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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)
1. The activities of six of the enzymes of haem biosynthesis have been assayed in peripheral blood from patients with lead poisoning,
acute intermittent porphyria
or hereditary coproprophyria. 2. Compared with normal subjects the lead-poisoned subjects had highly significant
depression
of delta-aminolaevulinate dehydratase, coproporphyrinogen oxidase and ferrochelatase. 3. Lead-poisoned subjects had highly significant elevation of delta-aminolaevulinate synthase activity. 4. delta-Aminolaevulinate synthase activity was inversely related to the haemoglobin concentration. 5. Increased delta-aminolaevulinate synthase and decreased delta-aminolaevulinate dehydratase activity are also found in
acute intermittent porphyria
. 6. Increased delta-aminolaevulinate synthase, normal prophobilinogen deaminase and uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase and decreased coproporphyrinogen oxidase are found in both lead poisoning and hereditary coproporphyria. 7. These enzyme changes explain the recognized patterns of porphyrins and prophyrin precurosrs in blood and urine in these conditions.
...
PMID:Alterations in the activity of enzymes of haem biosynthesis in lead poisoning and acute hepatic prophyria. 91 57
Diabetic oral glucose tolerance test together with hyperinsulinemia in a patient with decompensated
acute intermittent porphyria
is contrasted to normal findings in compensated
acute intermittent porphyria
(
AIP
). Results point to the essential role of insulin for the
depression
of porphyrin precursor overproduction as a mediator of the "glucose effect".
...
PMID:Hyperinsulinemia in acute intermittent porphyria. 389 10
Acute intermittent porphyria
mimics a variety of commonly occurring disorders and thus poses a diagnostic quagmire. Psychiatric manifestations include hysteria, anxiety,
depression
, phobias, psychosis, organic disorders, agitation, delirium, and altered consciousness ranging from somnolence to coma. Some patients develop psychosis similar to schizophrenia. Psychiatric hospitals have a disproportionate number of patients with this disorder as only difficult and resistant patients accumulate there. Presence of photosensitive porphyrins in the urine is diagnostic. When porphyrins are absent, excess of alpha aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen are present in the urine. The definitive test is to measure monopyrrole porphobilinogen deaminase in RBCs. This diagnosis should be entertained in the following situations: (a) unexplained leukocytosis; (b) unexplained neuropathy; (c) etiologically obscure neurosis or psychosis; (d) 'idiopathic' seizure disorder; (e) unexplained abdominal pain; (f) conversion hysteria, and (g) susceptibility to stress. Porphyria is important in psychiatry as it may present with only psychiatric symptoms; it may masquerade as a psychosis and the patient may be treated as a schizophrenic person for years; the only manifestation may be histrionic personality disorder which may not receive much attention. Diagnosis is based on a high index of suspicion and appropriate investigation. Various psychotropic drugs exacerbate acute attacks. While it is important not to use the unsafe drugs in porphyric patients, it is also imperative to look for this diagnosis in cases where these drugs produce unprecedented drug reactions.
...
PMID:Porphyria: reexamination of psychiatric implications. 865 42
Acute intermittent porphyria
is one of a group of metabolic diseases called the porphyrias that may lead to symptoms of the central nervous system during an acute exacerbation. Certain drugs such as barbiturates are known to precipitate attacks of
acute intermittent porphyria
, but unfortunately there is little information regarding the safety of many psychotropic drugs in this disorder, especially the newer antidepressants and atypical antipsychotics. We report a case of an elderly patient with
acute intermittent porphyria
who was treated with a variety of psychotropic agents for a severe
depression
with psychotic features. Although many of the agents did not improve the psychiatric status of the patient, all the drugs were tolerated without precipitating an episode of
acute intermittent porphyria
. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the safe use of sertraline, venlafaxine, olanzapine, risperidone, clozapine, buspirone, trazodone, lorazepam, and clonazepam in a patient with documented
acute intermittent porphyria
. Our report also supports the safety of trifluoperazine. Although response and sensitivity to drugs may vary greatly among patients with this disorder, clinicians may want to consider the possibility of the above drugs to treat psychiatric symptoms in patients with
acute intermittent porphyria
.
...
PMID:Psychotropic drugs in acute intermittent porphyria. 1051 Oct 69
A battery of self-report psychosocial measures was mailed to 116 patients who had been referred for clinical management (clinic attenders) or laboratory diagnosis (non-clinic attenders) to the London Supraregional Assay Service Centre for Porphyria over the past decade and who tested positive for porphyria. Usable replies were received from 81 (70%) patients. Our interest focused on the prevalence of psychosocial symptoms in acute porphyrias and the perceived effects of porphyria on quality of life and patient experience. Research questions examined included (i), lifestyle factors; (ii) life events; (iii) mental health; (iv) general health; and (v) perceptions of illness of patients receiving specialist clinical management compared to respondents referred for diagnostic investigations, between patients with latent or manifest symptomology and between patients with different types of porphyria. Patients with porphyria have an impaired quality of life, particularly manifest cases, compared to controls and to diabetic patients.
Depression
, and particularly anxiety, is more common than in the general population or general medical outpatient attenders. Quality oflife is lower in
acute intermittent porphyria
(
AIP
) than in other forms of porphyria and a significant number of patients had major life event consequences, e.g. failure to secure, or loss of, employment, limitation of family size. Patients attending a clinic providing specialist porphyria advice, management and counselling received some perceived lifestyle benefits.
...
PMID:Self-rated psychosocial consequences and quality of life in the acute porphyrias. 1180 10
The tragic life of Vincent van Gogh is summarized, emphasizing his early departure from formal education, failure as a successful salesman in the art world, attempt at religious studies, difficulty with female and family relationships, return to the art world, and tendencies toward extremes of poor nutrition or near self-starvation and excessive drinking and smoking. In Paris he joined the Impressionists, but drank very heavily both absinthe and cognac. Southward he went to Arles and was joined by Paul Gauguin, with whom he had major personality problems, causing van Gogh to cut off part of his left ear. He experienced paranoid ideation and confinement in mental institutions in Arles, and then returned to Paris and onto Auvers-sur-Oise, where he committed suicide at age 37. Possible physical diagnoses include glaucoma, Meniere's disease,
acute intermittent porphyria
, and chronic lead poisoning, but these diagnoses seem unlikely. Possible psychiatric diagnoses include borderline personality disorder, anxiety-depressive disorder with episodes of
depression
and hypomania, and also paranoid schizophrenia. Van Gogh did not have spontaneous seizures and, therefore, did not have epilepsy. Before he began to drink heavily, when he was near starvation, he had "fainting fits," and after drinking, especially absinthe, a convulsant drug, he continued to have similar attacks. His episodes of unconsciousness can be well explained by chronic malnutrition and alcohol abuse, only possibly exacerbated by drinking large quantities of absinthe. Although van Gogh is an excellent example of the Geschwind syndrome, at times associated with temporal lobe epilepsy, this fact does not establish such an epilepsy. Thus, the syndrome is an orphan without the parent condition.
...
PMID:A reappraisal of the possible seizures of Vincent van Gogh. 1590 45
The porphyrias are a heterogeneous group of inherited deficiencies in the heme biosynthetic pathway.
Acute intermittent porphyria
is both the most prevalent and most severe form of this illness. Psychiatric symptoms are part of the classic presentation of this disorder, and psychiatric patients have a higher rate of porphyria than the general population. Despite this, clinicians often fail to consider this diagnosis in the differential for recalcitrant psychosis or
depression
. Many patients are asymptomatic until exposed to certain medications, liver damage, or hormonal changes. Diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion and a thorough history, physical examination, and laboratory evaluation. The author reviews historical aspects, diagnostic features, and optimal treatment of
acute intermittent porphyria
, considers possible etiologies of its psychiatric symptoms, and provides two case histories as examples.
...
PMID:From King George to neuroglobin: the psychiatric aspects of acute intermittent porphyria. 1598 8
A previous study of self-rated psychosocial aspects in patients with acute porphyria found that
depression
, and particularly anxiety, is more common in porphyria patients than in the general population or general medical outpatient attenders. Nearly half of the sample (46%) reported at least some problem with anxiety and/or
depression
: anxiety caseness was 26% and
depression
caseness was 13%. This paper extends our previous observations and investigates further the associations between porphyria and anxiety,
depression
and general mental health in 90 patients (58
acute intermittent porphyria
, 32 variegate porphyria). The findings of this study confirm that anxiety is raised in patients with
acute intermittent porphyria
and with variegate porphyria, in both males and females, compared to the normative population and, using a series of questionnaires exploring the physical and psychosocial features of anxiety, that this anxiety is experienced as a 'relatively stable personality trait', rather than a 'transitory emotional state' (i.e. intrinsic rather than secondary to the porphyria).
...
PMID:Anxiety and depression in the acute porphyrias. 1643 3
This analysis describes the diagnosis and psychiatric treatment modalities of 6 patients (5 women, 1 man; mean age 28.5 years) of
acute intermittent porphyria
(
AIP
), who presented to the Psychiatry OPD over a period of one year. The mean number of episodes was 2.83. Premorbid personality traits, clinical presentation, urine colour and urinary porphobilinogen titre were recorded. Among the 6 patients, 4 had abdominal pain, 5 had autonomic instability, all 6 had mental symptoms, 3 had
depression
, 2 came in delirium, and 3 had an episode of seizure.
...
PMID:An analysis of six cases of acute intermittent porphyria (AIP). 2084 51
Acute intermittent porphyria
(
AIP
) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder of heme biosynthesis in liver due to deficiency of porphobilinogen deaminase enzyme. Clinically,
AIP
is dominated by a colicky type pain, which does not subside after taking usual analgesics. Additional frequent symptoms are vomiting, hypertension, peripheral neuropathy, seizures,
depression
, delirium and coma. This paper reported a case of a twenty-five- year-old female patient, who had undergone a period of six days between the first presentation to the medical department and the diagnosis confirmation. It has accentuated possible mistakes in symptomatic therapy administration as well as dangers of a delayed diagnosis.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of acute abdominal pain - acute intermittent porphyria. 2184 59
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