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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

About 10% of women show elation and associated features of hypomania in the first 5 days following childbirth. These symptoms can be detected using a self-rating scale (the 'Highs') based on SADS-L criteria. This phenomenon has been confirmed using the observer-rated Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Scale, which also revealed a high degree of related irritability. Significantly more women scoring > or = 8 on the Highs scale at 3 days postpartum went on to manifest depression at 6 weeks than did subjects with no psychopathology in the early puerperium. It is suggested that the 'highs' followed by depression may be a mild and common form of bipolar disorder.
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PMID:Mild hypomania (the highs) can be a feature of the first postpartum week. Association with later depression. 803 42

Phototherapy was administered to three female outpatients with seasonal affective disorder (winter depression), according to the DSM III-R criteria. The intensity of light was about 2.500 lux in two, and 1.500 lux in one cases at the eyes level. The treatment has shown to be very effective. Antidepressant response was observed after about one week of treatment. A short-lasting switch into hypomania was observed in one case.
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PMID:[Phototherapy for winter depression: report of three cases]. 813

Both premorbid personality characteristics and location of brain lesion have been proposed to account for emotional changes after cerebral damage. To explore the relative merits of each hypothesis, we compared the MMPI profiles of 30 epileptic patients, who showed either a euphoric or depressive reaction after injection of amobarbital into the right or left hemisphere, with the MMPI profiles of 30 matched controls. There were no significant T-score differences between euphoric, depressed, or control patients on any of the MMPI scales. However, more patients with euphoric (42%) than depressed (0%) reactions had hypomania (scale 9) scores greater than 70 T. With regard to location of lesion, there was a statistically significant association between emotional reaction and side of amobarbital brain inactivation. Euphoria was more frequent following right, and depression was more common after left, hemisphere inactivation. Although support was found for both premorbid personality and lesion location in the genesis of emotional reactions after brain damage, results were more robust for location of lesion.
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PMID:Influence of premorbid personality and location of lesion on emotional expression. 813 72

Among a sample of 40 severe migraine sufferers, males and females displayed common personality profiles. Both sexes exhibit heightened scores on those MMPI clinical scales associated with neuroticism (hypochondriasis, depression and hysteria). Female migraine sufferers were further characterised by elevated scores on the primary scales constituting the psychotic tetrad (paranoia, psychaesthenia, schizophrenia, and hypomania). Migraine females appeared to differ from male patients with respect to a dimension associated with sex-role conformity (loaded on the L-scale and masculinity-femininity). The implication of these results are considered.
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PMID:MMPI profiles of male and female migraine sufferers. 821 5

The study aims to observe whether subjects with a primary affective disease and manic attacks show modifications of serum concentration of creatine-kinase conferring it the role of a biologic marker. Serum concentration of creatine-kinase was determined for 122 men with mono- and bipolar affective disease during the different stages as well as for schizophrenic men with different clinical forms excepting the affective form. The control group included 60 men. Data indicated that enzyme concentration can constitute a biological marker for a primary affective disease also showing the differences between the different stages of the disease (mania, hypomania, depression and the symptom-free intervals).
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PMID:The concentration of serum creatine-kinase in manic attacks of primary affective psychoses. 821 46

The longitudinal association of several syndromal diagnoses is very frequently a direct consequence of modern descriptive diagnosis. Comorbidity in this sense is clinically relevant. Comorbid cases are more severe, are more amenable to treatment and are more frequently suicidal. The level of association between psychiatric syndromes can lead to nosologic hypotheses that can be further examined by independent investigations, and especially by means of family studies. Generalized anxiety disorders are very closely associated with the affective disorders, particularly with depressions and suicide attempts, but also with hypomania. There is no close relationship with panic disorder. Social phobias are highly associated with agoraphobia, but also with simple phobia; also with panic, obsessive-compulsive syndromes and substance abuse. The prevalence of obsessive-compulsive syndromes depends to an exceptional degree on the definition. Syndromes below the diagnostic threshold of DSM-III are extremely frequent, and longitudinally a fluctuation about this threshold is apparent. OCS are especially found to be associated with social phobia and agoraphobia as well as with dysthymia and recurrent brief depression, but less with major depression.
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PMID:Comorbidity of anxiety, phobia, compulsion and depression. 825 49

A review of the published case reports of adverse behavioral episodes or unexpected psychopathology in patients taking benzodiazepines was undertaken in an attempt to determine if these adverse or unexpected events are more likely to occur with alprazolam when compared with other currently marketed benzodiazepines. Adverse behavioral phenomena and unexpected psychopathology were divided into the following categories: (1) anger or violence, (2) impulsive, suicidal, or self-harming behavior, (3) depression, (4) mania, (5) schizophrenia, (6) withdrawal syndromes and (7) physical dependence and abuse liability. It is difficult to draw conclusions from this literature because of the limitations of spontaneously reported cases and the lack of epidemiologic studies. Despite these limitations, it appears that some differences between alprazolam and older benzodiazepines may exist. The older benzodiazepines are more commonly reported to have adverse events than alprazolam (with the exception of mania or hypomania). On the other hand, worsening in post-traumatic stress disorder and an increase in impulsive behavior in patients with borderline personality disorder have only been reported in patients receiving alprazolam. This is probably explained by the fact that only alprazolam has been used to any great extent in these conditions.
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PMID:Adverse behavioral events reported in patients taking alprazolam and other benzodiazepines. 826 90

The introduction of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III), which uses a descriptive approach to operational definitions of psychiatric diagnostic groups, is an important step forward. Still the present classification systems of DSM or the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) are preliminary. A systematic descriptive approach based on data collection as a foundation for diagnostic definitions is strongly recommended. Data-based definitions have a good change of surviving later changes of diagnostic fashion. Treatment studies will be more valuable when the course of a disorder is included in its definition. The diagnosis of depression has to include operationalized subthreshold syndromes, such as minor depression and recurrent brief depression. In the face of the elementary importance of the distinction between uni- and bipolar disorders, a development of the definition of hypomania is proposed. Based on this definition, bipolar disorders are more prevalent in the normal population than is commonly assumed. Most diagnostic subgroups of depression are artificial. They are not diagnostic entities, but subtypes of the same spectrum disorder. During his/her lifetime, a patient may therefore receive two or more diagnoses, but still suffer from a single disorder. Dual diagnoses, such as double depression and combined depression, define more severely affected patients with major depression, characterized by higher suicide attempt rates. Thus the differentiation of subgroups is more than an academic exercise but has a practical use.
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PMID:Current concepts of the classification of affective disorders. 827 37

Records of patients who had been systematically evaluated at the Center for Anxiety and Depression were reviewed. Included in this report are records of patients who had a diagnosis of bipolar II or unipolar affective disorder as determined by one of the authors and who also underwent a Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III (SCID). A second study was undertaken with L.K.T. observing the clinical interview of D.L.D. and both clinicians making a diagnosis for the patient. There was reasonable diagnostic agreement between D.L.D. and the SCID for diagnosis of bipolar II disorder. Twelve of 34 patients clinically diagnosed as bipolar II were diagnosed by the SCID as unipolar. These 12 patients failed to demonstrate clinical factors, which could help explain the diagnostic difference between SCID and the clinical diagnosis. There was excellent agreement on 34 patients as to the presence or absence of hypomania, comparing two clinicians. The SCID interview underestimates the diagnosis of hypomania, a condition that can be diagnosed reliably by clinicians trained to make this diagnosis. This finding has some implications for DSM-IV, where there is a proposal for inclusion of bipolar II disorder as a parallel entity with bipolar disorder.
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PMID:Diagnostic reliability of the history of hypomania in bipolar II patients and patients with major depression. 830 39

This paper examines the association between psychiatric disorders and headache syndromes in a longitudinal epidemiologic sample of young adults who were selected from the general population of Zurich, Switzerland. Headache syndromes were defined according to the newly introduced diagnostic criteria of the International Headache Society in 1988. The prevalence rates of psychiatric disorders, according to specific headache subtypes, were examined both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. In the cross-sectional data, migraine with aura was associated with hypomania, recurrent brief depression, and all of the anxiety disorders, whereas only the phobic disorders and panic were elevated among subjects with migraine without aura. Similar findings emerged for the longitudinal data, with the exception that major depression was associated with both subtypes of migraine. Subjects with tension-type headaches did not differ from controls with respect to any of the effective or anxiety disorders in both the cross-sectional and longitudinal data. Prospective study data indicated that the age of onset of anxiety disorders generally preceded that of migraine and that the onset of affective disorders in the majority of comorbid subjects followed that of the onset of migraine. In order to investigate the mechanism for the associations between anxiety/depression syndromes and migraine, patterns of co-transmission of migraine and anxiety/depression were examined in data from a controlled family history study of migraine. The results were consistent with a syndromic relationship between migraine and anxiety/depression, rather than their representing discrete manifestations of shared underlying etiology. The implications of these data for research and clinical work are discussed.
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PMID:Headache syndromes and psychiatric disorders: association and familial transmission. 836 69


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