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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The feasibility, utility and reliability of the Zung Self-Rating
Depression
Scale (ZSDS) was examined in a large sample of ambulatory cancer patients. This tool and a brief 11-item version of the ZSDS (excluding nine items concerning somatic symptoms), which was developed during the course of the survey, were used to estimate the prevalence of self-reported depressive symptoms. Patient characteristics that may be associated with an increased risk of clinically significant depressive symptoms were also explored. Twenty-five ambulatory oncology clinics affiliated with Community Cancer Care, Inc. enrolled and surveyed 1109 subjects. The alpha coefficients for the ZSDS (0.84) and the Brief ZSDS (0.84) indicated high levels of internal consistency. The overall prevalence of clinically significant depressive symptoms as defined by the ZSDS was 35.9% and by the Brief ZSDS was 31.1%. The ZSDS and the Brief ZSDS were highly correlated (r = 0.92). The medical and demographic variables most associated with clinically significant depressive symptoms were more advanced stage of disease at time of diagnosis,
lung cancer
as primary tumor type, higher ECOG rating (greater degree of physical disability), and having been prescribed antidepressant medications. The high prevalence of depressive symptoms observed in this study is consistent with rates found in other studies of self-report
depression
instruments in cancer patients. The initial indicators of internal consistency and validity suggest that the Zung SDS or the brief version may be useful screening tools to identify depressive symptoms in oncology patients.
...
PMID:Use of the Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale in cancer patients: feasibility as a screening tool. 988 89
Reactions toward older adults have been widely researched, but the question of whether such reactions are due to age per se or due to the presence of other stigmas (e.g., physical disabilities) has received little attention. This study was designed to investigate emotional reactions and willingness to help older versus younger adults who exhibited a wide range of stigmas, including AIDS, leg amputation,
depression
, and so on. Guided by attribution theory, the cause of the stigmas was further ascribed to either uncontrollable or controllable factors. Older adults evoked less anger than younger individuals, particularly in the case of blindness,
depression
, leg amputation,
lung cancer
, and unemployment. Subjects were also more willing to help an older than a younger amputee. Moreover, stigmas ascribed to uncontrollable factors generally produced less anger, more pity, and greater willingness to help than stigmas described as due to controllable causes. These results provide little support for the notion of ageism, at least within an age range of up to 65 years, but suggest that responses to older adults with stigmas may be subject to positive stereotyping.
...
PMID:Reactions to stigmas. The effect of targets' age and controllability of stigmas. 1017 80
A relationship between such signs of humoral immunity failure as decreased levels of B-lymphocytes and immunoglobulins, on the one hand, and psycho-emotional disorders (anxiophobic syndrome associated with autism and
depression
), on the other, has been identified in
lung cancer
patients. An inverse correlation was established between anxiety and immunoglobulin concentration. Therefore, an individualized medication treatment can be designed to complement surgery and chemoradiation.
...
PMID:[Correlation between psycho-emotional and immuno-allergic status in patients with lung cancer]. 1044 26
Patients with cancer receive an explanation of their disease and the recommended treatment when they are asked to give informed consent (IC). In the course of this process patients suffer severe distress, including anxiety and
depression
, but physicians tend to underestimate it. The goal of this study was to reveal the magnitude of such stress and any changes to this during the IC process by means of the Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
(HAD) scale, a self-assessment scale. Of 171 in-patients newly diagnosed with
lung cancer
, 119 were assessable for serial HAD scale scores on admission, immediately after the IC process, and at 1 and again at 2 weeks after the IC. Both anxiety and
depression
scores increased significantly immediately after IC. Female patients had significantly higher anxiety and
depression
scores than males at 1 week after the IC. The patients with poor performance status demonstrated high anxiety scores on admission and immediately after the IC, and substantial
depression
persisted longer in these patients. The prevalence of high scores of more than 11 (judged as adjustment disorder or more severe state) immediately after the IC was 50% for anxiety and 31% for
depression
. The prevalence decreased significantly within 1 or 2 weeks, but 41% and 14% of the patients still showed high anxiety and
depression
scores, respectively. Physicians should be aware of these facts and pay special attention to their patients' psychological distress in routine clinical practice.
...
PMID:Psychological impact of informed consent in hospitalized cancer patients. A sequential study of anxiety and depression using the hospital anxiety and depression scale. 1054 81
Paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis (PLE) is a rare disorder characterized by personality changes, irritability,
depression
, seizures, memory loss and sometimes dementia. The diagnosis is difficult because clinical markers are often lacking, and symptoms usually precede the diagnosis of cancer or mimic other complications. The frequency of antineuronal antibodies in patients with PLE has not been investigated. We examined the neurological symptoms and the causal tumours in 50 patients with PLE to determine the utility of paraneoplastic antibodies and other tests. The diagnosis of PLE required neuropathological examination or the presence of the four following criteria: (i) a compatible clinical picture; (ii) an interval of <4 years between the development of neurological symptoms and tumour diagnosis; (iii) exclusion of other neuro-oncological complications; and (iv) at least one of the following: CSF with inflammatory changes but negative cytology; MRI demonstrating temporal lobe abnormalities; EEG showing epileptic activity in the temporal lobes. Of 1047 patients with neurological symptoms, whose sera or CSF were examined for paraneoplastic antibodies, 79 had the presumptive diagnosis of limbic encephalitis, dementia, cognitive dysfunction, or confusion. Fifty of these patients fulfilled our criteria for PLE. Pathological confirmation was obtained in 12 patients. The commonly associated neoplasms were of the lung (50%), testis (20%) and breast (8%). Neurological symptoms preceded the cancer diagnosis in 60% of patients (by a median of 3.5 months). Twenty-five of 44 (57%) patients with MRI studies had signal abnormalities in the limbic system. Thirty (60%) patients had antineuronal antibodies (18 anti-Hu, 10 anti-Ta, 2 anti-Ma), and 20 were antibody-negative or had uncharacterized antibodies (n = 4). The combination of symptoms, MRI findings and paraneoplastic antibodies established the diagnosis of PLE in 78% of the patients. Patients with anti-Hu antibodies usually had small-cell
lung cancer
(94%), multifocal neurological symptoms (78%) and a poor neurological outcome. Patients with anti-Ta (also called anti-Ma2) antibodies were young men with testicular tumours (100%), frequent hypothalamic involvement (70%) and a poor neurological outcome. In the group of patients without anti-Hu or anti-Ta antibodies, the tumour distribution was diverse, with cancer of the lung the most common (36%); 57% had positive MRI. Fifteen of 34 (44%) patients with a median follow-up of 8 months showed neurological improvement. Treatment of the tumour appeared to have more effect on the neurological outcome than the use of immune modulation. Improvement was observed in 38% of anti-Hu patients, 30% of anti-Ta patients and 64% of patients without these antibodies.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis: neurological symptoms, immunological findings and tumour association in 50 patients. 1086 59
The occupational health and safety issues of public school employees in large urban areas are many and complex. Crumbling school infrastructure and crowded classrooms are associated with inadequate indoor air quality, asbestos exposure, noisy environments, and enhanced transmission of communicable and infectious diseases. Poor ventilation in vocational education classrooms, duplicator rooms, kitchens, and science laboratories may also contribute to hazardous exposures. Ergonomic hazards may be responsible for increasing rates of musculoskeletal disorders. Other work-related illnesses and injuries now documented among school employees include asthma, mesothelioma, asbestos-related
lung cancer
, violent assault, voice disorders, and
depression
. Such a diverse industry with many potentially hazardous activities and conditions calls for a comprehensive research and intervention agenda.
...
PMID:School employees: the forgotten municipal workers. 1110 25
Multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1/ABCC1) is an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) polytopic membrane transporter of considerable clinical importance that confers multidrug resistance on tumor cells by reducing drug accumulation by active efflux. MRP1 is also an efficient transporter of conjugated organic anions. Like other ABC proteins, including the drug resistance conferring 170-kDa P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), the 190-kDa MRP1 has a core structure consisting of two membrane-spanning domains (MSDs), each followed by a nucleotide binding domain (NBD). However, unlike P-glycoprotein and most other ABC superfamily members, MRP1 contains a third MSD with five predicted transmembrane segments with an extracytosolic NH(2) terminus. Moreover, the two nucleotide-binding domains of MRP1 are considerably more divergent than those of P-glycoprotein. In the present study, the first structural details of MRP1 purified from drug-resistant
lung cancer
cells have been obtained by electron microscopy of negatively stained single particles and two-dimensional crystals formed after reconstitution of purified protein with lipids. The crystals display p2 symmetry with a single dimer of MRP1 in the unit cell. The overall dimensions of the MRP1 monomer are approximately 80 x 100 A. The MRP1 monomer shows some pseudo-2-fold symmetry in projection, and in some orientations of the detergent-solubilized particles, displays a stain filled
depression
(putative pore) appearing toward the center of the molecule, presumably to enable transport of substrates. These data represent the first structural information of this transporter to approximately 22-A resolution and provide direct structural evidence for a dimeric association of the transporter in a reconstituted lipid bilayer.
...
PMID:The structure of the multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1/ABCC1). crystallization and single-particle analysis. 1127 22
Best Supportive Care (BSC) is the treatment of choice when cure is not achievable with anticancer treatments and involves management of disease-related symptoms. In the palliative treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) radiation therapy has for a long time been the cornerstone of symptom management, although the best schedule is still to be defined. Chemotherapy, on the other hand, has been excluded from classical definitions of BSC and has been reserved only for selected patient populations in which a survival benefit was demonstrated using cisplatin-based regimens. We reviewed randomized trials on both palliative radiotherapy and chemotherapy in order to assess the impact of anticancer treatments on quality of life in advanced NSCLC patients. While no randomized trials compared radiation therapy with a control arm not including it, several randomized trials assessed the use of different schedules. Hypofractionated schedules seem to have comparable palliative activity when compared with the standard fractionated regimens, at least in metastatic, poor-prognosis patients. In locally advanced, inoperable NSCLC higher radiation doses administered with conventional fractionation achieve better results in terms of local control and survival. The rate of palliation of local symptoms is high, being 60-80% for chest pain and hemoptysis, while breathlessness and cough are controlled at a somewhat lower rate (50-70%). General symptoms (fatigue, anorexia, and
depression
) are affected in a minority of patients. Chemotherapy was compared with BSC in several randomized trials, in some of which an analysis of the quality of life was included. Results are consistent in favor of its palliative role and, when local symptom control is assessed, rates of palliation seem similar to those achieved by radiation. Benefits apply to metastatic NSCLC patients with good performance status, low body weight loss, age below 70-75. However, some studies support the use of chemotherapy also in patients with poor prognostic features. A comparison in terms of quality of life and symptom palliation between different chemotherapy regimens is the object of few trials. Both chemotherapy and radiation have an important role in the palliative treatment of advanced NSCLC patients and should be included in BSC programs. Future randomized trials should assess the best way of combining these two approaches.
Lung Cancer
2001 Jun
PMID:Best supportive care in non-small cell lung cancer: is there a role for radiotherapy and chemotherapy? 1139 3
Besides cardiovascular and renal functions, the role of dopamine in periphery as an endogenous regulator of immune functions is in the limelight. In human malignancy,
depression
of T cell functions is known. Interestingly, recent evidences indicate significant elevation of plasma dopamine in malignancy due to stress of the disease process. Therefore, this study evaluates whether this increased plasma dopamine exerts any influence on the proliferation and cytotoxicity of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Patients with lung carcinoma were selected for this study due to the high prevalence rate of this kind of cancer in developing countries and also due to strong positive biochemical and psychological criteria of stress in most of the patients. Results showed significant elevation of plasma dopamine (48.6 +/- 5.1 pg/ml) in
lung cancer
patients than normal controls (10.2 +/- 0.9 pg/ml). In vitro dopamine concentration, simulating the plasma concentration of the patients, significantly inhibited the proliferation and cytotoxicity of T cells of these patients and also of the normal volunteers, in presence of their respective serum. The mechanism has been attributed to be D1 class of dopamine receptor mediated elevation of intracellular cAMP in these cell populations. The results may be of significance in understanding the role of peripheral dopamine as an immunomodulator in human health and diseases.
...
PMID:Circulating dopamine level, in lung carcinoma patients, inhibits proliferation and cytotoxicity of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells by D1 dopamine receptors: an in vitro analysis. 1146 Mar 16
Although it has been indicated that patients with
lung cancer
experience higher level of fatigue than patients with other cancers, few published studies have focused on the characteristics of this fatigue and how it interferes with daily activities. The purpose of this study was to clarify fatigue prevalence and the factors correlated with fatigue, and to develop a screening method for fatigue in patients with advanced
lung cancer
. One hundred fifty-seven patients completed two fatigue scales (Cancer Fatigue Scale [CFS], and Fatigue Numerical Scale [FNS]) plus other measures, along with a self-administered questionnaire asking whether fatigue had interfered with any of 7 areas of daily activities. Fifty-nine percent of patients had experienced clinical fatigue, which was defined as fatigue that interfered with any daily activities. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that symptoms of dyspnea on walking, appetite loss, and
depression
were significant correlated factors. Both CFS and FNS were found to have sufficient sensitivity and specificity for use as a screening tool. The results indicated that fatigue is a frequent and important symptom, which is associated with both physical and psychological distress in this population. The CFS and FNS were confirmed to have sufficient screening ability.
...
PMID:Fatigue in ambulatory patients with advanced lung cancer: prevalence, correlated factors, and screening. 1151 97
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