Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study examined sources of distress experienced by 15-year-old adolescents in a large sample from the general population. We identified four types of stressful life circumstances relating to problems of self-image and independence, academic and physical competence, parental conflict, and moving residence and schools. Girls reported higher levels of distress for the first three types of circumstance. Reports of distress were associated with poor family social support, maternal
depression
and parental separation. Both
DSM
-III disorder and poor social competence were associated with differential patterns of distress. Lastly, poor social competence and high distress were independent and additive predictors of mental health disorders.
...
PMID:Sources of distress among New Zealand adolescents. 140 Jun 95
1,927 outpatients were included by 392 general practitioners in an open study in order to evaluate the safety of tianeptine in the ambulatory treatment of
depression
. The results of 1,858 depressed patients without melancholia and psychotic features, fulfilling
DSM
III criteria of Major Depressive Episode or Dysthymic Disorder, could be analysed. 1,458 patients completed the 3-month treatment period. The group treated with 37.5 mg/day of tianeptine showed improvement on the Montgomery-Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale. With regard to the clinical tolerance of tianeptine, somatic complaints were rarely reported and adverse events necessitating premature termination of treatment (4.8% of included patients) were without clinical severity. Cardiovascular, haematologic, hepatic and biochemical safety were verified. No signs of dependence and no specific withdrawal symptoms were found after discontinuation of treatment.
...
PMID:Clinical safety and efficacy of tianeptine in 1,858 depressed patients treated in general practice. 140 80
Psychiatrists used a semi-structured Standardized Psychiatric Examination method to examine 810 adults drawn from a probability sample of eastern Baltimore residents in 1981. Of the population, 5.9% was found to be significantly depressed.
DSM
-III major depression (MD) had a prevalence of 1.1% and 'non-major depression' (nMD), our collective term for the other depressive disorder categories in
DSM
-III, had a prevalence of 3.4%. The two types of
depression
differed by sex ratio, age-specific prevalence, symptom severity, symptom profiles, and family history of suicide. Analyses using a multiple logistic regression model discerned that both types of
depression
were influenced by adverse life events, and that nMD was influenced strongly by gender, marital status, and lack of employment outside the home. Neither type of
depression
was influenced by income, education, or race. This study validates the concept of major depression as a clinical entity. Future studies of the aetiology, mechanism, and treatment of
depression
should distinguish between these two types of
depression
.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of psychiatrist-ascertained depression and DSM-III depressive disorders. Results from the Eastern Baltimore Mental Health Survey Clinical Reappraisal. 141 89
334 of over 400 children who survived the sinking of the cruise ship, Jupiter, in Athens harbour in October 1988 completed a battery of questionnaires 5-9 months later. Compared with age- and sex-matched controls, they show significantly higher scores on
depression
and anxiety. They also report more fears, particularly of stimuli related to the trauma. Overall, their scores on the Impact of Events Scale are as high as those reported by adults in other disasters. Follow-up studies a year after the accident reveal that nearly half the children meet the
DSM
-III-R criteria for PTSD. The usefulness of this screening battery is discussed. Some evidence for the effects of early intervention in schools is presented.
...
PMID:Post-traumatic stress disorder in child survivors of shipping disasters: the sinking of the 'Jupiter'. 141 Jan 97
We estimated the prevalence of psychiatric disability and disorders (
depression
, mania, schizophrenia, alcohol disorder, drug disorder, antisocial personality, and somatization) in the parents, siblings, and children of three groups of index cases: primary care patients with somatization disorder (n = 70), primary care patients who approached, but did not reach,
DSM
-III-R criteria for somatization disorder (n = 29), and randomly-selected community residents with no psychiatric disorder (n = 1633). Nearly all psychiatric disorders were more common in relatives of both patient samples than in relatives of community residents, and the patient samples rarely differed from each other. In the patient samples, the 22.9% rate of patients with multiple unexplained medical problems is substantially higher than previous investigations of somatization would predict. The most common disorders in patients' relatives were
depression
and alcohol disorder. There was little difference in the rates of
depression
in relatives of somatization patients who were or were not themselves depressed. A similar pattern occurred for alcohol disorder. There was a high risk for antisocial personality disorder in parents of patients meeting
DSM
-III-R criteria for somatization disorder, but this increase was not found for other relatives.
...
PMID:Family psychiatric history of patients with somatization disorder. 141 May 44
The authors employed empirical methods to study the causes of discrepancies between clinicians' and epidemiologists' diagnoses of "cases" from the general population within the homogeneous
DSM
-III/DIS system. Four interviewers conducted 139 interviews using the DIS, while psychiatrists completed a
DSM
-III checklist, after which they could then ask any questions they wanted. All kappas exceeded 0.58. Meetings were subsequently organized with all participating psychiatrists in order to point out reasons for discrepancies between DIS diagnoses and clinical judgement. The authors came to the following conclusions: (1)
DSM
-III ambiguities led to discrepancies, especially when reference periods were not specified. (2) Discrepancies arose when cases were difficult: symptoms pertaining to different diagnoses or multiple diagnoses and the fact that clinicians could use volunteered comments, while interviewers were obliged to keep strictly to the schedule, contributed to discrepancies. (3) Other approaches, such as CIDI for anxiety and DISSA for
depression
, could improve DIS performances.
...
PMID:Why discrepancies exist between structured diagnostic interviews and clinicians' diagnoses. 141 47
Maturity of defense style has been associated with the level of adaptive functioning, but few studies have assessed defense style using self-report questionnaires which can provide ratings with great reliability and objectivity. We compared self-perception of defense style (using Bond's Defense Style Questionnaire) with ratings of adaptation assessed retrospectively by two independent raters (using the
DSM
III-R Global Assessment of Functioning scale) in a population of 100 adolescent girls diagnosed as having either an eating disorder or
depression
. There was significant correlation between maturity of defense style and level of adaptation, with greater maturity of defense style being associated with higher levels of adaptive functioning. This effect was independent of diagnosis within this population.
...
PMID:Defense style and adaptation in adolescents with depressions and eating disorders. 141 55
During a study of mental disorder in a primary care clinic in Nigeria, 214 patients, selected on the basis of their scores on the General Health Questionnaire, were interviewed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview, a structured clinical interview that allows for a systematic assessment of somatization symptoms. Only 1.1% of this clinical sample fulfilled the
DSM
-III-R criteria for somatization disorder, but 4.7% and 10.8% met the criteria for somatoform pain disorder and undifferentiated somatoform disorder, respectively. Age, gender and the presence of a
DSM
-III-R diagnosis of
depression
or dysthymia accounted for significant variability in the number of reported somatization symptoms. On factor analysis, a factor with close similarity to
DSM
-III-R somatization disorder was obtained. This factor is associated with the demographic features commonly found among patients with
DSM
-III-R somatization disorder.
...
PMID:Somatization in primary care: pattern and correlates in a clinic in Nigeria. 141 17
The diagnoses of avoidant disorder and social phobia in children have received little research attention. Although
DSM
-III-R describes avoidant disorder and social phobia as data are available to support this notion. The current study examined characteristics of avoidant disorder and social phobia by comparing outpatient youngsters with avoidant disorder, social phobia, and avoidant disorder plus social phobia on demographic variables and patterns of comorbidity. The psychiatric groups were compared with matched normal controls on symptom measures of
depression
and fear. Findings indicated that the three psychiatric groups were strikingly similar on all but one variable, age at intake. These findings question the notion of avoidant disorder and social phobia as distinct disorders in children and adolescents.
...
PMID:Avoidant disorder and social phobia in children and adolescents. 142 9
This group of studies describes the development of a 200 item, self-report, 4-point true-false inventory (Coolidge Axis II Inventory [CATI]) to assess personality disorders according to the criteria established in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (3rd ed., rev. [
DSM
-III-R]; American Psychiatric Association, 1987). The 13 personality disorder scales of the CATI had a mean test-retest reliability of .90 and a median internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) of .76. There was a 50% concordance rate with clinician's diagnosis for 24 personality disordered patients. The median concurrent validity (raw score sums) between the CATI and the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-II for the 13 personality disorder scales was .58. Preliminary studies also support the reliability and validity of
Depression
, Anxiety, and Brain Dysfunction scales.
...
PMID:Reliability and validity of the Coolidge Axis II Inventory: a new inventory for the assessment of personality disorders. 143 58
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>