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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prevalence rates of various side effects were studied comparatively among 3 oral contraceptive preparations containing 50 mcg of the estrogen component. Norinyl 1/50, Ovral, and Norlestrin 1 were each randomly assigned to groups of 160 healthy women who had consented to participate in the study designed to quantitate probabilities of experiencing specific side effects and of their continuing into the subsequent cycles. Acne, breast discomfort, nausea, abdominal bloating, headache,
fatigue
,
depression
, irritability, vaginal discharge, and breakthrough bleeding were the specific side effects studied; only breakthrough bleedings showed a statistical difference in prevalence. The rate of breakthrough bleeding associated with Ovral use in the 1st 3 cycles (16.6%) was significantly (P .05) lower than that associated with using either Norinyl or Norlestrin (46% and 51.7%, respectively). Norelestrin, aside from breakthrough bleeding, was reported as generally freer of side effects than the other 2 preparations. The probabilities of side effects being experienced in the 2nd or 3rd cycle after the effect(s) was experienced in the 1st cycle showed that overall, for all 3 combination pills, the probabilities significantly decreased from the 2nd to the 3rd cycle (P .05). Also examined was the probability that a side effect would occur in the 2nd or 3rd cycle if the user had not experienced such an effect in the 1st cycle. In each instance, the probabilities are significantly lower (P .05) than the corresponding probabilities where the symptom had been experienced in a previous cycle. These data support the contention that side effects experienced on inititation of oral contraceptives should not prohibit its continuation because the majority of symptoms will disappear as the patient becomes accustomed to the hormonal preparation.
...
PMID:The probability of side effects with ovral, norinyl 1/50 and norlestrin. 16 Aug 60
The arrangement of muscle spindles in m. ext. long. dig. IV has been examined by microdissection. It is confirmed that spindle systems generally appear to consist of individual receptors. Stimulation effects of fast motor fibres (conduction velocities greater than 12 m/sec) on the spindles of the same muscle were studied. Receptors were isolated with their nerves and the appropriate spinal roots, the latter ones were used for stimulating efferent fibres and recording sensory discharges. Single shocks to the ventral root filaments caused afferent responses ranging from a single action potential to a train of impulses. During repetitive stimulation (train of stimuli at frequency of 10 to 150/sec) a marked increase in afferent activity was found. Afferent activity could be driven by the frequency of stimuli ("driving") and the stimulus/action potentials ratio varied from 1:1 to 1:3 or more. The rate of sensory discharge depended on the frequency of stimuli: the maximum effect, was attained at 30 to 50 stimuli/sec and, in the most responsive receptors, up to 80 stimuli/sec. Slight increases of the initial lengths of the receptors caused facilitation of sensory responses to motor stimulation. Moreover, impairing effects, which appear during sustained or high-frequency stimulation, possibly related to
fatigue
in intrafusal neuromuscular transmission, could be relieved by increasing the initial length. The repetitive stimulation of fast fusimotor fibres increased both dynamic and static responses and also raised the afferent activity after a period of stretching, when usually a
depression
occurs; these effects varied according to the preparation, its initial tension and the frequency of stimulation. The main feature of the examined motor fibres, when stimulated, is the constant excitatory action on muscle spindle static response. Results are discussed. It is suggested that the different characteristics of intrafusal muscle fibres, the receptor initial tension and the frequency of motor units discharges, may together affect muscle spindles static or dynamic performance.
...
PMID:[Effect of motor stimulation and stretching on afferent activity of the neuromuscular spindle isolated from the frog]. 16 38
The neuromuscular block of myasthenia gravis has the characteristics of an antidepolarizing (competitive block), similar to that produced by d-tubocurarine in normal subjects: progressive decrease in muscle action potentials evoked by two or more nerve stimuli, posttetanic facilitation, posttetanic
fatigue
, inhibition of the depolarizing action of acetylcholine (ACh) or anticholinesterase compounds, and reversal of the block by ACh or anticholinesterase compounds. In myasthenic patients spontaneously recurring negative discharges were more difficult to locate in the end-plate zone than in normal subjects, suggesting that the number or density of functioning end plates may be reduced. The threshold dose of intra-arterial ACh that increased electrical activity was higher than in normal subjects; the duration of the increased electrical activity was briefer, and was followed by more
depression
of negative discharges than in normal subjects and by a greater increase in the threshold dose of ACh. These results indicate that the end-plate zone of myasthenic patients is less responsive than that of normal subjects to the excitatory action of ACh, and may be more readily desensitized by ACh. In both myasthenic patients and normal subjects the intra-arterial injection of ACh produced a prompt transient decrease in evoked potentials, attributable to depolarization of the end plates, followed by recovery (and in myasthenic patients by repair), and then by a more prolonged late decrease in evoked potentials, attributable to desensitization of the end plates to transmitter. This prompt depressant effect of ACh on evoked potentials was less in myasthenic patients than in normal subjects, and the late depressant effect of ACh was greater. In myasthenic patients the late block produced by ACh had the characteristics of an antidepolarizing (competitive) type of block, including inhibition of the depolarizing action of ACh and reversibility by ACh or neostigmine, while in normal subjects the characteristics were those of a depolarizing (noncompetitive) type of block, including little or no inhibition of the depolarizing action of ACh and lack of reversal by ACh or neostigmine. The differences between the late depressant action of ACh in myasthenic patients and normal subjects resembled differences in the effect of other depolarizing compounds, such as choline, succinylcholine, and decamethonium, and are best explained by differences in behavior of the postsynaptic receptor. The disease appears to be due to the presence of abnormal forms of receptor or to abnormal responses of receptor to the transmitter. The predominance of one or other form of receptor may determine the clinical state of the myasthenic patient and his response to anticholinesterase medication.
...
PMID:Characteristics and mechanism of neuromuscular block in myasthenia gravis. 18 86
1. Electrophysiological and electron microscope studies were done on cells in the ciliary ganglion of chickens which had been axotomized on the day of hatching. 2. By the third day after post-ganglionic axotomy both electrical and chemical transmission through the ganglion were severely depressed; by the fifth day ganglionic transmission had disappeared. 3. Action potential initiation and conduction in axotomized cells and in their associated presynaptic nerve terminals were unimpaired 3-4 days after axotomy. 4.
Depression
of ganglionic transmission in 3-4 day axotomized preparations was due to a reduction in amplitude of both the excitatory post-synaptic potential (e.p.s.p.) and the electrical coupling potential in individual ganglion cells. 5. In addition to being reduced in amplitude, e.p.s.p.s in axotomized cells were more subject to
fatigue
during low frequency (1/sec) stimulation. 6. The reduction in e.p.s.p. amplitude was due to a reduction in both the mean quantal content of the e.p.s.p.s and the calculated depolarization produced by an individual quantum of transmitter. On the average the e.p.s.p. was reduced by a factor of about 4, the mean quantum content to about two thirds normal and the quantal size to about a third normal, compared with responses in unaxotomized cells of the same age. 7. Ultrastructural studies revealed a progressive maturation of pre-synaptic terminals in normal ganglia between 0 and 9 days after hatching. Over this period the content of synaptic vesicles and mitochondria in the terminals increased and the background matrix became more dense. 8. After axotomy these signs of maturation was abolished or reversed, particularly from the third day onward. In addition there was an increase in the number of cell sections in which no synaptic terminals were observed. 9. It was concluded that loss of synaptic transmission was due to at least three factors: a reduction in release of transmitter from presynaptic terminals, a reduction in quantal size, probably due to a loss of post-synaptic sensitivity, and a partial loss of presynaptic contact.
...
PMID:Physiological and morphological effects of post-ganglionic axotomy on presynaptic nerve terminals. 18 71
1. The
fatigue
in rat anterior tibial (a.t.) motor units was studied and related to microphotometric determinations of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity of the motor unit muscle fibres. 2. Anterior tibial contains fast-twitch type II fibre units with an average contraction time of 11 msec and about 5% slow-twitch type I fibre units with an average contraction time of 20 msec. 3. In type II fibres stained for SDH, absorbance varied continuously from 0.046 to 0.569 and inversely to fibre size, except for the largest fibres. 4. Resistance to
fatigue
of fast motor units to 100 Hz intermittent stimulation varied continuously within a wide range in near linear relations to absorbance for SDH of unit fibres and inversely to tetanic tension, except for motor units with the largest fibres and the largest tetanic tension. 5. Neither resistance to
fatigue
nor SDH activity lent itself to any categorization of motor units or fibres into well demarcated functional or histochemical types, since both parameters varied continuously in the unit and fibre population of the muscle. 6. The direct relation between resistance to
fatigue
of fast-twitch motor units and SDH activity of unit fibres appeared valid for
fatigue
resistance of: (a) neuromuscular transmission, tested with 100 Hz intermittent stimulation which gave concomitant failure of electrical and mechanical response, (b) excitation--contraction coupling, demonstrated by post-stimulatory
depression
of twitch tension with preserved maximum tetanus tension and action potential, and (c) contractile mechanism; excitation--contraction coupling?, tested with low frequency stimulation which gave decline of twitch and maximum tetanus tension with preserved action potential. 7. It is suggested that the endurance of each link in the chain of events leading to contraction, including neuromuscular junction and the excitation--contraction coupling system, is under aerobic conditions matched to the contractile capacity of the fibre expressed by its oxidative enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Transmission and contraction fatigue of rat motor units in relation to succinate dehydrogenase activity of motor unit fibres. 22 67
It is recommended that patients with acute myocardial infarction be able to perform activities of daily living at approximately 3 METs at the time of hospital discharge. Implementation of this recommendation requires that the hemodynamic responses at the 3 METs level be assessed prior to discharge. Symptoms, blood pressures, heart rates, and electrocardiographic responses of 41 AMI patients (eight women and 33 men, mean age, 60 years) during a low-level treadmill test were studied 11 days after acute myocardial infarction. Twenty-nine of 41 patients (71 per cent) completed the test.
Fatigue
was the most common reason for stopping the test early. Between rest and maximum exercise there were increases of 13 per cent in systolic blood pressure, 25 per cent in heart rate, and 40 per cent in pressure-rate product. The resting systolic blood pressures, heart rates, and pressure-rate products were significantly higher (p less than or equal to 0.05) in the patients who were unable to finish the test. ST-segment elevation or
depression
larger than or equal to 1 mm. was seen in 14 patients. This low-level treadmill test was safe under well supervised conditions; it provided objective information about the patient's readiness for discharge. This type of information can be used for patient teaching and discharge planning.
...
PMID:Low-level treadmill testing of 41 patients with acute myocardial infarction prior to discharge from the hospital. 24 26
Mothers breast feeding 2 weeks after delivery were studied. One group (106 mothers) were advised to 'eat for two' during lactation to sustain their milk supply. They were compared at 3 months with a control group of 152 mothers. At 3 months only half as many advised group mothers had weaned their babies due to insufficient milk as control mothers. The numbers weaning for other reasons were similar in both groups. More breast feeding mothers reported an increased appetite during lactation than did mothers who had changed to artificial feeding. Smokers were more likely to have given up breast feeding between 2 weeks and 3 months than non-smokers but smoking was not associated with any particular weaning reason. Women taking a contraceptive pill during lactation more often experienced a diminution of milk supply than non-pill-takers. Sustained lactation benefits the mother since those who were still breast feeding were less likely to suffer from
depression
or
fatigue
at 3 months, and were more likely to have lost weight. The early introduction of solids was less frequent among infants being breast fed at 3 months.
...
PMID:Breast feeding in Cambridge, England: factors affecting the mother's milk supply. 25 71
In the course of treatment by Dr. H.L. Wen's technique of acupuncture for the withdrawal symptoms of various drugs, it was noted that there was a relief of neurotic symptoms, tension, restlessness and
depression
. Therefore, this treatment was used on neurotic patients. Forty patients ranging in age from 22 to 61 years were treated. Case reports are given on four patients. The degree of relief from neurotic symptoms was most marked in symptoms of restlessness, tension, mental and physical
fatigue
, loss of appetite and irritability, in that order. Obsessional symptoms showed a poor response. It is concluded that electro-acupuncture is useful in the treatment of neurotic symptoms, that it is cheaper and safer than other methods of treatment in use at this time, and that it is a useful adjunct in the treatment of psychoneurosis.
...
PMID:Electro-acupuncture treatment in psychiatry. 30 May 61
A study was designed to compare the effects of three relaxation strategies on mood state profiles in a group of 30 male alcoholics. The Profile of Mood States (POMS) was used for pre- and posttest treatment measures. The results indicated that the three relaxation strategies--progressive relaxation training, (PRT), meditation training (MT), quiet rest (QR)--produced qualitatively different patterns. While both PRT and MT produced measurable decrements in self-reported tension and QR controls showed no change on any of the six subscales, PRT was observed to effect decreased
depression
as well as a trend toward increased vigor. Meditation training effects were limited to decreased tension and a nonsignificant decrease in
fatigue
. These results are discussed in terms of refinement of the "relaxation response" notion to a more heterogeneous, technique-centered definition.
...
PMID:Differential mood changes in alcoholics as a function of anxiety management strategies. 34 7
The clinical efficacy of oral clomipramine and amitriptyline treatment (50--125 mg/day) was compared over a period of 2 months in 72 depressive patients visiting a psychiatric out-patient clinic. Both drugs were equally effective as measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
. According to a nurse's independent evaluation of 13 items the two drugs were equipotent in relieving depressive symptoms and no statistically significant differences between the treatment groups were found in the global evaluation by the investigator and the patient. A trend in favour of clomipramine was, however, seen in several parameters. The declines in the Hamilton Rating Scale scores and the nurse's evaluation scores were highly significant during the first 2 weeks of treatment (P less than 0.001) in both groups and the scores continued to decrease during the 2nd month of the study. The most common unwanted effects were dryness of the mouth and
fatigue
. The frequency of side effects was 51% in the clomipramine group and 43% in the amitriptyline group. The side effects were generally mild and transient and called for discontinuation of treatment in only one case in each group.
...
PMID:Tricyclic antidepressants in the treatment of depressions. A double-blind clinical comparison of clomipramine (Anafranil) and amitriptyline. 35 54
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