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)

Thirty-two patients with clinically definite multiple sclerosis were evaluated with neuropsychological procedures and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Neuropsychological evaluation included assessment of language, memory, cognition, visuospatial skills, and depression. Significant impairment in any three areas, compatible with diagnosis of a dementia syndrome, was observed in 28% of these patients, and lesser or no cognitive impairment characterized the remaining patients. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to evaluate the number and distribution of lesions as well as the presence of cerebral atrophy and atrophy of specific anatomic structures such as the corpus callosum. Results suggest that neither the number of lesions, the distribution of lesions, nor the extent of generalized cerebral atrophy was significantly greater in demented compared with non-demented patients. The primary finding was that atrophy of the corpus callosum was significantly more extensive on MRI scans in demented patients. Although the callosum itself may not be implicated directly in the pathogenesis of dementia, the presence of callosal atrophy on MRI scans should alert the physician to the possible occurrence of dementia in patients with multiple sclerosis.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging correlates of dementia in multiple sclerosis. 359 63

Forty-four Parkinson patients (19 patients of the rigid-akinetic type, 13, of the rigid-akinetic-tremor type, and 12, of the tremor type) were included in a study in order to analyse correlations of the expression of the motor symptoms tremor, rigidity, akinesia, with other clinical parameters, computertomographic aspect of brain atrophy and psychometrically assessed cognitive parameters. Rigidity and akinesia are significantly positively correlated with the severity of motor dysability, stage of the disease, and brain atrophy, as is akinesia with a history of pharmacotoxic psychosis. Tremor is significantly negatively correlated with motor dysability, stage of the disease, and history of pharmacotoxic psychosis. Akinesia is correlated with visuomotor dysfunction (tested with Bender Gestalt Test) and rigidity with the depression score (Zung scale). The tremor type is favorable, the rigid-akinetic type unfavorable with respect to motor disability and psychosis.
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PMID:Prognostic implications of the motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease with respect to clinical, computertomographic and psychometric parameters. 378 47

Thirty six male and 45 female patients (mean age 66 years) suffering from either dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) or dementia of vascular type (DVT) with comparable severity and suffering from depression in old age were included in the investigation. The study was performed to evaluate the diagnostic value of Ischemic Score, EEG and CT scan of the brain in differentiating dementia types and depression in old age. The patients underwent physical, psychiatric, psychometric, neurological, neurophysiological and CT scan examinations. Clinical diagnosis and diagnosis related to Ischemic Score were consistent in 86% of DAT and in 65% of DVT. Patients suffering from DVT showed significantly higher incidence of distinct Ischemic Scale items than was found in DAT patients. The Ischemic Scale items were found to be of major importance in differentiating vascular dementia from both DAT and depression. However, it was insufficient to distinguish between the latter two. In EEG, general slowing predominated in DAT (68%), and focal disturbances in DVT (71%). Patients with DAT and depression could not be differentiated on the basis of their EEG findings. CT scans of the brain yielded a higher incidence of brain atrophy in patients with DAT (71%) and DVT (70%) as compared to depressive patients (37%). In DAT, ventricular enlargement seems to be rather disease- than age-related. Psychological testing showed abnormalities in attention and memory performance in DAT and DVT to a significantly greater extent as compared to depression. This study demonstrated that the combination of Ischemic Score and EEG was found to be most valid in differentiating DAT from DVT. Additional cranial computerized tomography and the psychological testing of attention and memory were able to confirm the diagnosis of dementia and to differentiate dementia from depression in old age.
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PMID:Validity of the ischemic score in degenerative and vascular dementia and depression in old age. 383 87

The study population consisted of 1010 in patients and 81 control subjects. Patients suffering from schizophrenia, cerebral atrophy of unknown origin, dementia, depression, mental retardation, and ethanol-induced brain deterioration (alcoholics) were skin tested with 25 micrograms of S-100 protein and neuron-specific enolase isolated from fresh human brain. Evaluation of delayed skin hypersensitivity reactions at 24 hr revealed a high incidence of positive responses to S-100 protein: heavy alcoholism, 96.8%; depression, 94.1%; cerebral atrophy, 92.6%; dementia, 91.2%; schizophrenia, 87.7%; and mental retardation, 69.4%. The incidence of positive reactions to neuron-specific enolase in schizophrenics was 91.6%. Of 58 control subjects tested with S-100 protein, 6.8% were positive, whereas of 23 normal individuals tested with neuron-specific enolase, 6.4% developed mild skin reactions. These data suggest a close relationship between delayed hypersensitivity to neural tissue antigens and immunopsychiatric diseases, and they imply that cell-mediated immune mechanisms are involved in the pathogenesis of certain mental disorders.
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PMID:Neural tissue hypersensitivity in psychiatric disorders with immunologic features. 400 35

The clinical presentation of three patients with meningiomas at different frontal sites is described. They had been ill for 3, 25, and 43 years before the tumour was demonstrated radiologically. Apathy, incontinence, dementia, and fits were seen in association with middle and superior frontal lesions, and may be mistaken for symptoms of involutional depression or presenile cerebral atrophy. In contrast, excitement and hallucinosis were seen in association with a basal frontal lesion, and may mimic psychotic syndromes like hypomania and schizophrenia, particularly if the tumour encroaches on the third ventricle and adjacent structures. Irreversible loss of myelin and axons in the frontal areas of brain surrounding the tumour may have contributed to the clinical picture of the syndrome shown by these patients.
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PMID:Three cases of frontal meningiomas presenting psychiatrically. 496 22

Due to asymmetry of brain neurotransmitters and differential hemispheric information processing modes, it is suggested that the excessive use of one information processing mode could engender a state of brain reactivity whose neurochemical correlates would be either a rise in melatonin or beta-endorphin in systemic circulation. Since melatonin and beta-endorphin have opposite effects on lung-mediated regulation of prostaglandins, it is further suggested that the pulmonary inactivation of prostaglandin E1 would either be increased or inhibited. Low levels of PGE1 would engender high levels of PGE2 whose effects would explain the findings in schizophrenics of: 'reducing' pattern of visual evoked response, cerebral atrophy, and viral and autoimmune phenomena. The primacy of the disordered cognitive style in leading up to the immunological, biochemical and neuropathological processes is stressed. Implications of this model for understanding depression, anxiety and phobic disorders, autism, attention deficit disorder, obesity, alcoholism, smoking, drug addiction, sexual deviations, and certain psychosomatic and psychophysiological disorders are suggested.
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PMID:How information processing mode could affect prostaglandin E1 metabolism and lung inactivation: relevance of hemispheric specialization, neurotransmitter asymmetry and brain reactivity. 614 17

Psychiatric patients (208 with cerebral atrophy, 46 with dementia, 82 with depression and 481 with schizophrenia) with control subjects (56 normal individuals and patients with neurosis) were skin-tested with human S-100 brain protein, soluble fraction from the brain and liver protein. The local Arthus and delayed hypersensitivity reactions were read at 4-6 hr and at 24 hr respectively. The great majority of tested psychiatric patients developed positive Arthus and delayed skin reactions to S-100 protein and soluble brain protein fraction. A small number of control subjects responded to those antigens. The results obtained suggest that there is a correlation between local cutaneous sensitivity to neurotissue antigens and psychiatric diseases, and that both humoral and cell-mediated immunity are involved in the pathogenesis and development of cerebral atrophy, dementia, depression and schizophrenia.
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PMID:Schizophrenia and other psychiatric diseases: evidence for neurotissue hypersensitivity. 644 13

To confirm and extend previous observations concerning the correlation between cell-mediated immunity and psychiatric diseases, 511 patients with schizophrenia, cerebral atrophy, dementia, and mental retardation, and 32 control subjects and 27 control patients were skin-tested with human brain S-100 protein and human liver protein: 70.2-93.1% of tested psychiatric patients developed positive skin hypersensitivity reactions to S-100 protein, while 2.8-20.7% of patients reacted to liver protein. Of control subjects, 6.2-7.4% responded to S-100 protein, and 7.4-9.4% to liver protein. The findings indicate that cell-mediated immune processes may be involved in brain mechanisms underlying cerebral atrophy, depression, dementia, schizophrenia, and mental retardation.
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PMID:Delayed skin hypersensitivity reactions to human brain S-100 protein in psychiatric patients. 710 20

Accurate diagnosis of the dementias is difficult. Of 100 patients referred to a specialized outpatient dementia clinic, at least 26 were not demented. Fifteen had depression, 7 had miscellaneous other neuropsychiatric disorders, and 4 were normal. Specialized dementia clinics help to improve diagnostic accuracy. Three diagnostic errors appeared particularly important: failure to recognize depression, especially in the presence of mild organic brain disease; equating brain atrophy on the computerized tomogram with clinical dementia; and failure to distinguish focal from global intellectual impairment. For confirmation, the diagnosis of dementia requires follow-up evaluation, brain biopsy, or autopsy.
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PMID:Overdiagnosis of dementia. 726 33

To determine whether patients with geriatric depression have specific alterations in brain morphology, internal (ventricles) and external (frontal, temporal, and parieto-occipital) components of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) spaces were examined. Planimetric measurements of computed tomographic (CT) scans from patients with geriatric depression were compared with measurements from two age- and sex-matched control groups: normal control subjects and patients with primary degenerative dementia. Scans of 34 patients (6 men, 28 women; mean age = 70.7 years) who met DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria for major depression, 29 patients with DSM-III-R primary degenerative dementia (8 men, 21 women; mean age = 71.2 years), and 43 nonpsychiatric control subjects (10 men, 33 women; mean age = 70.8 years) were evaluated. The areas of the frontal and parieto-occipital sulci, the Sylvian fissures, and the lateral and third ventricles were measured separately for the right and left hemispheres. Compared with the control subjects, patients with geriatric depression revealed a remarkable enlargement (up to 125%) of the left Sylvian fissure on several levels and a more subtle enlargement of the ventricles, cortical sulci, and right Sylvian fissure (20-50%). The laterality index differed significantly between depressed patients and normal control subjects (but not between the demented patients and the normal control group) only for the Sylvian fissure. Demented patients showed a considerable brain atrophy that affected all CSF components (enlargement of 30-160%) but the left temporal region was less affected than in the depressed patients. Compared with the findings in geriatric depression, ventricular enlargement was significant in dementia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Brain morphology assessed by computed tomography in patients with geriatric depression, patients with degenerative dementia, and normal control subjects. 748 Mar 87


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