Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Sudden death is a recognized hazard of volatile substance abuse and may occur during exposure or in the subsequent hours. Intoxication may also lead to indirect deaths due to trauma. 2. Specific post-mortem features have not as yet been identified either macroscopically or microscopically in VSA-related deaths. Toxicological examination for volatile substances of all unnatural teenage deaths is strongly recommended. 3. Four mechanisms for acute, direct VSA-related deaths are discussed, viz anoxia, vagal inhibition, respiratory depression and cardiac arrhythmia. Of these, cardiac arrhythmia due to 'sensitization' of the heart to adrenaline is probably the most common and is well documented in experimental conditions. 4. Deaths from cardiac arrhythmia during or soon after VSA are unpredictable, unpreventable and resuscitation is rarely successful. Previous uneventful sessions of abuse provide no protection from this mode of death.
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PMID:Mechanism of sudden death associated with volatile substance abuse. 277 68

In the evaluation of 68 consecutive heart transplant candidates, 37 (54%) had one or more depressive syndromes. Premorbid psychiatric risk factors of depression were prevalent throughout the group. Statistically significant associations with depression were found with age, educational and occupational levels, and a history of past depressive episodes, but not with family psychiatric history, parental loss in childhood, history of serious childhood illness, or history of substance abuse. Of the 43 patients transplanted, 16 of 22 who were depressed preoperatively required psychiatric intervention postoperatively compared to 8 of 21 who were not depressed; 75% had a beneficial response to treatment. We recommend that a diagnosis of depression not be considered reason to exclude otherwise suitable candidates for cardiac transplantation.
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PMID:Depression in patients being evaluated for heart transplantation. 280 92

Of 200 consecutively admitted leg fracture patients, 101 consented to be screened for psychopathology using the BSI and SMAST questionnaires. Probable cases of psychopathology were referred for diagnostic psychiatric evaluation. Of the participants, 80.2 percent were identified as possible psychiatric cases. Diagnostic evaluation revealed high prevalence of substance abuse (66.0%), depression (46.8%), and personality pathology (38.3%). Accident victims tended to be single young males. Accidents occurred mostly during leisure hours, and were often associated with alcohol use. Psychiatric assistance appears essential in the management of such patients. Psychiatrists need to be especially knowledgeable about chemical dependency, interpersonal issues and psychotherapy.
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PMID:Psychiatric assessment of leg fracture patients: a pilot study. 280 37

1. Twelve patients with borderline personality disorder and not suffering a major depression were treated with fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, in an open label trial. All of the patients improved, and 75% were rated as much or very much improved. 2. Treatment was generally very well tolerated, but careful dosage titration was important in some patients, especially to manage agitation. 3. Improvement has been maintained with continued treatment throughout the follow-up period which ranged up to six months. 4. Incidental findings suggest fluoxetine may also be of use in treating substance abuse, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, late luteal phase dysphoria disorder, dysthymic and cyclothymic disorders, and seasonal pattern depression. 5. These preliminary results support the hypothesis that borderline personality disorder may be related to a central serotonergic deficit.
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PMID:Fluoxetine in borderline personality disorder. 281 6

A semistructured questionnaire was administered to 50 male prostitutes and 50 nonprostitutes matched on age, sex, and socioeconomic status. The questionnaire focused on areas pertaining to family, sexual and criminal history, current life situation, sexual practices with clients, substance abuse, etc. In addition, the Beck Depression Inventory and the Tennessee Self-Concept Scale were administered to 35 subjects from each group. Results indicated that there were differences between the groups but that these differences did not entirely support the demographic profile offered by previous researchers. Specifically, our findings suggest that factors related to family background may be less important as potential determinants for entry into prostitution than influences related to financial gain, sexual orientation (homosexuality), and early sexual experiences.
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PMID:A psychosocial study of male prostitution. 281 71

Description among Zhenjiang Psychiatric Hospital (ZPH) Taipei City Psychiatric Center (TCPC), and New York State Psychiatric Hospital, Rockland Psychiatric Center (RPC) admission cohorts during the identical year indicates that the RPC cohort demonstrates different frequencies of major psychiatric illness than the ZPH and TCPC cohorts which are remarkably similar. Schizophrenia is more prevalent among RPC public admissions than ZPH and TCPC. Mania exceeds depression in ZPH and TCPC samples while depression exceeds mania in RPC. Females predominate among ZPH and TCPC admissions, in contrast to male predominance in RPC. Wherease alcoholism is almost non-existant among ZPH and TCPC admissions, over half the RPC sample had a diagnosis of substance abuse.
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PMID:Inpatients of Taipei City Psychiatric Center, Zhenjiang Psychiatric Hospital and New York State Mental Hospital, Rockland Psychiatric Center: comparison of the diagnostic distribution and sex ratios. 281 78

Descriptive information (demographic variables, DSM-III diagnoses, and medications prescribed) was obtained from the discharge summaries of 536 male veteran inpatients who received a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) over a 4-year period. Data comparisons were also made between two types of inpatient programs (specialized PTSD vs. psychiatric ward) to control for program selection biases. Consistent with previous studies, alcohol and substance abuse and/or depression diagnoses occurred concurrently with PTSD. Diagnoses of schizophrenia were more prevalent in the psychiatric wards. Nearly one third of the total sample received an axis II diagnosis, with borderline features most common. Half of all patients received psychopharmacological treatment in addition to psychotherapy. Antidepressants, neuroleptics, and beta-blockers were prescribed most frequently. Directions for future inpatient PTSD research are offered based on the findings.
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PMID:Diagnostic and psychopharmacological treatment characteristics of 536 inpatients with posttraumatic stress disorder. 291 99

The psychometric properties and validity of the DSM-III and DSM-III-R definitions of melancholia were examined in 60 depressed inpatients. The prevalence of melancholia was significantly higher according to the DSM-III-R criteria, and the kappa-coefficient of agreement between the two definitions was .40. For both criteria sets, the internal consistencies and item-scale correlations were low. Both definitions were associated with overall symptom severity and the melancholia symptom subscale; however, only DSM-III melancholics scored higher on the nonmelancholia symptom subscale. The DSM-III-R criteria were associated with more of the predicted correlates of endogenous subtyping. According to both definitions, melancholics were characterized by less stress, greater symptom severity, and less frequent nonserious suicide attempts prior to admission. The DSM-III-R melancholic subtyping was additionally associated with a family history of antisocial personality and substance abuse, presence of a premorbid personality disorder, age, and a tendency to blame others for the depression.
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PMID:Diagnostic criteria for melancholia. The comparative validity of DSM-III and DSM-III-R. 293 Mar 32

A growing body of evidence points to the importance of life stressors and social resources in the development and course of alcoholism and other substance abuse disorders. This article describes the Life Stressors and Social Resources Inventory (LISRES), which provides an integrated assessment of life stressors and social resources in eight domains: physical health, home/neighborhood, financial, work, spouse/partner, children, extended family, and friends. The indices were developed on data obtained at two points in time 18 months apart from four demographically comparable groups: alcoholic patients, depressed patients, arthritic patients, and non-problem-drinking adults. As expected, alcoholic patients reported more acute and chronic stressors and fewer social resources than did non-problem-drinking adults. More important, the indices were predictively related to changes in alcohol consumption, drinking problems, depression, and self-confidence. Procedures such as the LISRES have some potential clinical and research applications and may be helpful in examining the process of recovery and relapse in substance abuse disorders.
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PMID:Assessing life stressors and social resources: applications to alcoholic patients. 298 Aug 65

Evidence so far indicates two sources for excess mortality in panic disorder--suicide and cardiovascular morbidity. The risk for eventual suicide may rival that for primary depression, but the predictors and the necessary antecedents probably differ. The lapse between diagnosis and suicide may be larger for panic disorder, and complications such as secondary depression and substance abuse may be necessary. There are few well-established predictors for primary depression despite many relevant studies. The risk for suicide in panic disorder is barely recognized, and established predictors are accordingly remote. One study has demonstrated excess cardiovascular mortality among males with panic disorder, and another from the same center has provided weak support. Only one additional study has provided the necessary detail as to sex and cause, and those findings were quite supportive, although the subjects may have been mixed diagnostically. There are numerous feasible explanations for excess cardiovascular mortality in panic disorder and even some reason to believe that successful treatment might lessen it. To so advise patients would be not only premature at this point but unnecessary and countertherapeutic--unnecessary because these patients are motivated by discomfort to seek treatment and countertherapeutic because cardiovascular morbidity is what many of these patients pathologically fear. Rather, the findings suggest focus for future study. The initial findings of excess cardiovascular morbidity in males badly need replication, as do the more recent findings of Kahn et al. Likewise, animal models may reveal some of the pathophysiologic mechanisms at work. It is hoped that these efforts will converge in the not-too-distant future.
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PMID:Panic disorder and mortality. 304 10


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