ventricular and coronary arteriography; 60 patients were investigated in this way after the third month following a myocardial infarction. After an anterior infarction, there is no significant correlation between the ECG changes and the coronary arteriogram. An elevation of the tracing is often (but not always) indicative of akinesia or dykinesia of the ventricle. After a posterior infarction, depression of the trace in leads which were initially normal indicates extension of the coronary lesions in 9 cases out of 10. It, is, however, possible for a tight stenosis on the anterior descending artery to exist with no changes on the ECG. A highly significant (p less than 0.001) and strong (r=0.83) correlation between an index of haemodynamic severity as defined by variations in the pulmonary arterial pressure on exercise and by the score on coronary arteriography, allows us to define certain indications for coronary arteriography and ventriculography after infarction.
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PMID:[Exercise electrocardiogram coupled with right cardiac microcatheterization after myocardial infarct. Correlations with ventriculo-coronarography]. 41 13

In order to assess the long-term effects of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) in combination with pupular methods of myocardial protection, 37 dogs were placed on CPB for 100 minutes with the use of a bubble oxygenator without hemodilution. A separate group (I) of eight normal dogs served as a control for assessment of hemodynamic changes. The operative groups were as follows: II, continuous coronary perfusion with an empty, beating heart for 60 minutes at 35 degrees C.; III, hypothermic anoxic arrest (aortic occlusion) for 60 minutes with topical cold saline lavage (4 degrees C.); IV, anoxic arrest for 60 minutes at 35 degrees C. Subgroups of Groups III and IV received intracoronary perfusion with Ringer's lactate or Sacks' solution during aortic occlusion and were compared with those animals receiving no perfusion. Survival in Groups II and III was significantly better than in Group IV (82 and 92 per cent vs. 45 per cent). Coronary perfusion with Ringer's lactate or Sack's solution did not influence survival. The 23 survivors from all groups underwent left heart catheterization and LV cineangiography 5 months after operation. All three operative groups had significant elevation of LVEDP and depression of maximum developed dp/dt when compared with normal dogs. Ejection fraction was significantly depressed in Groups III and IV, and there was evidence of left ventricular hypokinesia and/or akinesia in all three operative groups. Differences in function between Groups II, III, and IV were not significant. The use of intracoronary solutions during anoxic arrest did not significantly influence these functional alterations. Evidence of subendocardial fibrosis was found in each of the operative groups, with the most marked changes found in the normothermic arrest group. Moderate fibrosis was present, however, in some survivors in both the continuous coronary perfusion and topical hypothermic arrest groups. These data indicate that although survival is greatly enhanced when coronary artery perfusion or topical hypothermia is used, neither method prevents chronic deterioration in ventricular function nor the development of subendocardial fibrosis.
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PMID:Long-term morphologic and hemodynamic evaluation of the left ventricle after cardiopulmonary bypass. A comparison of normothermic anoxic arrest, coronary artery perfusion, and profound topical cardiac hypothermia. 118 84

This paper reports findings relative to a simple, rapid and reproducible technique for the induction of physical dependence upon ethanol in the rat. The dependence was induced by intragastric intubation of 20% (w/v) ethanol solutions at 9-15 g/kg in 3-5 fractional doses daily for 4 days, maintaining blood ethanol concentrations above a threshold level sufficient to sustain observable sedation throughout the entire period of intubation. Two phases were distinguished during the withdrawal period: 1. Prodromal detoxication, characterized by a spectrum of signs and responses of diminishing severity, related to the decline in blood ethanol concentrations (mg/dl): death, greater than 640; coma, 780-460; loss of righting reflex, 640-400; ataxia 3-1, 570-250; sedation 340-190; neutrality, 220-130; 2. Ethanol dependence, characterized by a spectrum of withdrawal signs and reactions of progressively increasing severity as blood ehtanol concentration approached 100 mg/dl: hyperactivity, tremors, akinesia, spastic rigidity, and induced and spontaneous convulsions. A rapid sucession of two diverse clusters of signs and reactions represents a reversal of the central nervous system function from the extremes of ethanol intoxication (CNS depression) to the extremes of ethanol dependence (CNS hyperexcitability) during the withdrawal period. Both extremes may terminate in death.
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PMID:Induction of physical dependence upon ethanol and the associated behavioral changes in rats. 123 14

Based on comparative clinical and morphometric studies in 45 autopsy cases of Parkinson's disease (PD), 27 clinically presenting with akinesia and rigidity (AR-type), 18 with predominant resting tremor (T-type), the neurobiological basis of the major clinical subtypes in PD is discussed. The AR-type showed higher neuronal losses in locus coeruleus (LC) and in medial and lateral parts of substantia nigra (SNM, SNL), suggesting lesion patterns different from the T-type. More severe cell loss in the serotonergic dorsal raphe nucleus was observed in PD patients with depression than in non-depressed ones. Demented PD subjects showed higher cell loss in SNM than non-demented ones indicating dysfunction of the mesocortical dopamine system, and significantly more severe Alzheimer lesions in isocortex and hippocampus. These and other recent data from the literature indicate that some major clinical features of PD are related to lesions of distinct neuronal systems.
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PMID:Clinico-pathological correlations in Parkinson's disease. 132 May 31

Paradigms of isometric force control allow study of the generation and release of movement in the absence of complications due to disordered visuomotor coordination. The onset and release of isometric force in Parkinson's disease (PD) was studied, using computerised determinants of latency of response and rate of force generation and release. Components of isometric force control were related to measures of cognitive, affective and clinical motor disability. The effects of treatment were determined by longitudinal study of de novo patients. Patients with PD showed impairment in latency and rate of force change for movement release as well as onset. Rate of force change correlated with depression, clinical motor disability and memory quotient but latency showed no correlation with any of these measures. Treatment improved rate of force release, in concert with clinical motor disability, but not latency. These results suggest dissociations between latency and rate of force change that may be linked to different neurochemical deficits. Further, they demonstrate akinetic deficits in force release that argue against the "neural energy hypothesis" of akinesia.
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PMID:A component analysis of the generation and release of isometric force in Parkinson's disease. 164 Feb 33

Clinical and neuropathologic data in 45 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) were compared. Twenty-seven patients suffered from marked akinesia and rigidity (AR-type) and 18 patients from predominant resting tremor (T-type). Dementia, depression, and psychosis occurred in 26, 18, and 18 patients, respectively. Neuronal counts were performed in defined areas of the medial and lateral substantia nigra (SNM, SNL), locus ceruleus (LC), and dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN). The AR-type (compared with the T-type) showed higher neuronal loss of LC, SNL, SNM, and more severe gliosis, extraneuronal melanin deposits, and neuroaxonal dystrophy in substantia nigra. Demented PD patients showed more intense cortical Alzheimer lesions and higher neuronal depletion in the SNM, whereas PD subjects with moderate or marked dementia differed from mildly or not demented ones only in the higher degree of cortical Alzheimer lesions. More severe neuronal cell loss of DRN was observed in PD patients with depression. Occurrence of psychosis was not associated with any pathologic feature. Our findings indicate that some major clinical features of PD are related to distinct neuropathologic lesions.
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PMID:The neuropathologic basis of different clinical subgroups of Parkinson's disease. 174 81

Comparing Crow's schizophrenia model with the defect state and Huber's basic symptoms shows that this model is an oversimplification of the complex reality of schizophrenic outcomes. The concept of negative symptoms is undermined by several factors, such as differing definitions, other confounding cross-sectional variables (e.g., akinesia and depression), short follow-ups and lack of confirmation by factorial analysis. The longitudinal concept of a defect state, which has been used in long-term follow-up studies, includes enduring symptoms currently classified as positive and negative. Huber's conceptualization of basic symptoms describes prodromal and enduring residual symptoms of schizophrenia associated with structural brain abnormalities. The overlap and lack of equivalence of these concepts and the limited empirical evidence does not allow firm conclusions. New longitudinal studies using clinical, psychosocial, and neuropsychological measures are needed to understand the natural history and etiology of the defect state.
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PMID:Negative symptoms, defect state and Huber's basic symptoms: a comparison of the concepts. 180 80

1. Substance abuse and post-psychotic depression are both frequently encountered concomitants of schizophrenia. 2. Substance abuse may be associated with depression-like symptomatology in the course of schizophrenia, and patients may attempt to self-medicate these symptoms with substances of abuse. 3. Antidepressant medication has been found to be a useful adjunct to treatment in at least some cases of substance abuse and some cases of post-psychotic depression. 4. Preliminary evidence exists suggesting that adjunctive antidepressant medication, added to a neuroleptic, may be useful for at least some stable dysphoric substance-abusing schizophrenic patients. 5. It is important to attempt to rule out even subtle neuroleptic-induced akinesia in such patients with a vigorous trial of antiparkinsonian medication.
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PMID:Antidepressant for substance-abusing schizophrenic patients: a minireview. 200 36


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