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)

HMPAO-single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) is a useful technique in studying cerebral blood flow (CBF). This method is suitable to evaluate the differences of CBF with reference to total sleep deprivation (TSD) within 24 h because of the short half-life of the radiopharmaceutical compound. In the present study, CBF before and after TSD was analysed in patients suffering from major depression. The morning before and after TSD, Tc-HMPAO-SPECT was performed in 20 patients. Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression scores and subjective ratings were obtained daily. Eleven patients responded to TSD; 9 were nonresponders. The main finding was a significant left temporal and mainly right parietal increase of CBF, which was observed in the responders only. CBF values and the severity of depression correlated inversely.
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PMID:Evaluation of the effects of total sleep deprivation on cerebral blood flow using single photon emission computerized tomography. 147 42

Recurrent brief depression (RBD) has recently been proposed as a new subtype of affective disorder characterized by episodes of major depression which last less than two weeks. The aim of this study was to further evaluate the validity of this putative subtype by means of clinical and biological data. DST, TSH response to TRH and sleep EEG variables were compared in 25 RBD patients sex- and age-matched to 25 major depressed (MD) and 25 healthy subjects. Family history, age at onset, and psychiatric comorbidity did not discriminate RBD from MD. Recurrent unipolar depression was found to be more prevalent in MD. Although less severely depressed during the biological tests, patients with RBD did not significantly differ from those with MDD on basis of DST non-suppression, blunted TSH response and shortening of REM latency. Compared to controls, a greater sleep onset latency was observed both in RBD and MD and a lower total sleep time in MD patients only. These results suggest that RBD could be viewed as a subtype of affective disorder sharing many characteristics with MDD.
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PMID:Biological and clinical features of recurrent brief depression: a comparison with major depressed and healthy subjects. 147 36

At least three categories of atypical depression have been described. The hysteroid dysphoria is characterized by repeated episodes of depressed mood in response to feeling rejected, and a craving for sweets and chocolate. Two other issues are characterized by a cyclical occurrence of changes of mood and appetite, i.e., the late luteal phase dysphoric disorder (DSM-III-R, appendix), or "the premenstrual syndrome" (PMS), and the major depression with seasonal pattern (DSM-III-R), or seasonal affective disorder (SAD). The reactive mood changes are frequently accompanied by features as hypersomnia, lethargy and increased appetite, particularly with a preference for carbohydrates. Central serotonin pathways participate in the regulation of mood and behavioural impulsivity, and modulate eating patterns qualitatively and quantitatively. Depressives with PMS og SAD benefit, in general, from treatments with serotonin potentiating drugs, suggesting that brain serotonin plays a role in the pathophysiology. Ingestion of carbohydrates increases the plasma ratio of tryptophan to other large neutral amino acids in man and animal, and the serotonin synthesis in the rat brain. Based on these findings it has been suggested that the excessive carbohydrate intake by patients with PMS and SAD reflects a self-medication that temporarily relieves the vegetative symptoms via an increased central serotonergic activity.
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PMID:Serotonin, carbohydrates, and atypical depression. 148 May 61

Major depressive illness is frequently associated with cortisol hypersecretion. The pathophysiologic significance of this is unknown, although it is possible that hypercortisolemia exacerbates or perpetuates depressive symptoms. In both depression and Cushing's syndrome, certain depressive symptoms are correlated with cortisol levels and, in the latter condition, therapeutic lowering of cortisol levels is associated with remission of psychiatric symptomatology. We review the behavioral effects of anticortisolemic drug administration in Cushing's syndrome and major depression. Preliminary data from small-scale studies suggest that ratings of depressive symptoms in hypercortisolemic major depression may be lowered by such interventions. Such results, if confirmed in larger scale, double-blind studies, might help clarify the role of endocrinologic disturbance in psychiatric symptomatology and might lead to the development of a novel class of antidepressant agent for hypercortisolemic depressed patients.
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PMID:Antiglucocorticoid strategies in hypercortisolemic states. 148 Jul 27

One hundred patients with major depression who had discontinued fluoxetine because of side effects were enrolled in a multicenter, open, 8-week study of sertraline. After a washout period of at least 3 weeks following fluoxetine discontinuation and an additional 1-week, single-blind, placebo washout period, patients began treatment with 50 mg sertraline once daily. Based on the clinician's judgment of patient response, doses were titrated upward if necessary. The maximum daily dose of sertraline was 200 mg. Depressive symptoms and adverse events were assessed weekly. An interim analysis was conducted of the first 93 patients who completed the study. Of 91 evaluable patients, 69 sertraline-treated patients (75.8%) experienced significant improvement in depression. Only 8 of 93 patients (8.6%) discontinued sertraline because of side effects.
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PMID:Are patients who are intolerant to one SSRI intolerant to another? 148 Jul 28

We examined the relationship between the pre-senile/senile depressive state and silent cerebral infarction using MRI. The subjects studied were 56 patients 50 years of age or older with a depressive state who underwent MRI and who were hospitalized and treated at the Department of Psychiatry or the Department of Neurology of Hiroshima Prefectural Hospital. We made a diagnosis of depression in patients who fulfilled the criteria of DSM-III-R for major depression. Patients in whom apoplectic attacks had occurred, or who had local neurologic symptoms or a history of evident cerebrovascular disorders, were not included in the study. Silent cerebral infarction was observed with pre-senile onset in 60.3% of patients with a pre-senile depressive state, and the complication rate was significantly higher than for cases with juvenile onset (20%). For patients with a senile depressive state, the complication of silent cerebral infarction was found in 53.6% of cases of pre-senile onset and in 100% of cases of senile onset. These rates were remarkably higher than the age-related complication rate of silent cerebral infarction in normal persons reported hitherto, we therefore suspect that nearly half of patients with depressive state of pre-senile onset and most of patients with that of senile onset might have an organic-depressive state complicated by silent cerebral infarction. Both perforating-type infarcts and cortical-type infarcts were found, suggesting that infarct-related foci of depressive states were polyphyletic. When we divided the depressive states complicated by cerebral infarction into 2 subtypes, those complicated by a perforating-type infarct and those by a cortical-type infarct, and compared the 2 types, we found possible differences in clinical symptoms and course between the subtypes. These differences seem worthy of further study. Among cortical-type lesions, parietal lesions were predominant, followed by frontal and then temporal lesions in incidence. There were significantly more left frontal lesions than right frontal lesions. Infarcts of both the parietal lobe and left frontal lobe may be related to the depressive state. Compared with cases not complicated by cerebral infarction, those with perforating- and mixed-type cerebral infarction were complicated with PVH significantly more frequently, similarity in risk factors and pathology between perforating-type cerebral infarction and PVH was suggested by these results.
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PMID:[Clinical study of correlation pre-senile, senile depressive state with silent cerebral infarction--MRI findings and its distribution]. 148 5

In spite of considerable progress in the establishment of physical and psychological treatments for major depression in clinical trials, little is known of the impact of treatment on the prevalence and course of depression in the population. Improved methods for assessing need for care have not yet been applied systematically to such a population. One hundred and thirty men and women attending psychiatric hospitals with depressive disorders were interviewed at the time of their initial contact. After a mean 4-month interval, 119 were reassessed in order to determine the extent to which potentially effective treatments were being fully deployed in those who had not made a complete recovery. Half had made a good recovery. At least 78% of those remaining at threshold level or above apparently had not been offered alternative, potentially effective physical or psychosocial treatment, and were therefore rated as having unmet need. Older male patients were less likely to have unmet need. This study thus raises doubts about the effectiveness of routine clinical management of depression. However, we will remain uncertain of how far the routine falls below the ideal until systematic needs for care procedures (Brewin et al. 1987) are applied prospectively to depressed populations.
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PMID:The undertreatment of depression. 148 98

The purpose of this study was to investigate antecedents of first incidence of major depressive disorder and recurrent brief depression with the help of a cohort of 20 year-old Swiss, who was interviewed four times up to age 30. Cases diagnosed as depressed at the third or fourth interview (age 28 or 30) were compared with never diagnosed controls for antecedents at the first and second interview (age 21 and 23). Besides retrospectively assessed childhood precursors, later depressives showed slight differences in their relationship to parents and friends and early symptoms of subclinical depression, persistent helplessness and a surplus of life events. These antecedents were mainly found in females. The most persistent antecedent of later depression for both sexes was a higher score than controls' on the SCL-90R ("negative affectivity"). Whether this finding signifies that proneness to the milder depressions in young adults is rooted in personality is subject to discussion.
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PMID:The Zurich Study. XVI. Early antecedents of depression. A longitudinal prospective study on incidence in young adults. 148 4

All-night electroencephalographic (EEG) sleep recording and cranial computed tomography were performed in 24 inpatients with major depression (14 unipolar, 10 bipolar). The patients showed the characteristic "depression-like" EEG sleep alterations and their ventricular brain ratio (VBR) was increased compared with the control subjects. No major differences were found between the unipolar and the bipolar groups. There was a close and positive association between the VBR values and several measures of slow wave sleep. It is hypothesized that this relationship is due to an altered function of the limbic-hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis in depression that affects both EEG sleep and brain morphology.
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PMID:All-night electroencephalographic sleep and cranial computed tomography in depression. A study of unipolar and bipolar patients. 148 7

Currently it is not clear whether minor forms of unipolar depression not matching the criteria of "major depression" should be considered as a separate diagnostic category. A controlled family study examined the familial aggregation of minor depression among probands with unipolar major depression. In the families of these probands the relative risk for minor depression was elevated by a similar magnitude to the risk for major depression. Therefore, the diagnostic category "minor depression" would not increase diagnostic sensitivity at the expense of diagnostic specificity as far as familiality is the criterion. In agreement with recent epidemiological studies, minor depression did not reveal a similar excess prevalence in females compared with males as major depression does. The variation of the sex ratio for any subtype of unipolar depression was not associated with the familiality of this disorder.
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PMID:The risk of minor depression in families of probands with major depression: sex differences and familiality. 148 13


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