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)

Venous air embolism (VAE) is a potential but rare complication of cesarean delivery that can be associated with morbidity and death. Uterine sinuses are susceptible to the entrance of air during cesarean delivery. To define the incidence of VAE and its relation to arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) and consequent electrocardiographic (ECG) changes, a prospective study was undertaken in which precordial Doppler monitoring was conducted during cesarean delivery. Concomitant, SaO2 and ECG were recorded in 78 patients. Fifty-one of 78 (65%) of the subjects had Doppler changes consistent with VAE. Of these, 37 patients (72%) showed a decreased SaO2, (average decline 5.2%). The remainder of the patients with Doppler changes showed no SaO2 change. Twenty of the patients with Doppler changes and decreased SaO2 complained of chest pain and dyspnea. Three of these patients exhibited ECG changes including ST segment depression. Although all ECG changes resolved spontaneously without sequelae, the potential clearly existed for life threatening embolic events. Thus, precordial Doppler monitoring of cesarean delivery patients demonstrated a surprisingly high incidence of Doppler changes consistent with VAE. Some episodes were associated with a significant reduction in SaO2 and rarely with ECG changes.
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PMID:Precordial Doppler monitoring and pulse oximetry during cesarean delivery: detection of venous air embolism. 227 16

An investigation has been made with regard to the clinical picture of 87 terminally ill patients with lung cancer. It has yielded the following points. 1) Seven patients had been informed of their diagnosis. 2) Intravenous hyperalimentation was administered in 78 cases (90%), oxygen therapy in 68 cases (78%), and morphine in 35 cases (40%). 3) The most frequent cause of death in these patients was respiratory failure, due to progress of cancer, then infection, pleural, or pericardial effusion, or interstitial pneumonitis. 4) Psychic disturbances involved anxiety over breathing, depression, and delirium. In only 12% of the patients did the mental condition seem normal until death. 5) To deal with the dying patient's needs, it is necessary to establish proper treatment for the control of sensory dyspnea and for psychosocial support by a psychiatrist and other professionals for members of the family.
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PMID:[The clinical picture of terminally ill patients with lung cancer]. 250 34

Eight cases of snakebite occurred in seven of 11 captive Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) during June and July 1987. Severity of reactions to envenomation varied; affected elk presented with combinations of signs that included painful swelling restricted to the face and muzzle, submandibular edema, inspiratory dyspnea, epistaxis, frothy, blood-tinged nasal discharge, epiphora, anorexia and anxiousness or depression. We observed puncture wounds in only two cases. Treatment consisted of dexamethasone (about 0.1 mg/kg subcutaneously, single dose) and procaine penicillin G (about 25,000 IU/kg subcutaneously, once or twice daily, for 5 to 6 days), as well as revaccination using clostridium and tetanus toxoids. Swelling resolved and elk recovered in 3 to 5 days without complications. Using immunodiffusion, we detected serum antibodies to prairie rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis viridis) venom in six of seven affected elk, demonstrating seroconversion in three cases and anamnesis in one elk bitten twice. Venom was undetectable in any serum samples using similar techniques.
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PMID:Snakebite in captive Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni). 250 25

Chronic obstructive airways disease (COAD) is a major, though neglected, medical and social problem in the United Kingdom today. Dyspnoea is one of the most distressing and disabling symptoms of COAD, which is itself the largest single cause of absence from work in the United Kingdom. 92 patients suffering from COAD were interviewed in order to assess impairment, disability and handicap. Measures included spirometric tests of lung function; the Fletcher breathlessness grading scale, the oxygen cost diagram and a visual analogue scale of dyspnoea; the Functional Limitations Profile (FLP); and the shortened 12 item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), supplemented by the 7-item GHQ sub-scales of anxiety and severe depression. Low correlations were found between lung function and disability (-0.38, P less than 0.001), accounting for only 14% of the variance, and high correlations were found to exist between measures of dyspnoea and disability (-0.90, P less than 0.001). Major areas of disability and handicap included; household management, ambulation, sleep and rest, recreation and pastimes and work. Financial problems and difficulties, housing problems and problems of social isolation were also frequently reported. The paper goes on to discuss both the need for a more integrated approach to the care and rehabilitation of COAD patients and their families and for a complementary social perspective and approach to COAD and its treatment.
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PMID:Impairment, disability and handicap in chronic respiratory illness. 252 43

Twenty-five infants and young children intoxicated by carbamate and organophosphorus compounds are described. Presenting signs and symptoms in children differed from those described in adults and were mainly related to severe CNS depression, coma and stupor, dyspnea, and flaccidity. Other clinical signs such as miosis, excessive salivation and tearing, sweaty, cold skin, and gastrointestinal symptoms were less frequent, while fasciculations and bradycardia were quite uncommon on arrival. Only two patients presented with all typical signs of organophosphate poisoning as described in adults. Signs of carbamate poisoning were indistinguishable from those of organophosphate poisoning and included signs of myoneural and CNS cholinergic receptor involvement, in addition to parasympathetic muscarinic dysfunction. Atropine sulfate was found to have a clear beneficial CNS effect in addition to its known peripheral antimuscarinic effect. Our data suggest that the clinical presentation of carbamate and organophosphate poisoning in early childhood and its response to therapy are quite different from those of adults and older children.
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PMID:Carbamate and organophosphate poisoning in early childhood. 260 93

The relationship between general health measured using the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP), lung spirometry, arterial oxygen saturation during exercise, and six-minute walking distance was studied in 141 patients with chronic airflow limitation. In addition the patients completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Questionnaire and the Medical Research Council (MRC) Bronchitis Questionnaire. Their mean age was 63 years (range 31 to 75) and their mean FEV1 was 47 +/- 23 (SD)% of predicted normal. The SIP scores were lower (i.e., the patients had better general health) than in previously reported patients who had greater physiological disturbance, but the profile of the different category scores within the SIP was similar to previous findings. Walking distance correlated with the SIP better than any spirometric measure or arterial saturation and accounted for 41% of the variance in SIP (p less than 0.001). The SIP score was considerably higher in patients who wheezed every day compared with those who did not (p less than 0.005). In patients who reported that their breathing was not normal between acute attacks of breathlessness and wheeze, the SIP score was twice as high as in those who felt normal between attacks (p less than 0.0006). Walking distance, depression score, and MRC dyspnea score correlated with SIP score independently of each other. A multiple regression incorporating these three variables accounted for 62% of the total variance in SIP score. Age, sex, and response to bronchodilator were not correlated with SIP score. We conclude that the SIP provides a valid measure of general health in a population of patients with chronic airflow limitation.
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PMID:Relationships between general health measured with the sickness impact profile and respiratory symptoms, physiological measures, and mood in patients with chronic airflow limitation. 260 85

A cause-and-effect relation between panic attacks and agoraphobia is an accepted concept. It is believed that, left unchecked, a subgroup of patients with panic attacks will consistently develop agoraphobia. However, to date, there are no means for early identification of this at-risk group. This study analyzed patients with panic attacks and phobic avoidance behaviors by using population-based, survey-collected data. Path analysis was used to determine relations among panic symptoms, phobic behaviors, panic-phobic lag times, and measures of pervasiveness and severity of fears and panic. Panic-related chest pain, dyspnea, trembling, and fear were important factors in the development, pervasiveness, and severity of situational fears and anticipatory anxiety. However, full-blown agoraphobia was only related to the presence of anticipatory anxiety and the pervasiveness of phobic avoidance behaviors. Although the age-of-onset of panic and phobic avoidance was unrelated to other factors, lag times were dependent upon panic symptomatology and the presence of depression. These findings suggest that patients with panic attacks who are at risk for agoraphobia can be identified by the nature of their panic symptoms, and perhaps, through early treatment, the development of phobic avoidance can be averted.
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PMID:Factors in the panic-agoraphobia transition. 275 May 61

A number of plants are capable of producing intoxication of sufficient severity as to cause death within 12 hours of the onset of clinical signs. Those most rapid in their lethal effects are the cyanogenic plants and yew. Nitrate-accumulating plants likewise are capable of causing sudden death with only a brief appearance of signs. Most toxic plants, however, typically either require a longer time for the intoxication to develop and become lethal or sudden death is the exception rather than the rule following ingestion. In these cases, diagnosis of the problem may be facilitated by recognition of arrays of clinical signs that appear. Seven major groups of presenting signs can be distinguished: dyspnea and polypnea, hemorrhage, prominent excessive muscular activity, depression and/or weakness, diarrhea and weakness, excessive salivation and/or regurgitation and/or colic, and weakness and incoordination and/or tremors. Based on these and accompanying signs in surviving animals, many of the causes of sudden death can be differentiated. In addition, pathological changes visible on necropsy and identification of plant fragments in the rumen and stomach may be of diagnostic value.
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PMID:Plants causing sudden death in livestock. 266 7

The American Thoracic Society respiratory symptom questionnaire (ATS-Q) is widely used and has provided valuable information in epidemiologic studies. To determine the influence of psychological status on respiratory symptoms, we compared subjects' ATS-Q responses to their Ilfeld Psychiatric Symptom Index (PSI) scores. To minimize the potential confounding effect of respiratory disease on the association between respiratory and psychological status, from a population-based survey of 3,628 subjects, we studied only the 600 "healthy" subjects, defined by the following characteristics: between 14 and 55 yr of age; never-smokers; no diagnoses of respiratory, heart, kidney, thyroid disease, or anemia; and normal spirometry (defined as an FEV1 and FVC greater than 80% of predicted). Associations were found between respiratory symptoms (cough, phlegm, wheeze, dyspnea) and PSI subscales (anxiety, anger, depression, and cognitive disturbance). Adjusted odds ratios for respiratory symptoms ranged from 1.13 to 2.15 for every 10% increase in PSI score. Psychological status is an important determinant of respiratory symptoms and therefore must be taken into consideration when interpreting results of epidemiologic studies using questionnaire information.
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PMID:The influence of psychological status on respiratory symptom reporting. 272 53

In the group of 85 patients with coronary artery disease the exercise and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiograms were recorded in order to analyse the frequency of asymptomatic episodes of myocardial ischemia and to determine differences between symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes of myocardial ischemia. All patients had ischemic ST-segment depression (greater than or equal to 1 mm) on the exercise electrocardiogram. During exercise testing, 23 (27%) patients had ST-segment depression without anginal pain or dyspnea. On the 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiogram transient episodes of myocardial ischemia were found in 50 (58.8%) patients. In 16 patients all episodes were asymptomatic, in 9 all episodes were symptomatic, and in 25 patients some episodes were symptomatic and some asymptomatic. During a 24-hour electrocardiogram in 25 patients with both types of ischemia, 175 transient episodes of myocardial ischemia were recorded. Most of them (125, i.e. 71.4%) were asymptomatic. The heart rate in symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes was similar. The magnitude of ST-segment depression in symptomatic episodes was higher than in asymptomatic episodes (P less than 0.01). There was not significant difference in the duration of the two types of myocardial ischemia. This study suggests: 1. During daily activities, in patients with the positive exercise test, asymptomatic episodes of myocardial ischemia are more frequent than symptomatic episodes. 2. The magnitude of ST-segment depression is the main factor in the determination of the presence of anginal pain.
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PMID:Heart rate, magnitude and duration of ST-segment depression in symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes of myocardial ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease recorded by Holter. 274 22


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