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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)
Treatment-resistant
depression
, i.e. partial or non response to antidepressants in spite of various treatment attempts with optimized doses and combinations, is rather common. With residual symptoms such as tiredness, anhedonia and concentration disturbances, the treatment strategy has often been to use monoamino-oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs). Their use, however, is limited due to interaction problems. Modafinil is recently developed wake-promoting drug with only minor side-effects. Pilot studies indicate that it appears to have an augmentation effect in treatment-resistant
depression
. This open-label study performed in the private psychiatric practice setting is the first to make a comprehensive evaluation of the target patient profile based on patient-reported symptoms. Modafinil in doses of 100-400 mg was administered as augmentation to ongoing antidepressant therapy in patients with partial response and suffering from hypersomnia. The total number of patients was 21 and 43% of these were responders (i.e. had a score reduction of >50% on the Major Depression Inventory (MDI) as well as remitters, i.e. the remission rate was 43%. At endpoint, the responders had psychological distress scores on the Symptom Checklist (SCL-92) on the level of the general Danish population. Baseline characteristics for responders were lower scores on
depression
, hostility, anxiety, somatization,
obsession
and psychoticism. Modafinil thus appears to be an appropriate augmentation to antidepressant treatment, leading to a remission rate of 43%. However, the results from this open-label study need ot be confirmed in a placebo-controlled trial.
...
PMID:Modafinil augmentation in depressed patients with partial response to antidepressants: a pilot study on self-reported symptoms covered by the Major Depression Inventory (MDI) and the Symptom Checklist (SCL-92). 1620 39
The aim of the present study was to explore the relationship between happiness and death distress (death anxiety, death
depression
, and death
obsession
) in 275 volunteer Kuwaiti undergraduates. They responded to the Oxford Happiness Inventory, the Death Anxiety Scale, the Arabic Scale of Death Anxiety, the Death
Depression
Scale-Revised, and the Death
Obsession
Scale. Gender differences were significant on all 5 scales, with women showing a lower mean score of happiness and a higher mean score for the death distress. All the correlations between happiness and the death distress scales were non-significant except one pertaining to happiness and death
depression
(negative) in women. Two oblique factors were extracted: death distress and happiness. Therefore, these constructs represent 2 distinct and independent factors.
...
PMID:Happiness and death distress: two separate factors. 1626 99
The aim of this study is to demonstrate the regional cerebral blood flows (rCBF) of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) patients compared to controls by using Tc-99m-HMPAO SPECT. Sixteen OCD and seven control subjects were admitted into the study. Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Rating Scale (Y-BOCS), Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale (HDRS), and Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HARS) were applied to the patients. The rCBF was found to be decreased in right basal ganglion in OCD patients. The right basal ganglion rCBF was negatively correlated with Y-BOCS total and compulsion scores. The left thalamus rCBF was negatively correlated with Y-BOCS
obsession
score. Right and left cingulate rCBF were negatively correlated with HDRS score. The results indicating hypoperfusion in right basal ganglion in OCD patients support previous findings about dysfunction of frontal-subcortical circuits in this disorder.
...
PMID:Right basal ganglion hypoperfusion in obsessive compulsive disorder patients demonstrated by Tc-99m-HMPAO brain perfusion spect: a controlled study. 1628 31
Because of inconsistency among previous reports that examined neuropsychological function and treatment response of OCD patients, we here consider the heterogeneity of OCD; for example: symptom-based clusters, degree of insight, age of onset, and comorbid diagnoses. In this study, we examined neuropsychological function and the treatment response of OCD patients. Thirty-two OCD patients participated in this study. We examined their clinical symptoms by Y-BOCS, MOCI and other scales, and examined their cognitive function with several neuropsychological tests including: WAIS-R, Stroop test, WCST, WMS-R and R-OCFT. We then randomly assigned them to three treatment packages including: behavior therapy, pharmacotherapy by fluvoxamine, and controlled therapy. The patients were divided into two groups by duration of illness: short to middle range group (Group S, n=17, 5.5+/-3.1 years), and long range group (Group L, n=15, 20.3+/-6.1 years). The mean age of Group L was higher than that of Group S (Group S: 30.6+/-9.7 years old, Group L: 36.1+/-6.2 years old). There was no significant group difference in sex ratio or number of years of education. The mean age of onset of Group L was significantly lower than that of Group S (Group S; 25.5+/-10.2 years old, Group L; 15.3+/-7.1 years old). The total Y-BOCS mean score and MOCI score showed no group differences. These two groups showed similar clinical characteristics such as the severity of OC symptom, OC subtypes, and comorbid
depression
. Group S, however, demonstrated significantly more
obsession
with the need for correction. Group L had significantly higher levels of anxiety and compulsion. There were also no group differences in the mean HDRS or STAI scores. As a result, compared to Group S, Group L showed significant attention deficit in the Stroop test and the WMS-R though other neuropsychological dysfunctions such as intellectual level, executive function, verbal memory, and nonverbal memory were found in this group. Concerning treatment response, Group L showed little improvement by pharmacotherapy. Behavior therapy brought significant improvement to all patients of both groups. Long duration of the illness might cause attention deficit and a lowered pharmaceutical response in OCD patients.
...
PMID:[Duration effect on neuropsychological function and treatment response of OCD]. 1650 26
A convenient sample of 568 Egyptian female nursing undergraduates (M age = 19.5 yr., SD = 1.6) was recruited. Their scores on the Satisfaction with Life Scale were correlated with scores on the Death Anxiety Scale, Arabic Scale of Death Anxiety, Death
Depression
Scale-Revised, and the Death
Obsession
Scale. Pearson correlations were significant but small [-.15, -.18, -.14 (p < .01) and -.08 (ns), respectively], indicating their predictive and practical value is negligible.
...
PMID:Satisfaction with life and death distress. 1651 96
The purpose of the present study was to explore the relationship between religiosity and death distress (death anxiety, death
depression
, and death
obsession
) among a sample (N = 570) of Egyptian women nursing undergraduates, mainly Muslims. Their ages ranged from 17 to 25. The correlations between religiosity and both death anxiety and death
depression
were significant and negative, whereas the correlation between religiosity and death
obsession
was not. Significant, positive and high correlations were found between the different scales of death distress. Factor analysis of all the correlations yielded a single, salient, and bipolar factor labeled 'death distress versus religiosity.' It was argued that different situational variables may have had influenced the conceptual relationship between religiosity and death distress, including the young ages of the present sample.
...
PMID:Religiosity and death distress in Arabic college students. 1657 33
The present study examined the association between belief in life after death and six measures of psychiatric symptomology in a national sample of 1403 adult Americans. A statistically significant inverse relationship was found between belief in life after death and symptom severity on all six symptom clusters that were examined (i.e., anxiety,
depression
,
obsession
-compulsion, paranoia, phobia, and somatization) after controlling for demographic and other variables (e.g., stress and social support) that are known to influence mental health. No significant association was found between the frequency of attending religious services and any of the mental health measures. The results are discussed in terms of the potentially salubrious effects of religious belief systems on mental health. These findings suggest that it may be more valuable to focus on religious beliefs than on religious practices and behaviors in research on religion and mental health.
...
PMID:Belief in life after death and mental health: findings from a national survey. 1684 Aug 49
In a sample of 112 Kuwaiti college students, approval of physician-assisted suicide was not significantly correlated with scores on trait anxiety, death
depression
, or death
obsession
.
...
PMID:Correlations of attitudes toward physician-assisted suicide, death depression, death obsession, and trait anxiety. 1693 70
The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between disordered eating and three psychological variables (obsessive and depressive symptoms, self-esteem) and body mass index (BMI) in a sample of male and female college students in Turkey. Maudsley Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory (MOCI), Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI), Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale (RSES), Eating Attitude Test (EAT), and Bulimic Investigatory Test, Edinburgh (BITE) scales were administered to 408 college students (279 women; 129 men). By multiple regression analysis, the scales of MOCI, BDI, RSES and BMI were used as potential predictors of EAT and BITE scores for each gender. Obsessionality and BMI were the strongest predictors of bulimic and anorexic symptoms in women. In men, while the strongest predictors of bulimic symptoms were the depressive and obsessive symptoms, the best predictor of anorexic symptoms was
obsession
scores. There were significant differences and some similarities between male and female Turkish college students.
...
PMID:Psychological and physical correlates of disordered eating in male and female Turkish college students. 1695 37
This paper aims to elucidate some dysfunctional aspects of health care utilisation by combining concepts from modern systems theory and from psychoanalysis. Contemporary health care in industrialised countries can be conceived as a social system in terms of modern systems theory. According to this theory, social systems are operating on the basis of a 'guiding difference,' which in the case of health care is the distinction between 'healthy' and 'ill.' Its rigidity in adhering to the healthy-ill dichotomy exposes health care to being collusively entangled in the interpersonal defence arrangements of patients. In the psychoanalytic view, individual conflicts can be warded off from consciousness not only by intrapsychic defence, but also by interpersonal defence mechanisms. These mechanisms involve the patients' close social environment, often including doctors and hospitals. The functioning and the motivational structure of health care itself shows features of neurotic defence: not only its representatives, but health care as a whole act in a rigid, obsessive manner in order to separate the healthy from the ill and to battle against (presumed) diseases. This
obsession
sometimes results in excessive diagnostic activism and in inconsiderate application of aggressive medical treatments. Both are inappropriate with regard to the salient problem of modern medicine: the increase of chronic nonfatal diseases like
depression
and chronic pain. The described defence mechanisms are unconscious not only to patients but also to health care professionals (let alone health politicians), and are contributing to dysfunctional health care overuse.
...
PMID:Psychosocial and psychodynamic factors influencing health care utilisation. 1719 75
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