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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A systematic interview regarding family history was administered to 48 men with bipolar affective illness who were attending a lithium clinic. Several families were found in which both the patient and father had affective disorders, but the mother and maternal second-degree relatives were well. Of 30 men who had histories of hospitalization for mania, three had fathers with affective disorder (all bipolar). Of 18 men who had
depression
and
hypomania
, one father had unipolar depressive disorder. The hypothesis that bipolar manic-depressive illness may be transmitted by a single dominant genetic factor on the X chromosome is discussed in relation to these ill father-ill son pairs.
...
PMID:Psychiatric illness in fathers of men with bipolar primary affective disorder. 118 Jun 63
A review of clinical experience with 163 patients with primary affective disorder indicates that patients with a history characterized by recurrent
depression
interspersed with periods of
hypomania
(bipolar II) may have clinical courses that are distinguishable from bipolar I (
depression
with histories of mania) or unipolar patients. A prior history of suicide attempt and suicide after discharge from the research unit were most frequent among bipolar II patients. The family histories of bipolar I and bipolar II patients revealed similarly increased morbid risks for bipolar illness, whereas no bipolar illness was found in the first-degree relatives of unipolar patients. The suggestion that patients classified as bipolar II be separately considered in future studies of affective disorder is discussed.
...
PMID:Heritable factors in the severity of affective illness. 126 75
This study explores the relationship between male sexual behavior and personality factors, as measured by the MMPI and Sensation Seeking Scale. Subjects were 20 male volunteers, ages 19-58, with a history of long-term sexual relationships. Subjects kept a daily record of sexual behaviors. Frequency of these behaviors was correlated with MMPI and Sensation Seeking (SSS) subscales. Results indicate that both introversion and
depression
show significant correlations with autoerotic stimulation and arousal, but not with heterosexual activity. There is no significant correlation demonstrated between
hypomania
and sexual activity. The Boredom Susceptibility subscale of the SSS correlated significantly with the number of sexual partners.
...
PMID:Personality correlates of male sexual arousal and behavior. 127 90
The average therapeutic effect of classical tricyclic antidepressants and antidepressants of the second and third generation varies between 60-70%. Moreover, tricycklic antidepressants are associated with undesirable effects mostly anticholinergic and "cardiotoxic", which may be a contraindication in particular in patients with multiple diseases and in older age groups. The authors compared two new alternative therapeutic procedures, represented by new highly effective benzodiazepines and anticonvulsants, as regards the therapeutic effect and side-effects. From this comparison ensues that their general therapeutic effect is on average comparable with the effect of tricyclic antidepressants, however, in the spectrum of their undesirable symptoms the anticholinergic effects are absent. Recent benzodiazepines have a better effect on depressions where anxiety and agitation are in the foreground. Their effect on depressive core symptoms is more marked, as compared with anticonvulsants. The most frequent side-effects are fatigue, somnolence and vertigo. Anticonvulsants have a balanced effect in different syndromological forms of
depression
. Undesirable effects are mostly gastrointestinal. In the authors' trials it did not lead to
hypomania
.
...
PMID:[Alternative therapy in the acute phase of endogenous depression--antiepileptics and new benzodiazepines and their comparison]. 136 40
In 57 patients with psicovegetative disorders and abnormal MMPI, abnormality in MMPI scales indicating hypochondriasis, hysteria, gender deviant, paranoia, psychastenia, schizophrenia,
hypomania
or introversion was accompanied by increased plasma catecholamine levels and/or responses to hypoglycemia or by an increased cardiovascular reactivity. A high
depression
scale was associated with lower plasma catecholamine levels. Blunted plasma growth hormone responses to hypoglycemia were found in abnormal
hypomania
scale, and augmented responses of plasma cortisol in abnormal hysteria or schizophrenia scales. Paranoia and
hypomania
traits correlated with absence of morning-evening differences in blood cortisol levels. Electrodermal responses compatible with increased sympathetic activity correlated with high hysteria, gender, paranoia, schizophrenia or
hypomania
MMPI scales. This study indicates that most psychopathological traits in MMPI are accompanied by humoral and/or electrophysiological signs of abnormality of the autonomic nervous system.
...
PMID:Some neurovegetative correlates of Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) 136 36
In the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Program on the Psychobiology of
Depression
study, data were collected on 2226 first-degree relatives of 612 probands. A second, "blind" reassessment of all relatives was attempted 6 years after the initial evaluation. We report on a final sample of 1629 relatives assessed twice using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime version. We summarize methods for using stability of diagnosis to model the relationship between clinical covariates and the probability of being a true case. Moreover, we define an index of caseness that can be used to narrow the criteria for who is a case. Of those positive for major depressive disorder at initial evaluation, 74% were positive (on a lifetime basis) at follow-up (ie, were stable). There is a gradient: 48% of those who had three symptoms and no treatment were stable, compared with 96% of those with eight symptoms and treatment. For major depressive disorder, we found the caseness index for those with lifetime mania more severe than that of nonbipolar patients, with those who had
hypomania
being intermediate. A hierarchical analysis indicated that bipolar I tends to be diagnosed as schizoaffective-manic across occasions, and vice versa. This is consistent with the prior familial analyses that suggest these two diagnoses be combined into a single bipolar phenotype. The analysis for major depressive disorder indicates that caseness appears to represent quantitative, rather than qualitative, differences, with no natural cutoff to identify distinct subgroups. Finally, we discuss implications including utility in genetic analyses, estimation of incidence or prevalence allowing for diagnostic error, and examination of cohort effects.
...
PMID:Stability of psychiatric diagnoses. An application to the affective disorders. 141 36
Glucocorticoid therapy causes psychiatric side effects in many patients. Although psychiatric side effects occur most commonly in women and middle-aged patients, no clinical features have been identified to predict which patients are at risk. The most frequent side effects are mood changes ranging from mild euphoria to
hypomania
, but other reactions, including
depression
, dementia and psychosis, are possible. The incidence of psychiatric side effects is directly related to dosage. The mechanism by which glucocorticoids produce psychiatric symptoms is probably multifactorial, including both direct and indirect effects on the brain. Psychiatric symptoms usually resolve with dosage reduction or controlled withdrawal of glucocorticoids, but antipsychotic medication may be indicated if symptoms are severe or prolonged.
...
PMID:Adverse psychiatric effects of systemic glucocorticoid therapy. 144 65
The historical antecedents of the current diagnostic criteria for mania involve the German phenomenologic descriptions of the late 1800s, the introduction of lithium for treatment and prevention of mania (which broadened the definition of mania in this country), the attempts to subclassify bipolar disorder into at least two subtypes, and the differentiation of patients with mania and
hypomania
from those with
depression
alone. Current diagnostic criteria for bipolar disorder are delineated in DSM-III-R. The differential diagnosis of bipolar disorder includes other conditions that may have manic-like symptoms, including organic mood disorders such as endocrine or metabolic conditions, drug intoxications, and tumors. Mania occurring in the context of substance abuse would be called a secondary mania. In addition, schizoaffective disorder can be diagnosed if there is a manic syndrome superimposed in the context of schizophrenia. Because of the absence of duration criteria for mania in DSM-III-R, the differential diagnosis within the bipolar disorders is largely based on severity and duration of
depression
. A problem in studying mania at present is that the prototypic cases have largely disappeared from treatment centers because of the success of lithium maintenance treatment. Patients available for study at psychiatric treatment facilities are largely treatment resistant, atypical, and likely to have experienced considerable amounts of substance abuse in their histories. Among the changes being considered for DSM-IV are to include duration criteria for mania, to separate bipolar II patients (
depression
and
hypomania
) from bipolar not otherwise specified, to refine the criteria for
hypomania
, and to add rapid cycling to the list of parenthetical modifiers for bipolar disorder with mania and bipolar disorder with
hypomania
.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of bipolar disorder. 154 21
Review of the published literature produces 1-year prevalence rates for major depressive disorder DSM-III between 2.6 and 6.2%, for dysthymia between 2.3 and 3.7%, bipolar disorder 1.0-1.7%. Data from the prospective Zurich Study with four interviews over 10 years give relatively high 10-year prevalence rates for subjects from age 20 to 30 (14.4% major depression, 10.5% recurrent brief
depression
, 0.9% dysthymia, 3.3% bipolar disorder, 1.3%
hypomania
). On average, 49% of all these cases received treatment for affective disorder, resulting in a weighted treatment prevalence rate of the population of 11.6% (18% for females and 5% for males). It has to be assumed that lifetime prevalence rates based on recall may greatly underestimate true morbidity.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of depression. 154 46
Of 919 patients with major affective disorders who completed at least 1 year of a 5-year, semiannual follow-up, 45 developed a rapidly cycling bipolar course during the first year, but only one developed a rapidly cycling unipolar course. In comparison with patients who showed a non-rapidly cycling bipolar course, those who became rapid cyclers were more likely to be female and to have exhibited
depression
,
hypomania
, or cycling between
depression
and
hypomania
within the index episode. Family study data revealed no evidence that high cycle frequencies breed true. Rapid cycling was associated with a significantly lower likelihood of recovery in the second year of follow-up but not in the third, fourth, or fifth. These data suggest that rapid cycling is, in the large majority of cases, a transient, nonfamilial manifestation of bipolar affective disorder.
...
PMID:Rapidly cycling affective disorder. Demographics, diagnosis, family history, and course. 849 87
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