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)

We examined data from 44 women with seasonal affective disorder (SAD) to determine whether any demographic, diagnostic, or symptomatic characteristics would be predictive of a favorable response to phototherapy. Preexistent hypersomnia was particularly associated with lessening of depression after phototherapy. In contrast to a report elsewhere, both "typical" and "atypical" depressive symptoms correlated with improvement after phototherapy.
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PMID:Predictors of response to phototherapy in seasonal affective disorder. 154 95

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) has received formal research attention only within the last eight years. Diagnostic criteria for SAD include many characteristics typical of depression: sadness, low self-esteem, lack of energy, social withdrawal, and suicide ideation, and features of atypical depression: carbohydrate craving, overeating, weight gain, and hypersomnia. Differential diagnosis of the disorder depends on an onset in fall/winter and remission in spring/summer. It was hypothesized that spinal cord injury (SCI) patients would have a higher incidence of the disorder in the northern latitudes because of decreased outdoor activities in winter and because of such light-depriving winter survival tactics as installing opaque plastic for storm windows. SCI patient responded to a postal survey which included Rosenthal's Seasonal Pattern Assessment Questionnaire (SPAQ) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Results showed a substantially higher rate of SAD among SCI patients than in the normative sample.
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PMID:Seasonal affective disorder in a spinal cord injury population. 158 5

In a longitudinal cohort study of young adults from the Canton of Zurich in Switzerland (Zurich Study), seasonal patterns of several psychiatric and psychosomatic syndromes were investigated in two interviews over a period of three years. At an age of 27-28 years, 23% of the depressives, 15% of the neurasthenic subjects, and 14% of the subjects with backache reported an increased susceptibility in autumn and/or winter. With respect to the course we found that 10.4% of the subjects of the longitudinal sample (n = 417) suffered from seasonal depression (including individuals with subsyndromal seasonal difficulties) over two consecutive years. Specific symptoms, such as hypersomnia, increase of appetite or weight gain, were not found to be consistently associated with seasonal depression. A comparison of actual and retrospective reports on seasonal depression resulted in a very low reliability. In view of these results the seasonal subtype of depression should be diagnosed with caution, except when the diagnosis is based on longitudinal observations and/or external sources of information (e.g. family members, partner).
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PMID:The Zurich Study. XIV. Epidemiology of seasonal depression. 160 94

In a mailed survey conducted at four centers--Nashua, NH; New York, NY; Washington, DC; and Sarasota, FL--1,671 respondents provided information on monthly variations in 10 behavioral categories representing extremes in the areas of mood, socializing, appetite, weight gain/loss, and sleep length. A 10-factor solution revealed the following factors: (1) a winter weight gain factor; (2) a winter depression factor; (3) a winter hypersomnia factor; (4) a summer weight gain factor; (5) a summer hypersomnia factor; (6) a summer depression factor; (7) a winter socializing factor; (8) a winter weight loss factor; (9) a fall depression factor; and (10) a possibly mixed factor. Factors consistent with winter seasonal affective disorder were positively correlated with latitude, while those consistent with summer seasonal affective disorder were negatively correlated with latitude.
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PMID:Seasonal variations in mood and behavior in the general population: a factor-analytic approach. 175 39

Epidemiological studies and studies of clinical populations suggest that there are primarily two opposite patterns of seasonally recurring depressions: summer depression and winter depression. In addition, there is preliminary evidence that the two seasonal types of depression may have opposite types of vegetative symptoms. In the present study, we prospectively monitored symptoms of depression in 30 patients with recurrent summer depression and 30 sex-matched patients with recurrent winter depression and compared the symptom profiles of the two groups. Consistent with predictions based on the earlier reports, we found that winter depressives were more likely to have atypical vegetative symptoms, with increased appetite, carbohydrate craving, weight gain and hypersomnia, and that summer depressives were more likely to have endogenous vegetative symptoms, with decreased appetite and insomnia. A cluster analysis performed on the patients' symptom profiles without reference to season of occurrence of their episodes separated 78% of the summer depressives and winter depressives from each other on the basis of their symptoms (chi 2 = 19.29, P less than 0.001).
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PMID:Contrasts between symptoms of summer depression and winter depression. 179 Dec 62

We assessed the therapeutical efficacy of various antidepressants (amineptine, minaprine and clomipramine) in patients affected by retarded depression. All patients exhibited symptoms of retardation, including hypokinesia, anergia, reduction of speech, increased salivation, hypersomnia, Parinaud's syndrome, reduced sexual activity, slowness, hypomimia, orthostatic hypotension, dysphagia and drowsiness. Antidepressant drugs were administered for a 6-week period in a randomized double-blind vs placebo design. The rank order of clinical effectiveness (amineptine much greater than minaprine greater than clomipramine greater than placebo) paralleled the specificity of antidepressants as dopaminomimetic agents. These results support the view that a reduced dopaminergic transmission contributes to the pathophysiology of retarded depression.
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PMID:Dopaminergic hypothesis for retarded depression: a symptom profile for predicting therapeutical responses. 179 29

A multi-center study on seasonal affective disorder (SAD) was conducted from the autumn of 1988 to the spring of 1989 with the cooperation of 16 facilities in Japan. Forty-six SAD patients were identified among 1104 respondents to our advertisements in mass media, or patients seen at the outpatient clinics. Essentially similar findings to other previous reports were obtained in terms of onset age of the first episode, duration of episode, high proportion of depression in first-degree relatives and atypical vegetative symptoms. However, a nearly equal sex ratio, together with a high proportion of unipolar depression, is characteristic of the present study. Increased appetite and carbohydrate craving were predominant only in female patients, whereas hypersomnia was prominent in both sexes. Effective response to light therapy was found in 17 SAD patients. However, a controlled study on a large number of patients is required to allow final conclusions on the efficacy of light therapy in Japanese SAD patients.
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PMID:Multi-center study of seasonal affective disorders in Japan. A preliminary report. 182 77

In a randomized crossover design 19 patients with winter depression were treated with 7 days of bright morning light (6:00 to 8:00 AM) and 7 days of evening light (7:00 to 9:00 PM). Bright light in the morning reduced the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale score from 22.3 to 5.5; bright light in the evening decreased the Hamilton score from 21.0 to 12.2. Improvement in the depression as measured by the Hamilton Depression Rating scores was greater with morning light compared with evening lights. Hypersomnia was associated (p less than 0.05) with a superior response to morning light.
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PMID:Morning or evening bright light treatment of winter depression? The significance of hypersomnia. 199 83

A subgroup of bipolar affective psychoses is characterized as rapid cycling affective disorder with at least four affective episodes resp. two bipolar cycles per year, including cycles of 48 hours ("ultra-rapid-cycling"). We show that rapid cycling-syndromes but not ultra rapid cycling-syndromes are comparable to traditional cyclothymic psychoses with respect to psychopathology, sex distribution, age of onset, REM sleep parameters and neuroendocrinological findings. Rapid cycling-syndromes exhibit acute switches, a peculiar coherence of course and intensity and a atypical combination of depression and hypersomnia. Ultra rapid cycling-syndromes are psychopathologically closely linked to some hypo- und hyperphases of endogenous psychoses. Like seen through a window they represent phenomena of syndromal shifting and can be related to organic dienzephaloses. They verify experiences of the sleep deprivation therapy that show the most sensitive night time for shifting being that between 1 and 3 o'clock a.m. The meaning of the drug induced rapid cycling may be overrated. The differential diagnosis includes various symptomatic affective psychoses as well as catatonic schizophrenic syndromes. Pathogenetic ideas discuss disorders of the pituitary dienzephalic regulation.
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PMID:[Biological findings in rapid cycling syndromes]. 200 6

Seasonal affective disorders have recently been individualized by American authors. According to these authors, this subgroup of affective diseases deserve to be regarded as a clinical category owing to its specific symptoms, its epidemiological features and its response to treatment. They are characterized by the triad: hypersomnia, hyperoxia, weight gain, associated with usual symptoms of depression. Moreover, contrary to the bipolar manic-depressive psychosis, they seem to predominate among women. Finally, phototherapy, the various protocols of which are discussed here, is said to be effective. The influence of latitude combined with the effectiveness of phototherapy has led to original pathogenic hypotheses, among which the presence of a chronobiological disorder (abnormality of the season-induced circadian rhythm), although attractive and supported by a strict clinical study, has yet to be demonstrated. Also hypothetical is the role played by melatonin: is this hormone the principal "mediator" or an epiphenomenon?
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PMID:[Seasonal affective disorders, a new clinical category]. 213 39


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