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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study provided Tapping Test norms for young legal offenders by measuring 54 Anglo male probationers (35 juveniles, 19 adults) in Study I, and 127 probationers aged 12-17 within eight sex/age/ethnicity subgroups in Study II. The Tapping Test, a measure of fine-motor speed, forms part of the Halstead-Reitan battery for neuropsychodiagnosis. Study I results suggest that tapping speed related to age for juvenile male delinquents, p less than .01; for adults, speed relates to IQ, p less than .05. Study II results suggest that Anglo females--but not non-Anglo females--
tap
slower than males, p less than .01. The results were only paritally consistent with those of prior studies. Future researchers may wish to: (a) refine norms by appropriate adjustments for age and IQ; (b) investigate why Anglo female delinquents were especially slow on the Tapping Test; and (c) evaluate to what extent false positives may be provoked on this test by
depression
rather than organicity.
...
PMID:Delinquents and the Tapping Test. 89 14
Mature male and female rats maintained on an ad lib diet were given a choice between
tap
water and glucose solutions of different concentrations (1, 5 and 12 percent). Both sexes exhibited a definite preference for the 12 percent glucose solution, but the females drank significantly more than males. Gonadectomy produced neither quantitative nor qualitative changes in the choice made by male rats. On the contrary, gonadectomized females showed a
depression
of the 12 percent glucose solution intake and an increase in the 5 percent glucose solution intake, resulting in a decrease of the total fluid intake. A comparison of ovariectomized and intact female rats in regard to the self-selection of
tap
water and a 5 percent glucose solution confirmed the stimulatory effect of ovariectomy on the 5 percent glucose solution intake. When a choice between
tap
water and 12 percent glucose solution was permitted the ovariectomized rats showed a weaker positive response to the sweet solution than the intact female rats.
...
PMID:Effect of gonadectomy on taste preference for glucose solutions in rats. 118 49
Assessment of physical and psychosocial dysfunction is recognized as essential in chronic pain patient evaluation. One instrument, the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP), has demonstrated good reliability and validity as a measure of dysfunction among chronic pain patients. An alternate measure, the Chronic Illness Problem Inventory (CIPI), is shorter and more easily scored than the SIP, but as yet has not been applied widely to chronic pain problems. In the present study, 95 chronic low back pain patients completed the SIP, the CIPI, activity diaries, the McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ), and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-
Depression
scale (CES-D), before participating in a chronic pain treatment study. Overt pain behaviors were also coded from videotapes of a standardized assessment protocol. Seventy-five subjects completed the measures post-treatment. The results indicate that although the SIP and the CIPI are significantly correlated and appear to be measuring similar constructs, there is also substantial unshared variance between them, suggesting that they may
tap
somewhat different aspects of dysfunction in chronic pain. The CIPI shows promise as a useful alternative measure of dysfunction in chronic low back pain patients, but requires further validation for this purpose.
...
PMID:The Chronic Illness Problem Inventory as a measure of dysfunction in chronic pain patients. 153 1
1. Reciprocal inhibition between elbow flexor and extensor muscles (biceps and triceps brachii) has been investigated in nine healthy subjects. Two techniques were used to assess changes in motoneurone excitability after stimulation of antagonist muscle afferents: (1) monosynaptic reflexes elicited by a mechanical stimulation of the distal muscle tendon (tendon
tap
); (2) post-stimulus time histograms (PSTH) of voluntarily activated motor units. 2. Electrical stimulation of the antagonist muscle nerve produced a short-latency and short-lasting inhibition of the flexor and extensor motoneurones. The amount of this inhibition was found to be similar in both motor nuclei. 3. The inhibition could be evoked with conditioning electrical stimuli as low as 0.7 x motor threshold (MT) or by very weak tendon taps applied to the antagonist tendon. In the former case the threshold of this inhibition was found to be consistently increased after raising the threshold of Ia afferent fibres by a long-lasting muscle vibration. Since a contribution from cutaneous afferent fibres was ruled out, it is concluded that this inhibition was Ia in origin. 4. Post-stimulus time histograms of voluntarily activated triceps and biceps motor units were made following electrical stimulation of homonymous and antagonist muscle afferents. This enabled an estimate of the central synaptic delay of the inhibitory process. An average central delay of 0.94 ms in excess of that of monosynaptic facilitation was found, thus suggesting that the inhibitory process could be mediated by only one interneurone. 5. A conditioning reflex discharge elicited in the antagonist muscle by a tendon
tap
depressed or suppressed this inhibition. This
depression
was maximal when the reflex discharge was elicited 10-20 ms before the conditioning stimulus for the inhibition and never lasted more than 30 ms. It is argued that the only mechanism compatible with such a
depression
is the inhibitory activity of Renshaw cells acting on the pathway mediating reciprocal inhibition. 6. We conclude that group Ia afferent fibres from elbow extensor and flexor muscles project monosynaptically onto Ia inhibitory interneurones to mediate disynaptic reciprocal inhibition of antagonist motoneurones.
...
PMID:Reciprocal Ia inhibition between elbow flexors and extensors in the human. 189 Jun 35
Bupivacaine has been used for spinal anesthesia since 1982 in our department. We performed a retrograde investigation of 121 cases who had lower limb surgery and anesthetized with plain 0.5% bupivacaine solution during the year of 1987. Doses of bupivacaine, maximum spread of analgesia and spinal
tap
level were analyzed. We chose the bupivacaine doses from 2.5 ml to 4.0 ml depending on the condition of the patient and the specificity of the surgery. The patients were divided into 3 groups by the dose of bupivacaine: i.e. 3.0, 3.5, 4.0 ml of plain 0.5% bupivacaine. Seventy percent of all patients had a spinal
tap
on L3/4 interspace. The average upper level of analgesia was T7 in each group and no patient had analgesia above T2 level. There was no correlation between the site of injection and volume of local anesthetics. However patient's physical status and surgical procedure are more important to obtain the good analgesic level. There was no significant respiratory
depression
nor hypotension during and after the surgery. It is concluded that 3-4 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine provided satisfactory spinal anesthesia for the lower limb surgery.
...
PMID:[Investigation of 121 cases of spinal anesthesia with plain 0.5% bupivacaine]. 221 22
The reflex EMG responses from a tendon
tap
or an imposed, medium amplitude (30 degrees), stretch at a range of stretch velocities have been recorded from the triceps and biceps muscles of normal human subjects and in both the affected and "unaffected" arms of hemiparetic patients under relaxed conditions. In the hemiparetic arm, exaggerated tendon jerks were, as expected, observed in both muscles. The response of the biceps to elbow extension was also exaggerated compared with normal values and displayed both an additional earlier component and a much reduced velocity threshold. The triceps, in contrast, showed depressed responses to elbow flexion, with a much higher velocity threshold than normal subjects. Furthermore, on the supposedly "unaffected" side of the hemiparetic subjects, the reciprocal pattern was seen, with
depression
of the biceps response and a raising of its threshold, along with considerably exaggerated responses in the triceps including earlier components not seen in the normal subjects. The increased excitability of the flexor musculature on the spastic side may be paralleled by increases in activity in the segmental pathways responsible for modulation of agonist/antagonist activity in the ipsi and contralateral limb, leading to an inhibition of the ipsilateral extensors and contralateral flexors and excitatory input to the contralateral extensors. Thus the "good" side of hemiparetic patients also receives pathological changes, and studies of the mechanisms of spasticity should avoid the use of the "unaffected" side of hemiparetic subjects as a control for monitoring pathological reflexes.
...
PMID:Pathological stretch reflexes on the "good" side of hemiparetic patients. 232 53
1. This is a report of experiments on cat and man which demonstrate effects of a muscle's previous history of contraction and length changes on the size of the stretch reflex. 2. In adult human subjects the size of the tendon jerk was measured in ankle extensor muscles by tapping the Achilles tendon. Muscle conditioning consisted of a maximum voluntary contraction with the foot dorsiflexed or plantarflexed by 30 deg from the test position, after which the subject was asked to relax while the foot was held still for several seconds before being returned to the test position and a tendon
tap
given. After a contraction of the lengthened muscle the tendon jerk was smaller than after a contraction of the shortened muscle. 3. The experiment was then repeated, but instead of a tendon jerk an H (Hoffmann) reflex was elicited by transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the tibial nerve in the popliteal fossa. The reflex after a conditioning contraction of the lengthened muscle was larger than after a contraction of the shortened muscle. In other words muscle conditioning produced opposite effects on the tendon jerk and H reflex. 4. These findings were confirmed in cats anaesthetized with chloralose. After a conditioning contraction of triceps surae at a length 5 mm longer than the test length (hold-long) a quick tendon stretch produced a smaller reflex response than following a conditioning contraction with the muscle 5 mm shorter than the test length (hold-short). The reverse trend was seen with a reflex elicited by direct electrical stimulation of the muscle nerve, which stimulates the H reflex. 5. One consequence of a conditioning contraction is that it leads to an alteration of the level of resting discharge of muscle spindles. We propose that the larger tendon jerk after a contraction of the shortened muscle is the result of changes in stretch sensitivity of muscle spindles. The reverse effect on the H reflex we attribute to a rise in the level of resting discharge of muscle spindles, which, we propose, leads to reflex inhibition of motoneurones. 6. We support this conclusion with evidence from an experiment in which the size of the conditioning step was systematically altered. Even quite small hold-short conditioning steps led to
depression
of the H reflex in man and the monosynaptic reflex in cats. Recordings from single afferents showed that such small steps were also accompanied by a detectable rise in spindle resting discharge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of muscle history on the stretch reflex in cat and man. 239 63
1. In electrophysiological experiments in spinalized, alpha-chloralose anaesthetized rats, opioids and anaesthetics were tested intravenously (i.v.) on the responses of individual motoneurones to alternating noxious (heat or pinch) and non-noxious (
tap
or vibration) stimuli. 2. On cells that were sensitive to low doses of mu-opioids, both fentanyl (0.5-4 micrograms kg-1 i.v.) and morphine (0.5 mg kg-1 i.v.) selectivity reduced reflexes to noxious stimuli to a greater degree than the higher doses required to reduce nociceptive reflexes (fentanyl 8 micrograms kg-1 i.v.; morphine 1-8 mg kg-1 i.v.) depressed non-nociceptive reflexes to a similar degree. 3. A similar spectrum of selectivity was seen with U-50,488 (0.5-16 mg kg-1 i.v.) although statistically significant selective
depression
of reflexes was only evident at the lowest dose tested (0.5 mg kg-1 i.v.). All effects of U-50,488 were readily reversed by low doses of the opioid antagonist, naloxone (10-100 micrograms kg-1 i.v.). 4. The dissociative anaesthetic/PCP ligand ketamine (0.5-4 mg kg-1 i.v.) was similar in having selective actions at low doses on sensitive cells but non-selective actions when higher doses were required. In contrast, the general anaesthetics methohexitone (4 mg kg-1 i.v.) and alphadolone/alphaxalone (1 mg kg-1 i.v.) were consistently non-selective between reflexes to noxious and non-noxious stimuli. alpha-Chloralose (20-40 mg kg-1 i.v.) had very little effect on reflexes to any of the synaptic inputs tested.
...
PMID:On the selectivity of intravenous mu- and kappa-opioids between nociceptive and non-nociceptive reflexes in the spinalized rat. 255 13
A long lasting inhibition (greater than 8 s) of the soleus Hoffmann reflex (H-reflex) was evoked by a preceding soleus H-reflex, by a brief voluntary ankle flexor or extensor muscle contraction or by a
tap
applied to the Achilles tendon. The time course of this long lasting inhibition was similar in all these cases, suggesting that the same spinal mechanism is involved. Furthermore, it was shown that the post-activation
depression
may interfere with the determination of inhibitory or facilitatory effects on the H-reflex. It is stressed that when the onset of inhibitory or facilitatory effects on the soleus H-reflex is to be determined in relation to start of an ankle movement, either very long stimulus intervals (greater than 8 s) must be used, or the onset must be determined in relation to a reference value of the soleus H-reflex, which may be influenced by the long lasting inhibitory effect, but not yet by the succeeding muscle contraction.
...
PMID:Methodological implications of the post activation depression of the soleus H-reflex in man. 259 15
Though self-report measures and clinician-based ratings are extensively used to document psychopathology, there has been little work examining the relationship between these different types of measurement techniques. The current work examined the relationship between the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) in patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. Correlations were calculated in an initial exploratory sample, and a set of relationships was selected for confirmation in a second sample. The BPRS items of hallucinatory behavior and tension significantly correlated with MMPI measures of psychoticism. BPRS measures of hostility correlated with scale 4 (Psychopathic Deviate) of the MMPI. BPRS and MMPI measures of
depression
also were related. In contrast, BPRS and MMPI measures thought to reflect negative symptoms were uncorrelated. These results offer behavioral validity for the use of the MMPI in schizophrenic samples and suggest that the two measures
tap
similar as well as separable symptom constructs thought to be common in schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Correlations between the MMPI and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale in schizophrenic and schizoaffective patients. 274 68
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