Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have investigated whether attenuated growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) responses to L-tryptophan in depression return to normal with clinical recovery. Ten patients who had received intravenous infusions of L-tryptophan (100 mg/kg) when depressed were retested at least 3 months after full recovery and cessation of treatment. In recovered depressives growth hormone responses showed considerable recovery, in all but three cases to within a few units of their healthy age- and sex-matched controls. Prolactin responses increased with clinical recovery in all six male subjects. Results in females were inconclusive because of the effect of weight loss on prolactin responses. The results suggest that GH and PRL responses to tryptophan are state-dependent abnormalities rather than indicators of predisposition to depression. This allows the possibility that impaired functioning in systems with a 5HT1A or 5HT1D receptor link may be part of the causal chain in depression.
...
PMID:Blunted growth hormone and prolactin responses to L-tryptophan in depression; a state-dependent abnormality. 182 42

In a 12-week double-blind study with 36 patients with major depressive episode (DSM-III), paroxetine (Seroxat, Aropax) showed significantly quicker onset of efficacy on the Melancholia Scale, and better tolerance than imipramine. Plasma concentration analyses showed no clear concentration-efficacy correlation in either treatment group. During long-term treatment paroxetine seemed to be superior to imipramine in preventing relapse; both treatments were well tolerated. A significant correlation between baseline plasma tryptophan: large neutral amino acids ratio and final Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) score and a trend towards an inverse correlation between this ratio and percentage reduction in HRSD score were seen in the paroxetine group but not in the imipramine group. In line with previous studies, these results support the hypothesis that paroxetine is an effective and well tolerated antidepressant.
...
PMID:Paroxetine and imipramine treatment of depressive patients in a controlled multicentre study with plasma amino acid measurements. 183 51

In this paper the authors report the results of a cross-over treatment of 79 case of neurosis with vacuum drugs and L-tryptophan. The therapeutic effects were evaluated respectively with four-degree scale and the rating scales of SCL-90. Sleep vs. Sleep disturbance self-checklist. Side effects were evaluated with TESS. The data show that treatment of L-tryptophan 3.0g/day for six weeks. Rate of marked improvement is 58.2%, effective rate is 91.1%. It is concluded that the effects of hypnosis and sedation are mild side effects only. Using L-tryptophan the therapeutic effects which concern somatization depression anxiety, phobia, compulsion, are analysed and discussed.
...
PMID:[A self body double blind clinical study of L-tryptophan and placebo in treated neurosis]. 186 Mar 85

1. It has been established that chronic hyperammonaemia, whether caused by portacaval shunting or other means, leads to a variety of metabolic changes, including a depression in the cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMRGlc) increased permeability of the blood-brain barrier to neutral amino acids, and an increase in the brain content of aromatic amino acids. The preceding paper [Jessy, DeJoseph & Hawkins (1991) Biochem. J. 277, 693-696] showed that the depression in CMRGlc caused by hyperammonaemia correlated more closely with glutamine, a metabolite of ammonia, than with ammonia itself. This suggested that ammonia (NH3 and NH4+) was without effect. The present experiments address the question whether ammonia, in the absence of net glutamine synthesis, induces any of the metabolic symptoms of cerebral dysfunction associated with hyperammonaemia. 2. Small doses of methionine sulphoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, were used to raise the plasma ammonia levels of normal rats without increasing the brain glutamine content. These hyperammonaemic rats, with plasma and brain ammonia levels equivalent to those known to depress brain function, behaved normally over 48 h. There was no depression of cerebral energy metabolism (i.e. the rate of glucose consumption). Contents of key intermediary metabolites and high-energy phosphates were normal. Neutral amino acid transport (tryptophan and leucine) and the brain contents of aromatic amino acids were unchanged. 3. The data suggest that ammonia is without effect at concentrations less than 1 mumol/ml if it is not converted into glutamine. The deleterious effect of chronic hyperammonaemia seems to begin with the synthesis of glutamine.
...
PMID:Hyperammonaemia does not impair brain function in the absence of net glutamine synthesis. 187 6

The neuroendocrine response to L-tryptophan infusion was measured at two stages of the menstrual cycle, premenstrually and postmenstrually, in 13 women with and 13 women without premenstrual depression (the MC and NMC groups respectively). Previous studies have shown that in non-depressed women, this challenge test results in an increase in circulating prolactin and growth hormone. In depressed women both responses are blunted. In this study the growth hormone and cortisol responses were smaller in the MC group than the NMC group on both occasions. The prolactin response was blunted premenstrually compared with postmenstrually in both groups. These findings suggest that women who experience premenstrual depression may have neuroendocrine abnormalities throughout the cycle. The neurotransmitter abnormalities reflected in these altered endocrine responses appear to interact with neuroendocrine changes that normally occur premenstrually resulting in a vulnerability to depression at that phase of the cycle.
...
PMID:Blunting of neuroendocrine responses to infusion of L-tryptophan in women with perimenstrual mood change. 187 35

We examined tryptophan and serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) levels in the blood after consumption of alcohol. Forty-five minutes after drinking, whole blood serotonin concentration was significantly reduced, whereas no changes were observed in tryptophan level. The diurnal rhythm of 5-HT in subjects who the day before had drunk alcohol was quite different from the control group, but very similar to that of patients with depression. The results strongly suggest that the mechanism of depression after alcohol drinking may be related to serotonin.
...
PMID:Alcohol-induced depression: involvement of serotonin. 187 77

L-tryptophan is an essential amino acid taken as an over-the-counter nutritional supplement for a variety of conditions including chronic pain, insomnia, and depression. In October 1989 several patients were reported having eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS) who had taken L-tryptophan in large doses. Little is known about the long-term outcomes of EMS. A patient with EMS who developed contractures of the upper extremities because of severe myalgias is discussed. Early aggressive rehabilitative intervention may prevent contractures in patients with EMS.
...
PMID:Upper extremity contractures in a patient with eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. 195 17

As many as 30 patients with affective psychoses were examined for the concentration of plasma kynurenine, a neuroactive tryptophan metabolite, and for the parameters of the dexamethasone test. A group of patients suffering from "endogenous anxiety" and endogenous depression were distinguished. In the patients' group with "endogenous anxiety", the concentration of kynurenine at the height psychosis was significantly higher as compared to controls, correlating with the gravity of anxious symptomatology. In the patients' group with endogenous depression, plasma kynurenine was significantly lower than in controls but did not agree with the depression gravity. The dexamethasone test appeared pathological only in the group of patients suffering from endogenous depression and its parameters correlated well with the gravity of depressive symptomatology. In both groups, the study parameters returned to normal after the egress from the morbid condition.
...
PMID:[Plasma kynurenine levels and the dexamethasone test in patients with endogenous anxiety disorders and depression]. 196 8

There is circumstantial evidence that increases in prolactin secretion evoked by L-tryptophan infusion involve 5-HT1 receptors, whereas growth hormone responses do not. Propranolol is a beta-adrenoceptor antagonist that also possesses antagonist properties at 5-HT1 receptors. Propranolol (80 mg, PO) failed to attenuate the prolactin response to L-tryptophan infusion (100 mg/kg, IV) in seven volunteers; the role of 5-HT1 receptors in this response remains uncertain. The growth hormone response to tryptophan was enhanced by propranolol, consistent with previous reports of an inhibitory beta-adrenoceptor influence on GH secretion. Excessive beta-adrenoceptor function might explain the blunted growth hormone response to tryptophan in depression.
...
PMID:Hormonal response to L-tryptophan infusion: effect of propranolol. 208 37

The dexamethasone suppression test (DST), the thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) test, and the ratio of plasma L-tryptophan to competing amino acids (L-TRP/CAA) were studied in relation to the 21 items of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) in 123 depressed patients categorized according to DSM-III. The relationships between the biological data and the items or item clusters of the HDRS were assessed by multivariate analyses. The psychopathological correlates of increased post-dexamethasone cortisol and decreased thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) responsivity to TRH were middle and delayed insomnia and weight loss. The symptom correlates of decreased availability of L-TRP to the brain were psychic anxiety, depersonalization, obsessions and paranoid symptoms. Core depressive symptoms, i.e. depression, loss of interest, feelings of guilt and suicidal thoughts, were not related to the biological markers.
...
PMID:Symptom profiles of biological markers in depression: a multivariate study. 211 48


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>