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)

Frontal-subcortical circuits provide a comprehensive framework for understanding the anatomy, biochemistry, and pharmacology of behavior. The three principal behaviorally relevant circuits originate in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, and anterior cingulate cortex, respectively. Circuit-specific marker behaviors associated with each circuit are executive dysfunction (dorsolateral prefrontal-subcortical circuit), disinhibition and OCD (orbitofrontal-subcortical circuit), and apathy (medial frontal-subcortical circuit). Environmental dependency is common to all prefrontal-subcortical syndromes and may reflect disruption of working memory. Depression, mania, and psychosis are mediated by structures involved in prefrontal-subcortical circuits and are circuit-related but not circuit-specific behaviors. The actions of PCP, LSD, serotonergic antidepressants, anxiolytics, sedative-hypnotics, antipsychotic agents, and ethanol may all be partially or primarily mediated through transmitter systems and receptor effects expressed through frontal-subcortical circuits.
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PMID:Anatomic and behavioral aspects of frontal-subcortical circuits. 859 19

Depression is common in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Clinicoanatomic studies in focal brain injuries and functional imaging studies both in primary depression and in depression secondary to neurologic diseases have demonstrated involvement of the frontal lobe. Frontal involvement has not been established in the depression of AD. We studied the correlation between focal brain metabolic abnormalities and depression in AD. In 53 patients with probable AD of minimal to moderate disability, we assessed the severity of depression using the Neuropsychiatric Inventory and correlated the depression score with regional cerebral glucose metabolism determined by 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose and PET. Depression was present in 19 patients (36%). The depression score correlated significantly with normalized glucose metabolic rates in the bilateral superior frontal and left anterior cingulate cortices. These results indicated an association between depression and decreased activity in the frontal lobe in AD and support frontal involvement, especially in the left side, in depression, irrespective of disease etiology.
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PMID:Frontal lobe hypometabolism and depression in Alzheimer's disease. 948 57

Recent studies point to the importance of frontal systems in the control of complex behavior. Because major depression affects the same systems the considerable overlap between some so-called "depressive symptoms" and the behavioral sequelae of frontal lobe brain damage can be explained. In other mental disorders, functional outcomes are closely related to frontal system impairment. Frontal deficits, rather than mood disturbance, may explain the disability of depressed patients. This should cause doctors to reconsider their approach to depression. Treatment for the cognitive aspects of depression may be needed to ensure improvement in functional domains.
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PMID:Frontal systems impairment in major depression. 1022 89

A 30-year-old woman, with history of depression, was found dead after the ingestion of an unknown quantity of Xanax (alprazolam), Tramal (tramadol) and alcohol. At the autopsy only a slight decomposition and a diffuse visceral congestion were noticed. Biological samples obtained at autopsy were analysed to detect the presence of alprazolam, tramadol and alcohol. Blood concentrations of alprazolam, alcohol and tramadol were 0.21 mg/l, 1.29 g/kg and 38.3 mg/l, respectively.
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PMID:Fatal overdose of tramadol and alprazolam. 1064 52

EEG asymmetry, specifically greater relative right frontal activation, is associated with negative affect. Depressed adults show stable patterns of this asymmetry. The present study assessed the effects of massage therapy and music therapy on frontal EEG asymmetry in depressed adolescents. Thirty adolescents with greater relative right frontal EEG activation and symptoms of depression were given either massage therapy (n = 14) or music therapy (n = 16). EEG was recorded for three-minute periods before, during, and after therapy. Frontal EEG asymmetry was significantly attenuated during and after the massage and music sessions.
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PMID:Massage and music therapies attenuate frontal EEG asymmetry in depressed adolescents. 1065 60

A number of studies have suggested that cerebral changes, particularly deep white matter lesions (WML) visualized on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), may be involved in the genesis of late life depression. This has been confirmed in a prospective study which also found a relationship between the presence of WML and poor 3-year outcome in elderly depressed subjects. Most studies find these lesions to predominate in frontal lobe and basal ganglia, supporting the hypothesis of "fronto-striatal" dysfunction in depression. To investigate whether WML are associated with mood disturbance in dementia, proton density and T2-weighted images were obtained in 80 subjects with dementia (dementia with Lewy bodies, n = 27; Alzheimer's disease, n = 28; vascular dementia, n = 25) and 26 age-matched normal controls. Periventricular lesions (PVL), white matter lesions (WML), and basal ganglia hyperintensities (BG) were visually rated blind to diagnosis using a semiquantitative scale. Frontal WML were associated with higher depression scores in patients with dementia, implying a common pathophysiology of depression irrespective of diagnosis. Further study of the neurobiological basis of WML is needed. This can best be achieved by serial clinical assessment combined with in vivo and in vitro MRI and neuropathological examination.
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PMID:The association between white matter lesions on magnetic resonance imaging and noncognitive symptoms. 1081 42

This is a study on the longitudinal evaluation of cognitive functions in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and their quality of life (QoL). The study follow-up lasted for 3 years and the evaluation was performed every 9 months for four times altogether. We present data on the first and second session, when we evaluated the frontal component of cognitive functions, behavioural memory and quality of life. We administered the Luria Frontal Lobe Syndrome test (LFLS), the Rivermead Behavioural Memory Test (RBMT), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), SF-36 for QoL evaluation. The frontal component of cognitive functions and behavioural memory involvement is related to a worsening of QoL, in particular in the Physical Functioning and the Mental Health of SF-36.
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PMID:Cognitive function and quality of life in multiple sclerosis patients. 1087 11

Intractable complex partial seizures developed in a 3-year-old female with normal intracranial findings on computed tomography. Frontal paramedian band-like depression of the skin gradually developed thereafter, and progressive facial hemiatrophy (Parry-Romberg syndrome) was diagnosed. Computed tomography scanning at 5 years of age revealed multiple parenchymal calcifications and low-density areas in the white matter of the frontoparietal lobes. Epileptic seizures, one of the major neurologic complications of progressive facial hemiatrophy, could precede the succeeding neurocutaneous changes.
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PMID:Progressive facial hemiatrophy after epileptic seizures. 1102 Jun 43

Positron emission tomography was used to evaluate 3 Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients: 1 with major depression, 1 with emotional lability, and 1 with apathy. Compared with 5 non-mood-disordered AD patients, the patient with depression had diminished relative regional cerebral blood flow (rel-CBF) in the anterior cingulate and superior temporal cortices, bilaterally. This patient also showed diminished rel-CBF in the left dorsolateral prefrontal and right medial temporal and parietal cortices. The patient with emotional lability had diminished rel-CBF in the anterior cingulate and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices, bilaterally, and left basal ganglia. The patient with apathy had diminished rel-CBF in the basal ganglia and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, bilaterally. Results are consistent with the hypothesis of a common frontal-temporal-subcortical substrate (e.g., involving aminergic nuclei) in the etiology of depression in AD. Frontal-subcortical dysfunction may also be associated with emotional lability and apathy in AD, although these may be related to a greater involvement of frontal-basal ganglia circuits.
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PMID:Psychiatric symptoms associated with cortical-subcortical dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease. 1120 30

Many people living with HIV use marijuana to manage agitation, spasms, chronic pain, depression, nausea arising from chemotherapy, and loss of appetite. Concerns over the use of marijuana or dronabinol (a pharmaceutical version of tetrahydrocannabinol or THC) include potential contamination from pesticides or other chemicals used in the growing process, and the potential of increasing the likelihood of lung infections. Use of THC is associated with reduced levels of testosterone and may have similar effects on other hormones in women. THC can also interact with other mood-altering medications such as Valium, librium, Xanax, seconal, Nembutal, or phenobarbital, by exaggerating their effect.
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PMID:Medical marijuana and dronabinol. 1136 69


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