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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The 24-h rhythms of blood serotonin and serum melatonin were determined in 39 unmediated inpatients with nonseasonal
affective disorder
and in 14 healthy men and women after 7 days of morning bright-light (2500 lx) or dim-light (50 lx) treatment. Bright-light treatment led to a more than 50% decrease in the Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
(HRSD) score in 4/19 patients and dim light in 1/17 patients. After light treatment the mesor (the daily mean estimated by cosinor analysis) of patients' and subjects' melatonin levels did not change significantly, nor was there a correlation between phase change and decrease in HRSD score. We observed after bright- and dim-light treatment a consistent increase in blood serotonin in patients and healthy subjects, which differed significantly between healthy subjects and patients. These findings suggest the involvement of serotonergic mechanisms following light therapy.
...
PMID:Blood serotonin, serum melatonin and light therapy in healthy subjects and in patients with nonseasonal depression. 152 35
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
Suicide has been associated traditionally with major depression, alcoholism, and schizophrenia and in the past several years with alcoholism and comorbid
depression
. More recently, however, panic disorder has been linked with suicide attempts, and the importance of severe anxiety symptoms (panic attacks, psychic anxiety, and agitation) as possible predictors of suicide risk in patients with major
affective disorder
has been studied. The author discusses data sets from three such studies: (1) the Clinical Studies of the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Program on the Psychobiology of
Depression
, (2) a study on 17-hydroxycorticosteroid concentrations in inpatients with major
affective disorder
, and (3) a study on inpatient suicides. The author concludes by suggesting that anxiety, which is readily treatable, may in fact be one of the most clinically important symptoms in depressive disorders.
...
PMID:Suicide risk factors in depressive disorders and in panic disorder. 154 56
Insomnia is associated with a reduction of natural killer (NK) activity in
depression
independent of the severity of other depressive symptoms. This study extends these findings by exploring the relationship between objective electroencephalographic (EEG) assessment of sleep and values of NK activity in depressed patients (n = 23) and in control subjects (n = 17). The sleep EEG parameters total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and duration of nonREM sleep were each positively correlated with NK activity in the depressed patients and in the control subjects, demonstrating similar relationships between the amount of sleep and NK activity in the separate groups. These observations support the hypothesis that sleep measures are associated with NK cytotoxicity, independent of the effects of severity of depressive symptoms or the presence of a
mood disorder
.
...
PMID:Electroencephalographic sleep and natural killer activity in depressed patients and control subjects. 155 96
Exploratory eye movements in schizophrenic and nonschizophrenic subjects were examined with an eye mark recorder while the subjects viewed geometric figures. Elementary components of eye movements and the responsive search score (RSS), a function of the number of sections on which the subjects fixated, were measured by means of an eye movement analyzer and slow motion replay. The schizophrenic group and the depressed patient group had fewer eye fixations than the normal control group and the obsessive-compulsive disorder group. The schizophrenic group had a lower RSS average than patients with
depression
, patients with obsessive-compulsive disorders, or subjects in the normal control group. These results in conjunction with those of our previous studies suggest that a low RSS is specific to schizophrenia. We examined the relationship between these eye movements and neuropsychological tests and also investigated the relation between the eye movements and clinical symptoms by means of the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Schedule for
Affective Disorders
and Schizophrenia, and the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms. The RSS correlated positively with the performance IQ and Wechsler's Maze test, but not with the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test or the verbal IQ result. The RSS also correlated negatively with negative symptoms. These results suggest that the RSS has two characteristic features: it is strongly associated with the interpersonal response and it may be connected with visuospatial and visuomotor functions including attention.
...
PMID:Exploratory eye movements and neuropsychological tests in schizophrenic patients. 155 6
Attributional style was investigated in remitted
affective disorder
patients (23 unipolars and 26 bipolars) and 26 non-psychiatric controls. We found a specific cognitive vulnerability in unipolars. Unipolars attributed negative events to causes that were more stable--but not more internal nor more global--than bipolars and controls, and did not attach more importance to these events. Attributional vulnerability seemed more apparent in patients with longer histories of
depression
.
...
PMID:Attributional style and depression: a controlled comparison of remitted unipolar and bipolar patients. 155 20
Fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, is gaining increased acceptance in the treatment of adolescent
depression
. Generally safe and well tolerated by adults, fluoxetine has been reported to induce mania. The cases of five depressed adolescents, 14-16 years of age, who developed mania during pharmacotherapy with fluoxetine, are reported here. Apparent risk factors for the development of mania or hypomania during fluoxetine pharmacotherapy in this population were the combination of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and affective instability; major depression with psychotic features; a family history of
affective disorder
, especially bipolar disorder; and a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Further study is needed to determine the optimal dosage and to identify risk factors that increase individual vulnerability to fluoxetine induced mania in adolescents.
...
PMID:Mania associated with fluoxetine treatment in adolescents. 156 30
A retrospective study was carried out including all patients who in the previous 6 years had required admission to our hospital for medical or surgical reasons following attempted suicide (n = 257). Those diagnosed as having
affective disorder
(n = 96), according to DSM-IIIR criteria, were compared with the other non-affective suicide attempters (n = 161). Affective patients were significantly different in that they were older, more often women, married or widowed, usually used non-violent methods, made more serious attempts and presented a higher incidence of concomitant physical illness. Affective patients with a history of previous attempts were more likely to be recurrent unipolar depressives or first episode unipolars with a concurrent diagnosis of personality disorder. Most of the depressed patients made the attempt within the first 12 months of the episode. Patients who attempted suicide in the first 12 months of the
depression
were more likely to use non-violent methods and to receive a diagnosis of bipolar or unipolar recurrent disorder.
...
PMID:Serious suicide attempts in affective patients. 157 23
Particular patterns of personality (e.g., introversion, neuroticism, obsessionality) have been found to be associated with unipolar depression by a large number of investigators; recent prospective studies have stressed neuroticism as a premorbid risk factor for
depression
. This study examines whether similar patterns of personality are found in relatives of
affective disorder
patients and of controls. First-degree relatives of normal controls and of subjects with primary unipolar depression were studied using the Munich Personality Test. Relatives in remission from an episode of unipolar depression had clearly higher levels of neuroticism and rigidity and lower levels of extraversion than controls; healthy relatives of controls had higher levels of rigidity (both sexes) and of neuroticism (males only) than controls. It is proposed that these traits are either risk factors for
depression
or attenuated forms of
depression
.
...
PMID:Personality traits in subjects at risk for unipolar major depression: a family study perspective. 157 24
Levels of the melatonin metabolite, 6-hydroxymelatonin sulfate, were measured in overnight urine from 31 prepubertal children with major depressive disorder and 15 normal control children with very low family loading for
affective disorder
. The two groups did not differ with regard to their nocturnal excretion of this compound, nor was any depressive subgroup identified whose 6-hydroxymelatonin sulfate excretion differed from that of the control group. Previous studies of pineal function in
depression
are reviewed and discussed in the context of the present investigation.
...
PMID:Nocturnal urinary excretion of 6-hydroxymelatonin sulfate in prepubertal major depressive disorder. 158 37
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