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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
T-lymphocyte subpopulations were measured in the two major types of adult
malnutrition
, adult marasmus and kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic
malnutrition
. The population of T-cells (T3) and the percentage of both helper (T4) and suppressor (T8) T-cells were significantly (P less than .05) decreased in patients with kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic
malnutrition
, but did not differ from control values in patients with adult marasmus. The ratio of helper T-cell (T4), to suppressor T-cells (T8) (range 1.2-1.6) did not vary from control values in either type of
malnutrition
. One week of nutritional support was not associated with a significant increase in any of the T lymphocyte subpopulations in either type of
malnutrition
. These T-cell subpopulation changes are consistent with the greater
depression
of cellular immune function seen in patients with metabolic stresses associated with kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic
malnutrition
. With the increasing frequency in which abnormalities of T-cell subpopulations are being reported in various diseases, the coexistence of kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic
malnutrition
should be noted for its potentially confounding effect.
...
PMID:The effect of nutritional support on T-lymphocyte subpopulations in protein calorie malnutrition. 294 50
The changes occurring in the T-cell subsets during acute symptomatic measles were examined in ten malnourished and 18 well nourished hospitalized children younger than 5 years of age (median age 14 months). A significant decrease in total lymphocyte count was observed, which was due mainly to a decrease in helper/inducer T lymphocytes, whereas the suppressor/cytotoxic T-lymphocyte subset remained unchanged. Consequently, helper/suppressor ratio decreased significantly during the acute phase of the disease. A reduced response to mitogens (PHA, Con A, PWM) was also observed.
Malnourished
infants showed a trend toward a deeper
depression
in both helper and suppressor T cells during the acute phase than well nourished children, whereas the helper/suppressor ratio remained similar in the two groups.
...
PMID:Cellular immunity and T-lymphocyte subsets in young children with acute measles. 295 61
Head and neck cancer (H&N CA) patients have known
depression
of cell-mediated immunity. There is suggestive evidence that prostaglandin (PGE2)-secreting cells may be a major factor. The authors have sought to determine the role of PGE2-releasing monocytes-macrophages in this immune
depression
by determining the effects of adherent cell depletion and by measuring the effects of indomethacin, a PGE2 synthetase inhibitor, on selected tests of lymphocyte function. Lymphocyte stimulation with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) (T-cell stimulant) and Staph phage lysate (SPL) (B-cell stimulant) was done in the presence of varying concentrations of indomethacin; the effect of adherent cell depletion also was determined. The study population included 45 patients with localized or locoregional squamous CA of the H&N and 40 controls. Results included the following: (1) lymphocyte stimulation responses to PHA and SPL were generally depressed in the CA patients versus controls; (2) incubation with indomethacin produced bivalent effects in both controls and CA patients, depending on the concentration of indomethacin and lymphocyte stimulant; incubation with optimum concentrations of indomethacin generally produced augmented responses in both study groups whereas high concentrations of indomethacin were suppressive; (3) the immune potentiating effects were not observed in older patients with advanced disease; and (4) removal of adherent leukocytes (mainly monocytes) also restored depressed lymphocyte responses. Although other factors also are operative, our data suggest that PGE2-secreting monocytes-macrophages may have a major role in the immune
depression
of H&N CA patients. Age and host effects of the cancer and the
malnutrition
common to these patients probably are involved also, although their singular contribution has not been measured. This
depression
is largely reversible by a PGE2 synthesis inhibitor, indomethacin, which suggests the potential value of in vivo administration of indomethacin to H&N CA patients as an adjunct.
...
PMID:Indomethacin sensitive suppressor-cell activity in head and neck cancer patients. The role of the adherent mononuclear cell. 296 30
Diet clearly influences neurotransmission. This can be important in grossly undernourished children. It can also be important in children in whom normal homeostatic mechanisms governing food intake are bypassed. Subtle differences in behavior can occur with physiologic variation in food intake. Components of foods can also be used as drugs. Starvation can impair neuronal maturation and can have lasting effects upon behavior and intellectual performance. The extent of starvation's impact upon the brain depends upon whether undernutrition occurred during a critical phase in brain development. Short-term fasting has small, but significant, effects upon intellectual performance. Even when gross
malnutrition
is not present, subtle changes in diet may modulate brain function. Tryptophan, tyrosine, and choline in the diet are used as precursors for neuronal synthesis of serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine, and acetylcholine, respectively. It is likely that the brain's sensitivity to certain components of the diet exists to permit monitoring of food intake by the central nervous system. Tryptophan, tyrosine, and choline may be useful in treatment of humans with sleep disorders, pain
depression
, mania, hypertension, shock, or dyskinesias. Other components of the diet that may affect behavior include food additives, sugar, and caffeine. Food additives may exacerbate hyperactive symptoms in a small proportion of children with attention deficit disorder. Given that there is little potential for harm and that there is a subpopulation that may respond, a trial of a diet that contains no food additives may be a valid diagnostic approach for children with attention deficit disorder who do not respond to stimulant therapy or for children for whom stimulant therapy is not desired. Refined sugar has been blamed for many behavioral abnormalities. Subtle effects of carbohydrate upon behavior have been reported, but the existing data do not support the hypothesis that sucrose or fructose exert special effects upon neurotransmission. Caffeine is easily detected as a stimulant by humans, but it has little effect upon cognitive function. Administration of large doses of vitamins has no beneficial effect in most humans with schizophrenia, attention deficit disorder, autism, Down's syndrome, or drug addiction. Large doses of niacinamide may even be harmful, as they may cause hepatic damage.
...
PMID:Dietary influences on neurotransmission. 302 51
A variety of endocrine dysfunctions have been reported for anorexia nervosa, protein caloric
malnutrition
, and
depression
. The effect of reduced caloric intake and weight loss on endocrine functions was assessed in an experiment with five healthy female subjects during an initial baseline phase, a 3-week phase of complete food abstinence, weight gain to the original level, and a final baseline phase. During fasting, disturbances in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function were observed, with elevated plasma cortisol levels, increase in the number of secretory episodes, increase in cortisol plasma half-life, and insufficient suppression following 1.5 mg dexamethasone. While all dexamethasone suppression tests (DSTs) were normal at baseline, 7 of 14 DSTs showed insufficient suppression in the fasting phase. During fasting, basal thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) values were lowered and the TSH response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) was blunted. The plasma level of growth hormone (GH) over 24 hours was elevated during fasting and administration of the alpha 2-adrenergic receptor agonist clonidine resulted in a subnormal GH response after restoration of original body weight. One of the five subjects showed increased irritability, distress, anxiety, and
depression
as measured by various psychological scales. The results show that reduced caloric intake, weight loss, or catabolic state have powerful effects on several endocrine systems. The specificity of measures of endocrine disturbances (DST, TRH tests, and clonidine tests) as biological markers for certain types of
depression
must be questioned, and the metabolic state should be given more consideration in future studies.
...
PMID:Weight loss causes neuroendocrine disturbances: experimental study in healthy starving subjects. 308 Jul 66
Twenty-nine amino acids were analyzed in the sera of 105 adult Senegambian goitrous patients classified as stages I, II, and III according to World Health Organization recommendations. Mean serum concentration of all essential amino acids revealed highly significant drops (p less than 0.001) as goiter stage increased, except for methionine (Met). Most nonessential amino acids (NEAA) and intermediary metabolites were similarly characterized by a general decrease to the subnormal range, although some resisted
depression
in stages II and III. Homocystine (Hcy) demonstrated a unique pattern in that it was the only NEAA distinguished by regularly rising serum levels. These data are consistent with the view that endemic goiter is associated with overall stepwise downregulation in protein metabolism. In addition to iodine restriction, generalized
malnutrition
may aggravate the goitrogenic processes. Serum levels of Met and Hcy strongly suggest that the first step of the transsulfuration pathway is impaired in protein-depleted states due to cystathionine beta-synthase (EC 4.2.1.22) deficiency.
...
PMID:Nutritional significance of alterations in serum amino acid patterns in goitrous patients. 308 Aug 69
Children with Attention
Deficit
and/or Conduct Disorders were treated with bupropion, a new antidepressant, to determine its clinical, cognitive, and EEG effects. Seventeen male patients (age range 7 to 13.4 years; mean 10.4) participated in an open clinical trial consisting of a baseline placebo period (4 weeks), bupropion therapy (8 weeks), and post-drug placebo (2 weeks). Evaluations included clinical assessments, parents, teachers, and self-ratings; cognitive tests and blood level measurements of bupropion. Fifteen patients received a daily maximum of 150 mg, one received 100 mg and one 50 mg. Clinical global improvement with bupropion therapy was marked in 5 patients, moderate in 7, mild in 2, and none in 3. The Children's Psychiatric Rating Scale indicated improvements of hyperactivity, withdrawal, anxiety, hostility/uncooperativeness, sleep disorder, antisocial behaviour, neuroticism,
depression
and eating disturbance. Parents' Questionnaires indicated significant improvements of conduct disorder, anxiety, hyperactivity, muscle tension and psychosomaticism. While no single cognitive test showed significant improvement, all nine tests changed in the positive direction. Adverse effects were infrequent, transient and mild. There were no clinically significant changes of the laboratory values and vital signs. Two weeks following bupropion discontinuation, clinical global improvement was maintained in 8 patients, 7 showed relapses, while 2 remained unimproved. Analyses of computerized EEG revealed that degree of clinical improvement was indexed by baseline EEG parameters and that there were significant bupropion effects on EEG measures. Double-blind trials of bupropion are recommended in child psychiatry disorders.
...
PMID:Bupropion effects in attention deficit and conduct disorders. 309 46
The complex syndrome of protein-energy
malnutrition
(PEM) in weanling children, usually complicated by concurrent presence of numerous adverse environmental factors, is a chronic stressful situation which elicits a number of neuroendocrine and metabolic adjustments. Histidine metabolism is severely impaired in PEM in children and in experimental animals, and evidence from the latter indicate markedly increased body burden of histamine. The brain is the organ most prominently affected. Although data are still incomplete, histamine conforms with most criteria required of a neurotransmitter. Histamine interacts with other neuroregulatory substances in modulating many neuroendocrine and vegetative processes. Some of the prominent pathophysiological features associated with PEM in children such as increased circulating cortisol, defective thermoregulation, fluid/electrolyte imbalance, impaired immunity, reduced cardiac output with prolongation of systemic recirculation time, and apathy bordering on a clinical state of
depression
are consistent with the known effects of histamine as determined by neurochemical and neuropharmacological studies. It is suggested that studies of histamine status in human PEM, and the functional relationships between markedly elevated level of this amine with other neuroregulatory substances, will shed more light on the complex pathogenesis of the nutritional syndrome.
...
PMID:Pathophysiological implications of increased brain burden of histamine in protein malnutrition. 310 36
The percentage of peripheral blood lymphocytes forming rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (E-rosettes) was determined in 33 severely malnourished Guatemalan children, and in two groups of clinically well but mildly growth retarded children from the same environment. Mean E-rosettes in the acutely ill patients was lower than the value observed in the mildly malnourished children, although there was considerable overlap between groups. These data differ from previously published studies of severely malnourished children from other parts of the world in that not all patients had decreased values for E-rosettes, in contrast to the uniform
depression
reported by others. As all patients were clinically similar, the results suggest that there may be specific nutrient defects associated with protein-energy
malnutrition
that particularly affect immune function. In addition, in vitro incubation of lymphocytes from the acutely malnourished children with the thymic factor, thymosin fraction 5, increased the percentage of E-rosettes in a dose-dependent fashion. These data suggest that immature, thymosin-responsive T cells are present in circulation. It is possible that in vivo thymosin administration may be beneficial for malnourished individuals.
...
PMID:Immature circulating lymphocytes in severely malnourished Guatemalan children. 312 32
Patients with cancer of the upper gastrointestinal tract such as the esophagus and stomach are malnourished as a result of their cancer-bearing status. In such patients,
malnutrition
reduces the effects of anti-cancer therapy including surgical treatment. Therefore, we studied the effect of nutritional support in patients with upper gastrointestinal cancer. The incidence of postoperative complications was correlated with the preoperative nutritional status. Thus, improvement of nutritional status by preoperative nutritional support is thought to be important. As metabolic disturbances frequently accompany advanced cancer, the quantity of calories and quality of nutritional regimen were found to be important for improving such metabolic disorders. In the postoperative period, total parenteral nutrition (TPN) prevented the
depression
of cell-mediated immunity, increased the tolerance to anti-cancer drugs during chemotherapy as an adjunct to surgery, and prolonged the disease-free interval, in patients undergoing absolute non-curative gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer. The results of chemotherapy were better in recurrent upper gastrointestinal cancer patients whose nutritional parameters were in a favorable range on admission or improved after 2 weeks of TPN.
...
PMID:[Nutritional support as an adjunct to the treatment of upper gastrointestinal cancer patients--esophageal and gastric cancer]. 313 86
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