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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Using positron emission tomography (PET) and 15Oxygen, regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured in 33 patients with primary
depression
, 10 of whom had an associated severe
cognitive impairment
, and 23 age-matched controls. PET scans from these groups were analysed on a pixel-by-pixel basis and significant differences between the groups were identified on Statistical Parametric Maps (SPMs). In the depressed group as a whole rCBF was decreased in the left anterior cingulate and the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (P less than 0.05 Bonferroni-corrected for multiple comparisons). Comparing patients with and without
depression
-related
cognitive impairment
, in the impaired group there were significant decreases in rCBF in the left medial frontal gyrus and increased rCBF in the cerebellar vermis (P less than 0.05 Bonferroni-corrected). Therefore an anatomical dissociation has been described between the rCBF profiles associated with depressed mood and
depression
-related
cognitive impairment
. The pre-frontal and limbic areas identified in this study constitute a distributed anatomical network that may be functionally abnormal in major depressive disorder.
...
PMID:The anatomy of melancholia--focal abnormalities of cerebral blood flow in major depression. 141 86
Evaluation with the geriatric
depression
scale carried out in 30 patients with Parkinson's disease who did not present subjective complaint of loss of memory or impairment in superior mental function capable of interfering in daily routine showed a high frequency of
depression
of 50-70% depending on where the cut-off in the geriatric
depression
scale was located.
Depression
in these patients does not significantly relate with either
cognitive impairment
or the degree of motor incapacity. Neither were
depression
or anxiety in these patients related with demographic data such as the age of the patient, age at onset of the disease, sex, months of evolution, or education. In contrast, a positive correlation was found between
depression
and anxiety.
...
PMID:[Depression in Parkinson's disease and its relation to the cognitive and motor manifestations]. 141 86
Cognitive impairment
is a significant health problem for the elderly and is associated with severe negative consequences: higher morbidity and mortality and a diminished capacity to care for self. The accurate diagnosis of acute confusion, dementia, and
depression
depends on the routine, systematic, and comprehensive assessment of cognition, best achieved through the use of a mental status questionnaire and a behavioral rating scale. Nonspecific clinical features, atypical and variable presentations of symptomatology, and the frequent coexistence of acute confusion, dementia, and
depression
make an accurate diagnosis of the specific form of
cognitive impairment
difficult. The primary cognition disorder in acute confusion is that of attention, memory with dementia, and mood with
depression
.
...
PMID:Diagnostic dilemma: cognitive impairment in the elderly. 143 Sep 3
Twenty one unselected patients with an acute whiplash injury of the neck had neurological and neuropsychological assessment, cervical x rays, EEG, BAEP, MRI, and an otoneurological examination within two weeks of the injury. Subjectively, 13 patients reported concentration deficits, 18 reported sleep disturbances, 9 had symptoms of
depression
, and 7 female patients told of menstrual irregularities. Neuropsychological examination revealed significantly lower performance in tests related to attention and concentration compared to sex, age and educational matched control subjects. Otoneurological examination showed abnormalities in 9 of 17 whiplash subjects. EEG showed questionable changes in 8 of 18 recordings. MRI and BAEP were normal in all patients. Repeat neuropsychological testing in 15 patients at three months showed that attention deficits had improved but were still shown in 12 of 14 and the concentration deficits in 8 of 13 patients. At one year all patients had returned to work, 16 to full and 5 to part time employment. In 4,
cognitive dysfunction
remained the only significant problem. These findings are discussed as being compatible with possible damage to basal frontal and upper brain stem structures after whiplash injury of the neck.
...
PMID:Cerebral symptoms after whiplash injury of the neck: a prospective clinical and neuropsychological study of whiplash injury. 827 Sep 40
A total of 251 elderly residents of 2 boroughs of greater Athens were examined by a psychiatrist. For the assessment of depressive symptoms, the Center for Epidemiological Studies
Depression
(CES-D) Scale was used. Cognitive functioning was also evaluated. The prevalence of affective disorders of any type was estimated by a clinical examination with a semistructured psychiatric interview (PEF) supplemented by DSM-III criteria. A total of 27.1% of the elderly respondents reported a significant number of dysphoric or depressive symptoms and were identified as depressed cases. Respondents who had lower socioeconomic status, were widowed, were experiencing stressful life events or were living alone exhibited a significant degree of depressive psychopathology. An association between depressed mood and
cognitive impairment
was also found. A total of 9.5% of the sample was diagnosed as suffering from any type of affective disorder (1.6% major depression, 0.6% bipolar, 5.5% dysthymic disorder and 2.0% adjustment disorder with depressed mood). Affective disorders constitute nearly half of the total number of psychiatric diagnoses (20.3% at the sample). It is interesting that, of the 27.1% of the sample with depressed mood (> or = 16 score on CES-D Scale), only 9.5% of the sample were diagnosed as suffering from clinical types of
depression
.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms and depression among elderly people in Athens. 145 76
The authors investigate the importance of physical symptoms as a correlate of depressive symptoms and suicidal thoughts in a large (N = 881) community-based sample of persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus. The study overcomes limitations of prior research by minimizing overlap in measures of affective and physical symptoms, studying a more diverse population, and including correlates such as measures of social support, function, employment, insurance coverage, and
cognitive impairment
in the analysis. The authors' data support the notion that in diagnosing
depression
in the medically ill, concern over isolating physical symptoms as either "affective" or "physical" may be exaggerated.
...
PMID:Physical symptoms and depressive symptoms among individuals with HIV infection. 146 67
The Revised Memory and Behavior Problems Checklist (RMBPC), a 24-item, caregiver-report measure of observable behavioral problems in dementia patients, provides 1 total score and 3 subscale scores for patient problems (memory-related,
depression
, and disruptive behaviors) and parallel scores for caregiver reaction. Data were obtained from 201 geriatric patients and their caregivers. Factor analysis confirmed 3 first-order factors, consistent with subscales just named, and 1 general factor of behavioral disturbance. Overall scale reliability was good, with alphas of .84 for patient behavior and .90 for caregiver reaction. Subscale alphas ranged from .67 to .89. Validity was confirmed through comparison of RMBPC scores with well-established indexes of
depression
,
cognitive impairment
, and caregiver burden. The RMBPC is recommended as a reliable and valid tool for the clinical and empirical assessment of behavior problems in dementia patients.
...
PMID:Assessment of behavioral problems in dementia: the revised memory and behavior problems checklist. 146 31
Cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and somatostatin (SRIF) were measured in 77 female inpatients with moderate to extreme dementia and in 17 elderly female controls. Both multi-infarct (MID) and Alzheimer-type (SDAT) demented patients had equally elevated CSF CRH and TRH but not SRIF levels as compared with the controls. This elevation was, however, not seen in patients with simple dementia while it was most prominent in those exhibiting marked depressive symptoms. It is concluded that
depression
rather than dementia itself may be associated with CSF CRH and TRH elevation in elderly patients with
cognitive impairment
.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid neuropeptides in dementia. 148 50
Depressive symptoms have been reported in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent evidence suggests that a noradrenergic deficit originating from neuronal degeneration in brainstem nuclei may represent an organic correlate of these disturbances. We examined the neuropathological changes in the locus coeruleus (LC), substantia nigra (SN), basal nucleus of Meynert and cortex of 52 patients (12 male, 40 female, mean age 83.2 +/- 6.4 years) with pathologically verified AD. Fourteen patients (1 male, 13 female) showed signs of
depression
. The majority of these patients suffered from severe physical disability or sensory impairment and developed persistent delusions, but had less
cognitive impairment
. Neuronal counts in the LC were significantly lower than in the 38 patients without
depression
(36.9 +/- 14.0; 51.4 +/- 28.0 neuromelanin-pigmented cells per section per nucleus; F = 3.4, df = 1, 50, P = 0.04). Neuron counts were higher in the basal nucleus of Meynert in depressed AD patients and there were no differences of the neuron numbers in the SN.
Depression
(main effect; F = 4.5, P = 0.04) contributed significantly to the variance of neuronal counts in the LC, even when covarying for gender, age of onset,
cognitive impairment
and cortical Alzheimer pathology. The observed disproportionate loss of noradrenergic and cholinergic neurons in the LC and basal nucleus of Meynert may represent an important organic substrate of
depression
in AD.
...
PMID:Clinical and neuropathological correlates of depression in Alzheimer's disease. 148 85
Emotional discrimination was studied in patients with schizophrenia (n = 20) and matched controls. Performance of the emotion-discrimination tasks in the schizophrenic patients was impaired, relative to their performance of an age-discrimination task. Performance patterns in the patient group could also be reliably distinguished from those of normal controls. The impairment was associated with the severity of both emotional and nonemotional symptoms specific to schizophrenia, but not with the severity of nonspecific symptoms. The deficit associated with schizophrenia is more marked than that reported for
depression
(Gur et al., 1992), particularly for the emotion-discrimination tasks, and showed no difference between "happy" discrimination and "sad" discrimination. The main difficulty in patients with schizophrenia is the assignment of emotional valence to neutral faces. The magnitude of the deficit underscores the salience of emotional impairment in schizophrenia, and its relation to
cognitive dysfunction
in this disorder merits further scrutiny.
...
PMID:Facial emotion discrimination: III. Behavioral findings in schizophrenia. 149 57
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