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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of different subcutaneous doses of fentanyl (0.02, 0.04, 0.08, and 0.16 mg/kg), piritramide (0.63, 2.50, 10.0 and 40.0 mg/kg), and morphine (2.50, 5.00, 10.0 and 20.0 mg/kg) on self-stimulation in rats were studied. Different stimulus parameter combinations (SPC) inducing low, high or intermediate control response rates (CRR) were applied during the same experimental sessions. The three narcotic analgesics induced response
depression
(RD) and response stimulation (RS). RS was mostly observed at low dose levels; RD was dose-related. SPC's inducing low CRR were more sensitive than those inducing high CRR. Fentanyl was more potent than piritramide and than morphine. The RD is related to motor incapacitation, as the doses needed to effectively reduce self-stimulation also induced obvious
catatonia
. The RS probably is a more specific effect reflecting sensitization of structures involved in reinforcement of behavior.
...
PMID:Intracranial self-stimulation in rats as a function of various stimulus parameters. VI. Influence of fentanyl, piritramide, and morphine on medial forebrain bundle stimulation with monopolar electrodes. 0 96
To document the point that the hyperparathyroidism should be considered a possible cause of unexplained neurological and psychiatric symptoms, the authors present five case reports of confirmed primary hyperparathyroidism in which the patients initially appeared with problems that seemed mainly psychiatric. The presenting symptoms in these cases consisted of varying degrees of
depression
,
catatonia
, confusion, disorientation, fatigue, and lethargy; there was no associated bone or renal pathology in four of the cases. The authors include a review of the pertinent literature and a discussion of the effect of calcium and magnesium bivalent ions on the central nervous system associated with hyperparathyroidism. They conclude that more investigation of the role of magnesium in this disease seems warranted.
...
PMID:Mental changes associated with hyperparathyroidism. 111 11
Both in periodic
catatonia
and in manic-depressive disorders sudden switches occur in behavior, in the autonomic nervous system and in the catecholamine metabolism during the transition from interval or
depression
into
catatonia
or mania. Both the manic and the catatonic attacks seem to be superimposed on the basic depressive or schizophrenic illnesses. The attacks can be counteracted or suppressed by psychotropic drugs such as alpha-methyldopa, disulfiram, reserpine, haloperidol or chloropromazine which interfere with the catecholamine metabolism or their receptor sites. The involvement of the catecholamines may however be secondary to primary defects in the thyroid, the hypothalamus or the limbic system. The strict periodicity in periodic
catatonia
points to an accumulation of some active metabolite which may be produced centrally during the interval. At a certain level it may trigger the switch-mechanism and then be reduced during the catatonic phase. In periodic
catatonia
both the basic schizophrenic disease as well as the periodic manifestations are compensated by thyroxine-thyroid treatment.
...
PMID:The switch mechanism in periodic catatonia and manic-depressive disorder. 122 77
Many patients present with stupor or substupor without classical catatonic signs as described by Kahlbaum. The phenomenological literature is not clear as to whether stupor, when it presents alone, constitutes a separate syndrome or is a forme fruste of
catatonia
. All patients who presented with stupor, (a) partial or total mutism or (b) absent or decreased motor responses (n = 22), were compared with patients who also had classical catatonic signs such as negativism or waxy flexibility (n = 43) over a one-year period (1988), on sociodemographic and clinical variables. There were very few significant differences between the two groups (age, sex, diagnosis, duration of illness, number of ECTs required). The stupor group had a slight excess of patients with manic-depressive psychosis,
depression
and more frequently positive family histories of mental illness. The current study provides a tentative support to the hypothesis that stupor is a catatonic sign, and even when present alone can be considered to constitute a catatonic syndrome.
...
PMID:Is stupor by itself a catatonic symptom? 129 21
Four cases of baclofen intoxication are reported, with a review of 33 cases from the literature. Analysis of these 37 cases suggests that there are two types of baclofen intoxication syndrome. Patients with acute intoxication present with four major clinical manifestations: encephalopathy (disturbance of consciousness and/or seizure), respiratory
depression
, muscular hypotonia, and generalized hyporeflexia. Patients with chronic intoxication present with hallucinosis, impaired memory,
catatonia
, or acute mania. The acute intoxication syndrome has a faster onset, shorter duration, more severe clinical manifestations, and higher incidence of seizures than the chronic intoxication syndrome. Baclofen intoxication, although it may cause grave encephalopathic manifestations and electroencephalographic findings, has a benign outcome if actively managed.
...
PMID:Baclofen intoxication: report of four cases and review of the literature. 157 99
Although extrapyramidal side effects of two commonly used antiemetics, metoclopramide and prochlorperazine, are well known, it may be difficult for even the experienced practitioner to distinguish some of these extrapyramidal reactions from such psychiatric symptoms as anxiety,
depression
, or
catatonia
. Certain patient groups have increased susceptibility to these extrapyramidal reactions, including patients under 30, those with AIDS, those with renal disease, oncology patients, and possibly women. Physicians should maintain a high index of suspicion for
depression
, anxiety, or
catatonia
if their patients are taking antiemetics. These symptoms may be extrapyramidal side effects of the antiemetic rather than indications of a primary mental disorder.
...
PMID:Extrapyramidal side effects of antiemetics presenting as psychiatric illness. 160 Dec 95
We reviewed the records of 42 patients with Wilson's disease participating in a zinc acetate treatment protocol and interviewed 17 of them. Five of the patients studied were asymptomatic. A significant number of symptomatic patients (64.8%) reported psychiatric symptoms at the time of initial presentation. These symptoms were severe enough to warrant psychiatric intervention in almost half of all symptomatic patients before the diagnosis of Wilson's disease was made. Personality changes, particularly irritability and aggression, were most commonly described (45.9%), followed by
depression
(27%). Cognitive changes, anxiety, psychosis, and
catatonia
, while less frequent, also occurred. These data underscore the need to include Wilson's disease in the differential diagnosis of psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:The psychiatric presentations of Wilson's disease. 149 90
Alfentanil, a short-acting and powerful analgesic, when injected peripherally to rats (0.5 mg/kg) produced a catatonic state characterized by a rigid akinesia. The present study was designed to explore the neuroanatomical location of the opiate receptors mediating the alfentanil induced
catatonia
. The catatonic effect of alfentanil was measured using a bar test and
depression
of locomotor activity in rats tested in photocell cages during an active nocturnal phase of their cycle. Methylnaloxonium HCl (MN), a quaternary derivative of naloxone which does not readily cross the blood-brain barrier, injected into the lateral ventricle significantly reduced the
catatonia
at doses of 0.125-2.0 micrograms as measured in both the locomotor and bar test. MN perfusion of similar doses directly into the nucleus raphe pontis, but not in the caudate nucleus significantly antagonized the
catatonia
. These data complement results on alfentanil-induced muscular rigidity (Blasco et al., see companion paper) where EMG indices of rigidity in rats were reversed by microinjections of low doses of MN (0.125 and 0.5 microgram) in the nucleus raphe pontis, but not the caudate nucleus even at a high dose (4.0 micrograms). Together these results suggest that the region of the nucleus raphe pontis is an important neural substrate for opiate-induced muscular rigidity, and that the catatonic state produced by opiates depends on more diffuse opiate receptor activation of which one important component may be the nucleus raphe pontis.
...
PMID:'Catatonia' produced by alfentanil is reversed by methylnaloxonium microinjections into the brain. 302 82
Tumors and other mass lesions of the brain may present with symptoms resembling psychosis or
depression
or with features of delusions, hallucinations, mania, or
catatonia
. There is an over-representation of tumors affecting the frontal lobe, temporal lobe, and diencephalon in patients with these manifestations. Neurologic symptoms and signs may be helpful in making an early diagnosis of the tumor. Patients with late-onset psychosis, unusual histories of
depression
, and those with focal neurologic findings associated with psychotic disorders should undergo computerized tomographic (CT) scanning to exclude a focal brain lesion.
...
PMID:Intracranial mass lesions associated with late-onset psychosis and depression. 328 79
The experiments on adult freely behaving cats have shown that the injection of penicillin into the internal part (TI) of bed nucleus of stria terminalis (BST) caused the formation of the generator of pathologically enhanced excitation (GPEE). This part of BST became hyperactive and played the role of a pathologic determinant which caused the formation of a complex pathologic system and behavioural disorders with
catatonia
, stereotypy, food rejection, eating of uneatable things, hypoalgesia, zoosocial behavioural changes,
depression
of different emotions, etc. The development of these disorders was progressing and was accompanied by corresponding electrophysiological activity in TI and other brain structures studied. Coagulation of GPEE zone at the early stages of the process prevented the development of the above disorders.
...
PMID:[Modelling psychosis in cats by creating a generator of pathologically enhanced excitation in one of the septal nuclei]. 367 52
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