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)

Ceftiofur sodium was evaluated as a therapy for respiratory infections in horses. This cephalosporin antimicrobial was administered intramuscularly every 24 h and at a dose of 2.2 mg/kg (1.0 mg/lb) of body weight. The efficacy of ceftiofur sodium was compared with that of a positive control drug, ampicillin sodium (recommended dose of 6.6 mg/kg [3 mg/lb], given every 12 h). Both treatments were continued for 48 h after clinical symptoms were no longer evident (maximum of 10 days). Fifty-five (55) horses with naturally acquired respiratory infections were included in the study; 28 were treated with ceftiofur and 27 with ampicillin. Clinical improvement was recorded for 92.9% of the patients treated with ceftiofur and 92.6% of the animals receiving ampicillin. Both therapies reduced body temperatures to an afebrile level after 2 days of treatment. Complete recovery/cure was noted for 78.6% of the ceftiofur patients and 59.3% of the horses treated with ampicillin. Supporting variables (depression/malaise, respiration/dyspnoea, nasal discharge) were assessed and these also substantiated the effectiveness of the treatments. Both antibiotics were well tolerated. Neither pain nor swelling were noted at the ceftiofur injection site(s). None of the animals developed diarrhoea. Data from this study indicated that ceftiofur sodium is an effective and safe treatment for respiratory infections in horses.
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PMID:Treatment of respiratory infections in horses with ceftiofur sodium. 850 46

The intent of the study described in this article was to determine (a) if patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who regularly participate in less vigorous exercise programs, such as the program of systematic movement sponsored by the American Lung Association, differ from those who do not participate; and (b) whether these differences, if they exist, persist over time. Two convenience samples of COPD patients--those who practice systematic movement by participating in a pulmonary exercise program (PEP) and those who do not--were obtained through the American Lung Association of Maryland. Demographic information and health history were obtained from the participants and their physicians. They all completed the vertical visual analogue dyspnea scale (VADS) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) on two occasions 8 weeks apart and described the strategies they used in dealing with their illness. Differences were found between the groups on the BDI and VADS at both measurement times. Those who participated in the program had lower depression (5.9 versus 17.75) and lower dyspnea (58.9 versus 78.8). These findings persisted 8 weeks later, with exercisers having depression levels of 5.5 versus 19 for the nonexercisers and dyspnea levels of 55.2 versus 79.4 for the nonexercisers. Exercisers used fewer emotion-focused coping strategies than nonexercisers. These findings have implications for the rehabilitation of COPD patients.
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PMID:The effects of a program of systematic movement on COPD patients. 153 25

PAQUID is an epidemiologic prospective study of mental and functional aging. A sample of 4,050 community-dwelling individuals, aged 65 and over, was randomly selected from electoral lists of 37 parishes of Gironde after stratification by age, sex, and size of urban unit; 68.9 percent agreed to participate. Baseline information was obtained from a one-hour home interview. Health measures included ADL, IADL, mobility, Rosow scale, and two subjective health assessments. Depressive symptomatology was assessed by the CES-D scale and cognitive functioning by Folstein's MMS. Dependence rates vary from 9.7 percent to 71.9 percent according to the indicator under consideration. Cross-sectional correlations with dependence are significant for age, sex, education, rural setting, joint pain, dyspnea, hearing and visual impairment, MMS score, and depression. In logistic regressions, only dyspnea, MMS score, and depression are always significantly correlated with dependence, whichever the indicator.
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PMID:Health measures correlates in a French elderly community population: the PAQUID study. 153 80

In a prospective open study, 61 consecutive patients with advanced cancer admitted to a Palliative Care Unit underwent survival estimation by two independent physicians after a complete medical exam performed during the first day of admission. An independent research nurse also assessed each patient during the first day of admission. The assessment included activity, pain, nausea, depression, anxiety, anorexia, dry mouth, dyspnea, dysphagia, weight loss, and cognitive status. After the assessment was completed, patients were followed until discharge or death. In 47 evaluable patients, logistic regression showed a significant correlation between survival and dysphagia, cognitive failure, and weight loss. Accordingly, an "indicator of poor prognosis" was considered to exist in any patient who demonstrated weight loss of 10 kg or more plus cognitive failure (Mini-Mental State Questionnaire less than 24) plus dysphagia to solids or liquids. This indicator had a similar level of sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy, and a higher level of significance as compared with the assessment by physician #1 and physician #2, respectively. Our data suggest that three simple determinations, which may be performed by a nurse, can predict survival more or less than 4 wk as well as the assessments of two skilled physicians. These results need to be confirmed in other trials with large numbers of patients. Perhaps confirmation of these results and identification of other prognostic factors will result in staging systems for survival estimation of terminally ill cancer patients.
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PMID:Estimate of survival of patients admitted to a palliative care unit: a prospective study. 157 89

Monensin, lasalocid, salinomycin, narasin and maduramicin are carboxylic ionophores intended for use as anticoccidial drugs for poultry and as growth promotants for ruminants. Generally, ionophores have been found safe and effective in the target animals receiving recommended dosage levels. However, toxic syndromes can result from overdosage and misuse situations. More information and reports of adverse reactions are available for monensin than the other ionophores because of monensin's longstanding and widespread use in the poultry and livestock industries. Care must be exercised in the diagnosis of ionophore toxicoses since clinical signs and lesions are not pathognomic. However, a feed-related problem characterized clinically by anorexia, diarrhea, dyspnea, ataxia, depression, recumbency and death, and pathologically by focal degenerative cardiomyopathy, skeletal muscle necrosis, and congestive heart failure may warrant a presumptive diagnosis of ionophore toxicity. Confirmatory diagnosis will require considerations of differential diagnoses and laboratory assays to determine the specific ionophore involved. Presently, there is no antidote or treatment for toxicoses induced by the ionophores. Judicious use, avoidance of overdosing, and adherence to species recommendation will help prevent the occurrence of adverse effects associated with this class of compounds.
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PMID:The veterinary importance of the toxic syndrome induced by ionophores. 162 67

The course of illness in a 76-year-old woman with a history of dyspnea being treated with medigoxin, 0.1 mg daily, is presented. Five days before the symptoms of acute psychosis developed she had used medigoxin, 0.2 mg per day. On the fifth day of that therapy, the patient developed acute psychosis and was admitted to the Department of Psychiatry. An electrocardiogram recorded monomorphous ventricular premature beats at a frequency of 50%, the S-T segment depression of the anterolateral location with the diphasic T-wave and the corrected Q-T interval of 0.377 to 0.355 seconds. Five days after the discontinuation of medigoxin therapy, serum digoxin concentration was 2.2 nmol/L, out of which follows that two days after digitalis was stopped it was 4.0 nmol/L and that concentration was probably higher at the moment when acute psychosis developed. The patient was free of symptoms of acute psychosis after a single promazine dose and discontinuation of medigoxin.
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PMID:[Acute psychoses caused by digitalis poisoning]. 166 14

Advanced pulmonary disease (APD), a progressive, incurable condition, ultimately leading to death, is associated with significant, distressing symptoms. This paper reviews how the hospice approach to care, with its emphasis on treating those symptoms causing the patient the most distress, might be used by physicians in the outpatient setting to improve the patient's quality of life. Important aspects of care include management of hypoxia, malnutrition, osteoporosis, adverse drug reactions, and, especially, the symptomatic relief of dyspnea. Relief of emotional symptoms (depression, anxiety, panic) is also discussed.
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PMID:Managing lung disease in late life: a new approach. 170 79

In order to examine the relationship of dyspnea to anxiety and depression, the authors rated dyspnea using several methods in 50 patients with chronic respiratory impairment. Anxiety and depression were measured by the Symptom Checklist-90 and the Symptom Questionnaire. Results varied with the method of assessing dyspnea. Physician-rated dyspnea was significantly associated with patients' self-ratings of breathlessness as well as with pulmonary function tests, but not with any of the self-rating scales of emotions. Self-rated breathlessness was significantly associated with self-rated depression. In multiple regression analyses, depression was predictive of breathlessness. When the sample was limited to patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the results remained the same. The patients were significantly more depressed and anxious than matched family practice patients. In the study of the complex relationship of dyspnea to physical and emotional factors, it is desirable to use more than one measure of dyspnea because the results depend in part on the method of assessment.
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PMID:Dyspnea, anxiety, and depression in chronic respiratory impairment. 173 Mar 97

The diagnostic value of exercise echocardiography has been widely reported. In up to 20% of patients conventional transthoracic exercise echocardiography however is impossible due to impaired image quality related to exercise. In addition some patients will not be able to perform a conventional bicycle exercise test due to joint disease or peripheral vascular disease or a sufficient stress is not possible because of lack of patient motivation. In an attempt to overcome these limitations, a system has been developed which combines transesophageal echocardiography with simultaneous transesophageal atrial pacing via the same probe. Three circular silver pacing electrodes were installed at a distance of 7,9 and 12 cm from the tip of the echoscope. Square wave pulses of 10 ms and an intensity of 7 to 20 mA were delivered. After baseline recording at the patient's spontaneous heart rate, atrial pacing was initiated at a rate of 100 beats/min and increased stepwise every 2 min by 20 beats/min up to 85% of the age-predicted maximal heart rate. Pacing endpoints were designated to be the development of angina pectoris or dyspnea, persisting horizontal or downsloping ST-segment depression (0.2 mV 80 ms after the J-point in the 12-lead ECG) or the development of new segmental wall motion abnormalities. In a group of 50 patients with suspected coronary artery disease, coronary artery disease (luminal narrowing of more than 70% of at least one major vessel) was detected with high sensitivity (greater than 93%) and specificity (greater than 100%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Transesophageal echocardiography in combination with atrial stimulation for detection of ischemia-induced disorders of myocardial wall motion]. 175 62

The present paper is part on an extensive follow-up study aimed at the investigation of the effects of in-patient psychotherapy and at the durability of those effects. Using a psychoanalytic oriented personality-inventory (PSKB, Rudolf 1981) 85 phobic patients were examined at the beginning, at the end, and one year after a 6-8 week in-patient psychotherapy. Our results confirmed some of the generally described personality-characteristics in patients with phobia: the phobic symptoms are often accompanied by physical symptoms (sensation of dizziness, weakness sensation, palpitation, sleep disturbance, heavy sweating and breathlessness) and psychic symptoms (anxiousness, depression, restlessness, reduced self-awareness, pedantry, inhibition of aggressive impulses) which could be influenced by psychotherapy. Furthermore we depicted results which have not yet been published in literature.
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PMID:[Personality markers of phobic patients and their change in psychotherapy. Descriptive results of a catamnestic project of the effectiveness of 6-9 week inpatient treatment]. 177 Dec 26


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