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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recurrent brief depression, characterised by frequently occurring brief depressive episodes, lasting less than two weeks, is now recognised as a common and disabling illness with a chronic relapsing course and a significant suicide risk. The episodes have a mean duration of 3 days, but otherwise fulfill the symptomatic criteria for DSM III-R major depression. Some two thirds of episodes satisfy severity criteria for at least moderate depression and about a third for severe depression. They recur erratically with a mean period of 18 days between the start of one episode and the next. Because of the frequency of the episodes patients may report longer continuous periods of depression than was the case and may be mistakenly perceived as dysthymia as major depression. It is important to identify these patients as treatment response appears to differ. The episodes are too short to be able to assume efficacy with conventional antidepressants; it is necessary to adopt a prophylactic strategy for treatment aiming to reduce the severity, the frequency, or the duration of episodes.
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PMID:Features of recurrent brief depression. 130 49

In this prospective, 1-year study, 360 males admitted to an inpatient alcoholism treatment program were administered a DSM-III compatible structured interview and subtyped by co-occurring psychiatric disorder. Forty percent satisfied diagnostic criteria for alcohol dependence while 27% met criteria for alcohol dependence and one additional psychiatric syndrome. The dually diagnosed patients were divided into: alcohol dependence plus drug abuse, alcohol dependence plus antisocial personality and alcohol dependence plus depression. These subtypes were compared on multiple dimensions at intake and at 1-year follow-up. At follow-up, all groups showed significant improvement in drinking and psychosocial functioning. The results suggest that subtyping alcoholics by co-morbid psychiatric disorders may be a good postdictor of clinical history, but a poor predictor of drinking outcome.
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PMID:Outcomes of co-morbid alcoholic men: a 1-year follow-up. 131 61

Theorists have extrapolated the cholinergic supersensitivity theory of affective disorder from a convincing and broad spectrum of clinical observation and research. This hypothesis is tested using a neuroendocrine probe approach with the challenge drug pyridostigmine, an indirect cholinergic agent thought to release growth hormone (GH) by decreasing inhibitory somatostatin tone. The consequent increments in plasma GH were considered to reflect central acetylcholine responsivity. Fifty-four volunteers were tested: 27 DSM-III-R major depressives (18 women and 9 men) and 27 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Subjects were cannulated at 9.00 h following an overnight fast and two baseline samples were taken at 15 min intervals. Pyridostigmine 120 mg was administered orally and thereafter samples were taken at the time points +60, +90, +120 and +180 min. GH responses were significantly greater in depressives than controls and this effect was more marked for men than women. These results support the proposal that muscarinic upregulation and/or supersensitivity is associated with depression.
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PMID:Pyridostigmine-induced growth hormone responses in healthy and depressed subjects: evidence for cholinergic supersensitivity in depression. 131 44

In Dutch samples of treated heroin addicts, high prevalences of a heterogeneous psychiatric co-morbidity can be found with regard to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (third edition) (DSM-III) classifications, Zung Depression Inventory, and sum scores of a 90-item Symptom Checklist (SCL-90). A high-threshold (N = 87) and a low-threshold (N = 116) program are compared with regard to psychopathology and severity of psychopathology. A consecutive admissions design was used. More than 50% of the respondents suffered from a lifetime DSM-III Axis I disorder (70% with antisocial personality disorder included), and 40% were still suffering from one of the disorders in the year preceding the interview. Schizophrenia was diagnosed five times as much as in normal population samples (5%). The most frequently diagnosed disorders were recurrent major depression, phobic disorders, alcohol abuse and dependence, dysthymic disorder, and antisocial personality disorder. The prevalences of DSM-III disorders, the total number of symptoms, and the score on the Zung Depression Inventory and 90-item Symptom Checklist were all significantly higher in treatment-seeking drug addicts entering the high-threshold program. Within each program, three clinically meaningful subgroups can be distinguished: one group with DSM-III Axis I lifetime or current psychopathology and/or antisocial personality disorder, one with antisocial personality disorder only, and one with neither DSM-III psychopathology nor antisocial personality disorder. Possibly, self-selection results in patients with more serious conditions entering more treatment-oriented facilities. Odds ratios show that schizophrenia and mood disorders and especially associated on a lifetime and current basis.
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PMID:Prevalence of psychopathology in drug-addicted Dutch. 131 65

Recently, some authors have reported defective neutrophil phagocytosis during depression. The present study investigated neutrophil function in 19 healthy controls and in 41 depressed inpatients categorized according to DSM-III into minor, simple major, and melancholic depression. We determined neutrophil function by means of phagocytosis, chemotaxis, and superoxide release. The results show no significant differences in neutrophil function among any of the subtypes of depression and normal volunteers. This suggests that overall neutrophil function is normal during depression. Thus, neutrophils are unlikely to be involved in the increased susceptibility to physical illness of patients with depression.
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PMID:Neutrophil chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and superoxide release in depressive illness. 132 95

A study was performed of the course of major depressions (DSM-III) of elderly people who had been admitted to a psychogeriatric ward of a general psychiatric hospital. Patients were selected by searching the files. Patients with another diagnosis on axis I or a serious physical illness were excluded. The selected patients were traced and asked to participate in a follow-up investigation. From the files 38 patients were selected, of whom three had died in hospital. The remaining 35 patients included 28 women and seven men, with an average age of 78 years. After discharge seven of them died a natural death and six patients refused to participate. The remaining 22 patients were visited. From the files it appeared that 54% had completely recovered at discharge. Patients with a delusional depression had been hospitalised significantly longer, had been treated with more medicines and had less often been completely recovered at discharge. At the time of the follow up 64% had completely recovered but 32% had had a relapse. Patients with a delusional depression less often recovered completely. A remarkably low percentage of the population studied were able to live on their own. The results of this study are compared with foreign studies.
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PMID:[The course of a clinically treated depression in the elderly]. 132 5

It has been suggested that the well-documented hypercortisolaemia found in a proportion of patients with severe depression occurs either in response to excessive secretion of corticotrophin-releasing hormone-41 (CRH-41) from the hypothalamus, or as a consequence of up-regulation of pituitary CRH-41 receptors. The attenuation of the normal ACTH response to CRH-41 in these subjects is thought to result from inhibition of corticotrophin secretion by elevated cortisol levels. We tested these hypotheses by examining ACTH responses to metyrapone, an 11 beta-hydroxylase inhibitor which blocks the formation of cortisol, followed by CRH-41 in 15 severely depressed in-patients diagnosed according to DSM-IIIR criteria. Patients were assigned to two groups according to their response to overnight administration of 1 mg dexamethasone: suppressors (8) and nonsuppressors (7). A third group consisted of 6 healthy matched controls. Metyrapone 750 mg was given 4-hourly for 24 h and samples were taken for cortisol and ACTH. Six of the original 15 patients (3 from each group) were given a bolus dose of 100 micrograms human CRH-41 intravenously after 24 h of metyrapone, and ACTH levels were measured over 2 h. Falls in circulating cortisol in response to metyrapone were similar in all three groups. However, we found exaggerated rises in ACTH amongst the nonsuppressors, as compared to the suppressors and the control group, after metyrapone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of metyrapone on the pituitary-adrenal axis in depression: relation to dexamethasone suppressor status. 133 55

The prevalence and clinical characteristics of depression were studied in 110 randomly chosen patients attending a general medicine outpatient facility. Two psychiatrists evaluated depression according to DSM-III-R criteria and measured the intensity of depression using the Hamilton scale. 25 cases were diagnosed as Mood disorders and 8 as Adaptative disorders. Depression was minor in all cases. Anxiety and somatic complaints were the main symptoms. The influence of the classification system used, demographic and seasonal factors are discussed.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of depression in general medicine patients]. 134 May 53

The authors present a contribution to the french validation of the self-rating questionnaire of the depression in the elderly proposed by Yesavage and Brink (1982), the Geriatric Depression Scale (30 items). This study focusses on the assessment of the homogeneity and of the unidimensionality of this scale. 99 aged women living in old-people homes or attending a geriatric somatic day-hospital, not known to be psychiatrically ill, filled the GDS and were interviewed by either a psychiatrist or by a clinical psychologist. This interview yielded 44 cases of Major Depressive Disorder or of Dysthymia (DSM III). Firstly, we have applied the classical correlational methods of assessment of scale Reliability and Construct Validity: Cronbach's coefficient alpha and item-total correlations (homogeneity) and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) without rotation. Then, we have performed a Rasch Model Analysis: this method which belongs to the general frame of Latent Trait Theory relies on a probabilistic model of subject's response to individual questions. In the Rasch model, the response probability of a given subject to a given item is a logistic function of the difference between the item location parameter and the subject location parameter along a single continuous latent dimension. Our results have shown that the Cronbach's alpha was very high (.902) and that the item-total correlations were quite satisfactory (mean .470), thus giving a strong impression of homogeneity (similar to unidimensionality for many authors).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Study of the uni-dimensionality of the Yesavage-Brinck geriatric depression scale. Comparison between classical methods and Rasch's model]. 827 98

According to the Resource Allocation Model, it is logical to think that emotional mood states modulate the allocation of capacity, most cognitive tasks require some allocation of capacity, and in many instances there is a positive correlation between effort and memory. In cognitive science, the experimental paradigm of lexical decision task is used to investigate visual words recognition and lexical access. According to the Resource Allocation Model, we postulated that depressed patients take more time to recognize items from an affective loaded list. In order to compare their behavior in lexical decision task in this study, depressed patients and healthy controls were studied. We hoped to find an interaction between the mood state of subjects and the categories (affective or neutral) of words. This kind of interaction is expected to figure among the cognitive markers of depression. Two groups of right-handed adults served as subjects in our experiment. The subjects were living in the north west region of Quebec. The first group consisted of 11 depressed patients (mean age: 40.2; SD: 6.8). All of them met the DSM III criteria for major depressive disorder and the RDC. Patients were rated using the 24-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS). All depressed patients were without medications. The control group was composed with 24 subjects (mean age: 32.7; SD: 7.9). We built a depressive word-list (Mood-list) and a neutral word-list (Neutral-list) and used a computer for the lexical-decision task. We noted a significant interaction [F(1.33) = 10,035, p < 0.001] between the subjects group (depression vs control) and the words category (Moodlist vs Neutral-list).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Neuropsychologic function of the depressive patient. A lexical decision investigation in major depression]. 134 Aug 6


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