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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)
Few brief self-report memory questionnaires are available, and non has been well validated. We designed a brief questionnaire, the MAC-Q, to assess age-related memory decline. Validity and reliability of the MAC-Q were assessed in 232 subjects meeting diagnostic criteria for age-associated
memory impairment
(AAMI). Concurrent validity of the MAC-Q was supported by a significant correlation (r = .41, p < .001) with a lengthy, well-validated memory questionnaire. Multiple regression analysis indicated that memory test scores were significant predictors of MAC-Q scores. MAC-Q scores were not predicted by Hamilton
Depression
Scale scores, suggesting that memory complaint in AAMI is not related to affective status. Internal consistency and test-retest reliability of the MAC-Q were satisfactory. Our data support the validity and reliability of the MAC-Q, a new brief memory questionnaire. The MAC-Q is of particular relevance to the assessment of AAMI, but should also prove useful in any clinical or research setting requiring a brief index of memory complaint.
...
PMID:Assessment of memory complaint in age-associated memory impairment: the MAC-Q. 147 4
1. Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is a rare but potentially treatable form of dementia. Shunting will improve functioning in 40% to 50% of patients. 2. The classic symptoms of NPH are dementia characterized by mild
memory impairment
and apathy, ataxic gait, and urinary hesitancy or incontinence. 3. The patient with NPH may present with psychiatric symptoms of
depression
, paranoia, visual hallucinations, irrational hostility, and aggression or mania. 4. Patients with NPH are indifferent about activities of daily living and personal safety and require close supervision.
...
PMID:Normal pressure hydrocephalus. A potentially reversible form of dementia. 161 84
Twenty-seven medication-free, depressed patients (Research Diagnostic Criteria, endogenous subtype) were administered a comprehensive battery testing memory and other cognitive functions before and after a series of bilateral, brief-pulse electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) administered according to a dosage-titration procedure (8.9 +/- 1.981 treatments). A subset of patients (N = 14) were reexamined at 1 month and 6 months after the conclusion of the treatment. Anterograde (verbal and visuospatial tasks), as well as retrograde (famous and personal events), memory function was significantly impaired at the end of the ECT series. By 1 month follow-up, performance had improved to pre-ECT (
depression
) levels on both anterograde and retrograde tasks and exceeded these by 6 months. The memory deficits induced by ECT were not a consequence of generalized cognitive impairment. Furthermore,
depression
and ECT were shown to independently affect memory, and recovery from
depression
was not a consequence of the amnestic action of the treatment. The results generally confirm previous reports regarding the nature of ECT-induced
memory impairment
, in a different language and culture. They suggest that long-term effects of the treatment on memory are even less prominent than previously observed.
...
PMID:Early and long-term effects of electroconvulsive therapy and depression on memory and other cognitive functions. 191 54
To better understand the nature of the memory deficit in patients with multiple sclerosis, we designed a study to compare automatic vs effortful memory processes. Forty-one patients with definite multiple sclerosis and 45 demographically matched normal control subjects were administered two tasks designed to assess both automatic (monitoring frequency and modality) and effortful (free and cued-recall) processing. Results indicated that patients with multiple sclerosis, as expected, were significantly impaired on memory measures requiring effort, but performed normally on automatic measures. Performance on the memory indexes did not correlate with self-reported
depression
. The implications of these findings for delineating the locus of the
memory impairment
in multiple sclerosis is discussed.
...
PMID:Automatic memory processes in patients with multiple sclerosis. 192
Three studies were conducted on elderly patients with dementia. A case of control study on life styles before falling ill revealed that "intake of sweets" was significantly associated with clinically diagnosed dementia of the Alzheimer's type. Evaluation of treatments of outpatients suggests that proper care and some kinds of neuroleptics are useful for alleviation of abnormal behavior such as agitation, wandering, hallucination, insomnia and
depression
, but not for improvement of cognitive function and memory. A study on caregivers of elderly demented patients was undertaken to determine the relationship between the components of burden and symptoms of patients. Insomnia and abnormal behavior of patients correlated with physical and mental components of the burden of caregivers.
Memory disturbance
, psychological symptoms and deterioration in ADL correlated with physical burden. These studies indicate that symptoms accompanying dementia such as insomnia, wandering, hallucination and agitation should be the treated intensively for the purpose of improvement of the quality of the lives of patients and caregivers.
...
PMID:[Prevention and treatment of dementia: what should we do today?]. 194 24
Lyme borreliosis, a tick-borne multisystem disease, may cause a variety of neurologic complications, including meningoencephalitis and encephalopathy. To evaluate neurobehavioral function following treated Lyme borreliosis, 15 patients with Lyme disease and complaints of persistent cognitive difficulty a mean of 6.7 months following antibiotic treatment underwent neuropsychological evaluation and were compared with 10 healthy controls, matched in aggregate for age and education, who underwent the identical neuropsychological assessment. Compared with controls, patients with Lyme disease exhibited marked impairment on memory tests and particularly on selective reminding measures of memory retrieval. The
memory impairment
did not correlate with serum or cerebrospinal fluid anti-Borrelia burgdorferi antibody titers and was not explained by magnetic resonance imaging findings or
depression
. The cause of this encephalopathy is currently unknown; however, indirect effects of systemic infection or other toxic-metabolic factors may be partly responsible.
...
PMID:Cognitive functioning in late Lyme borreliosis. 141 7
Anxiety in the elderly is often mixed with
depression
, and successful antidepressant treatment will often also eliminate the anxiety. For specific symptoms of generalized anxiety, benzodiazepines are important therapeutic agents. Selection of an appropriate benzodiazepine is guided by pharmacokinetic properties of individual drugs. Long half-life benzodiazepines usually are not preferred for older patients because of cumulative toxicity. Among the short half-life drugs, high-potency compounds (e.g., lorazepam, alprazolam) may be more toxic than low-potency compounds (e.g., oxazepam). Although confirming controlled data are lacking, clinical experience suggests that dependence, rebound symptoms, and
memory impairment
may be more intense with lorazepam and alprazolam. Clinicians should endeavor to use benzodiazepines for short periods when treating the elderly. Long-term use has been reported effective and nonhazardous, but subtle and gradual cognitive impairment may occur in other patients over time. Buspirone has also been reported as an effective, nontoxic antianxiety compound for older patients, but more experience and comparative research data are needed.
...
PMID:Anxiety in the elderly: treatment strategies. 197 20
A wide variety of conditions seen in medical practice can produce
memory impairment
(amnesia). Normal aging,
depression
, and anxiety are commonly associated with memory difficulties, as are many neurologic conditions. Systemic illnesses can impair memory by injuring vulnerable limbic regions sensitive to hypoxia or hypoglycemia. Commonly used over-the-counter and prescription medications can likewise cause amnesia. These conditions disrupt memory in characteristic ways. Recent studies suggest that immediate, recent, and remote memory functions have different neuroanatomic substrates, as do the processes of registration, retention, and retrieval. New classifications have emerged to explain the evidence for multiple memory subsystems. The neuropharmacology of memory now includes several peptides in addition to cholinergic and noradrenergic pathways. Critical limbic regions have been discovered that mediate memory consolidation, and neuronal mechanisms such as long-term potentiation are being implicated in the unique capacity of these areas to permit new learning to take place.
...
PMID:Amnestic disorders. Pathophysiology and patterns of memory dysfunction. 215 98
We compared the performance of 50 multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and 35 normal controls on a variety of memory tasks to determine the nature and severity of memory deficits in the MS patients and the proportion of patients affected. We also determined the relationship between memory and other cognitive functions, demographic factors, disease characteristics,
depression
, and psychoactive medication. We found significant differences between patients and controls on almost all memory tests. Patterns of learning, effects of interference, and improvement with cuing were similar for both groups. Thirty percent of patients showed severe
memory impairment
, 30% were moderately impaired, and 40% were mildly or not impaired.
Memory dysfunction
was related to impairment of other cognitive functions, lower socioeconomic status, chronic progressive type of MS, and use of antianxiety medication, but not to severity of disability, duration of MS symptoms or
depression
.
...
PMID:Memory impairment in multiple sclerosis. 221 78
Verbal and visuospatial memory and dichotic listening performance were examined in 15 acutely depressed patients with no history of ECT, 17 depressed patients currently in remission, 15 remitted depressed patients who had received ECT six months or more in the past, and 20 normal controls. The neuropsychological functioning of an additional group of 10 acutely depressed patients was also studied before and two weeks after ECT. The results revealed some evidence of logical and autobiographical
memory impairment
two weeks following ECT, but no evidence that ECT impaired dichotic listening ability. Rather, a normalisation of hemispheric laterality was apparent on the dichotic listening task following ECT and the concomitant relief from
depression
. There was also no evidence of cognitive dysfunction on any task in individuals who were tested six months or more following their last ECT treatment.
...
PMID:Dichotic perception and memory following electroconvulsive treatment for depression. 224 66
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