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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lateral X-ray pictures of the skull in certain several and chronic disorders of the blood as thalassaemia, congenital haemolytic anaemia, sickle cell anaemia and
iron deficiency
disease show frequently changes of the outlines of the cranial bones. They consist of a double contour of the outer cranial border and on the interior side below the sagittal sutura of a band-like shadow or of multiple stripes and lines running parallel to the carnial vault. They concern the parietal bones and may extend from the bregma till to the lamda or occupy only a part of this distance. The roentgenological features are due to the enlargement of the crainal bones, the bulging out of both parietal bondes, the sometimes enlarged and deepened borders of the sulcus sagittalis superior and particularly to the furrow and
depression
on the skull above the sagittal suture caused by the protruding parietal bones on both sides. As these different abnormal structures must be passed by the picturing X-ray, effects of superposition and interference are produced. Longitudinal ridges or bony edges which could explain the roentgenological findings could not be established. Since the peculiar alterations of the cranial bones are mainly found in the mentioned blood disorders, where they are caused by the overgrowing red marrow, they also display the same roentgenological features. These features are, therefore, a characteristic sign of these diseases.
...
PMID:[Double contours and companion shadows in the skull associated with anaemias (author's transl)]. 15 80
A brief survey of the literature on the side effects of oral contraceptives is given. Of the many influences on laboratory results those related to (reversible) cholestasis or to a change in protein synthesis are the most important ones. A decrease of the tolerance for glucose is sometimes observed. Few of the clinical side effects attributed to oral contraceptives can be directly correlated with the pharmaceutical action of these drugs. Many so-called side effects of the pill are due to other factors such as altered psychosociological or sexual behavior, etc. However, among users of oral contraceptives there is a significant decrease in the number of benign tumors, particularly of the breast, the uterus and the ovaries. It is still an open question if this also signifies protection against cancer. Anemias due to
iron deficiency
are less frequent among users of the pill. According to recent studies arterial hypertension and cholecystopathies are probably directly related to oral contraceptives, but a causal relation has not been proven for migraine, headaches,
depression
etc. An elevated risk for vascular complications seems to be well established: there is a 4-6-fold increase of the estimated risk for venous thrombo-embolism and a 4-9-fold increase for cerebrovascular accidents among users of oral contraceptives when compared with nonpregnant women of the same age not using the pill. Oral contraceptives act as a supplementary factor of risk which may cumulate with other similar factors, such as arterial hypertension, hyperlipidemia, overweight, smoking etc. Mortality due to oral contraceptives is very much 10-50 x) inferior to the one caused by delivery and the post partum state. Since the number of failures in prevention of pregnancies is less for oral contraceptives than for any other method of contraception, the overall risk of death under oral contraceptives in this age group of women is least.
...
PMID:[Real and seeming side-effects of oral contraceptives with an emphasis on medical and haematological problems. Review of literature (author's transl)]. 79 Mar 74
The effect of 10 days of total fasting (energy deprivation) on blood polymorphonuclear granulocyte functions, leukocyte numbers, iron and transferrin levels was evaluated in 14 healthy, normal-weight males. Granulocytes from 7 of the subjects were tested in vitro. A statistically significant
depression
was noted in their bactericidal capacity against Staph. aureus. The 14 subjects showed a marked decrease in the stainable activity of granulocyte alkaline phosphatase and decreases were noted in plasma iron and serum transferrin levels. The iron saturation of serum transferrin was unchanged. Thus, impairment of granulocyte bactericidal functions may occur secondarily to short-term total energy deprivation, in the absence of
iron deficiency
.
...
PMID:Fasting (acute energy deprivation) in man: effect on polymorphonuclear granulocyte functions, plasma iron and serum transferrin. 96 52
Cell-mediated immunity has been studied in patients with 1) megaloblastic anemia of folic acid deficiency, 2)megaloblastic anemia of pregnancy, or 3) iron-deficiency anemia. Using dinitrochlorobenzene skin tests, phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocyte transformation, and rosette inhibition by antilymphocyte globulin, we have shown that cell-mediated immunity is depressed in megaloblastic anemia due to folate deficiency; this
depression
was reversed by folate treatment. Cell-mediated immunity was not impaired by iron-deficiency anemia. Suggested interactions between
iron deficiency
and folate metabolism were not clarified by these studies.
...
PMID:Depressed cell-mediated immunity in megaloblastic anemia due to folic acid deficiency. 111 20
Vitamin B12 deficiency develops over a slowly progressive continuum. Early manifestations may be generalized weakness or fatigue, indigestion, diarrhea, or
depression
. Pernicious anemia is considered the classic cause, but others include malabsorption because of achlorhydria or other gastric dysfunction, fish tapeworm infection, and strict vegetarianism.
Iron deficiency
often coexists. Because presentation is often atypical, vitamin B12 deficiency is a diagnostic consideration whenever neuropsychiatric signs or symptoms are unexplained.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 deficiency. Important new concepts in recognition. 220 95
We conducted a cross-sectional epidemiologic study to assess the association between blood lead level and hematocrit in 579 one to five year-old children living near a primary lead smelter in 1974. Blood lead levels ranged from 0.53 to 7.91 mumol/L (11 to 164 micrograms/dl). To predict hematocrit as a function of blood lead level and age, we derived non-linear regression models and fit percentile curves. We used logistic regression to predict the probability of hematocrit values less than 35 per cent. We found a strong non-linear, dose-response relationship between blood lead level and hematocrit. This relationship was influenced by age, but (in this age group) not by sex; the effect was strongest in youngest children. In one year-olds, the age group most severely affected, the risk of an hematocrit value below 35 percent was 2 percent above background at blood lead levels between 0.97 and 1.88 mumol/L (20 and 39 micrograms/dl), 18 percent above background at lead levels of 1.93 to 2.85 mumol/L (40 to 59 micrograms/dl), and 40 percent above background at lead levels of 2.9 mumol/L (60 micrograms/dl) and greater; background was defined as a blood lead level below 1.88 mumol/L (20 micrograms/dl). This effect appeared independent of
iron deficiency
. These findings suggest that blood lead levels close to the currently recommended limit value of 1.21 mumol/L (25 micrograms/dl) are associated with dose-related
depression
of hematocrit in young children.
...
PMID:Lead-induced anemia: dose-response relationships and evidence for a threshold. 229 59
The effect of
iron deficiency
on work capacity was studied in groups of rats that had received diets with iron contents ranging between 9 and 50 mg/kg diet from 3 to 6 wk of age. Maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) declined only 16% with a decrease in hemoglobin (Hb) from 14 to 8 g/dl and fell sharply only below a Hb of 7 g/dl. Duration until exhaustion in a treadmill exercise of submaximal intensity (endurance) showed no significant
depression
between a Hb of 14 and 10 g/dl. However, endurance declined abruptly by 73% between a Hb of 10 and 8 g/dl. The VO2max results are in accord with known compensatory mechanisms that help to maintain delivery of O2 to tissues until anemia becomes severe. The sharp fall in endurance with relatively mild
iron deficiency
suggests a lack of similarly effective compensations for decreased oxidative capacity of muscle.
...
PMID:Work performance in iron deficiency of increasing severity. 298 75
The hematologic status of 265 patients with rheumatoid arthritis was assessed. In the group as a whole, a mild
depression
in the hemoglobin concentration and mean cell volume (MCV) was associated with an increase in the red blood cell distribution width (RDW), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and platelet count. Bone marrow trephine biopsies and further measurements of iron status and disease activity were done in [a further] 38 more anemic patients, and the findings in those with absent marrow iron (
iron deficiency
) were compared with those having stainable stores (anemia of chronic disorders). The RDW was raised in both, and there was no significant difference between the two groups. The concentrations of nonheme iron in the marrow and of serum ferritin were significantly lower in the iron-deficient group, but the geometric mean serum ferritin of 34 micrograms/L was still a good deal higher than that associated with uncomplicated
iron deficiency
. This was presumably because of the fact that the serum ferritin, which was significantly correlated with the ESR (r 0.55; P less than 0.0004) and C-reactive protein (CRP) r 0.41; P less than 0.01), was also functioning as an acute phase protein. While there was a weak correlation (r 0.37; P less than 0.04) between the marrow nonheme iron and the serum ferritin concentrations, it disappeared when nonactive patients with normal CRP concentrations were excluded. The absence of a correlation is unlike the findings that have previously been noted in other chronic inflammatory conditions and in neoplasia. This raises the possibility that serum ferritin concentrations in rheumatoid arthritis may reflect, in part at least, another store of iron located in affected joints.
...
PMID:Hematologic and iron-related measurements in rheumatoid arthritis. 381 50
Severe copper deficiency was induced in rats by rearing nursing dams and their offsprings on a semisynthetic diet comprising all the requisite nutrients and trace metals except copper. The copper-deprived rats exhibited growth retardation, severe anaemia, loss of caeruloplasmin, decrease of cytochrome oxidase, accumulation of salt-soluble collagen and a drastic decrease in iron in plasma and liver. Apart from these characteristic signs of deficiency, a marked inhibition of protein synthesis was found to occur both in vivo and in cell-free liver preparations. The curtailed ability to carry out endogenously coded amino acid incorporation into protein contrasted with the unimpaired poly(U)-acid-directed phenylalanine polymerization. This inhibition pattern, as well as the attendant disaggregation of the liver polyribosomes, suggested that the primary biosynthetic lesion was located at the stage of peptide-chain initiation. Concurrently with this alteration there was a pronounced depletion of the hepatic ATP content, associated with a parallel
depression
of mitochondrial respiration and an enhancement of ATPase activity. Supplementation of the copper-deficient diet with a 2-4-fold excess of iron (relative to the standard diet) prevented growth retardation and anaemia and restored normal energy metabolism, as well as unimpaired protein-synthesizing capacity. The conclusion that these disturbances were primarily determined by the secondary
iron deficiency
was also borne out by the finding that similar alterations occurred in rats maintained on a copper-sufficient but iron-deficient diet. On the other hand, the iron-fortified diet failed to reverse the other signs of copper deficiency, namely the loss of caeruloplasmin, the diminished rate of cytochrome oxidase and the increase of soluble collagen. The interrelations between the various biochemical lesions induced by deprivation of copper or iron are discussed and the possible role of ATP depletion in determining the derangement of protein synthesis is considered.
...
PMID:Biochemical lesions in copper-deficient rats caused by secondary iron deficiency. Derangement of protein synthesis and impairment of energy metabolism. 625 58
The influence of an oral and intramuscular Fe-application on the nutrient (dry matter, energy, protein and iron) and feed intake resp. (skim milk, calf rearing feed and lucerne hay) of calves during their 56-day stay in the weaning range of a rearing farm was investigated. There were significant differences between the test animal groups with regard to nutrient intake; their levels had the following sequence: B (Fe orally) greater than C (Fe i.m.) greater than A (without Fe-supplement). In the calf rearing organised as graded production the effect of iron intervention on nutrient intake probably occurs as a consequence of the reduction of the
depression
of feed consumption caused by disease. By comparison with the nutrient and feed intake of weaning calves from a different rearing farm one can further conclude that this secondary effect of iron intervention does not only depend on the more or less rapid remedy of the differently marked states of
iron deficiency
of the calves but also on the other rearing conditions (particularly the drinking regime). It is improbable that the oral ferridextran intervention (200 mg Fe/d) carried out provokes excessive iron supply.
...
PMID:[Oral and intramuscular ferridextran intervention in male breeding calves. 3. Nutrient and feed uptake during the stay in the weaning range]. 671 80
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