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)
Considerable empirical support exists for the positive affect and negative affect components of the tripartite model of anxiety and
depression
proposed by L. A. Clark and D. Watson (1991); however, less attention has been paid to the physiological hyperarousal component of the model. The development of the Physiological Hyperarousal Scale for Children (PH-C; J. Laurent, S. J. Catanzaro, & T. E. Joiner Jr., 1995) is described. The psychometric properties of items are examined using students in Grades 6-12 (N = 398). Initial scale validation includes a joint factor analysis with the Positive and Negative Affect Scale for Children (PANAS-C; J. Laurent et al., 1999; J. Laurent, K. Potter, & S. J. Catanzaro, 1994). The relationship between the PH-C and existing measures that
tap
related constructs is examined. Together, the PH-C and PANAS-C provide a means to assess tripartite model constructs useful in differentiating anxiety and
depression
.
...
PMID:Development and preliminary validation of the physiological hyperarousal scale for children. 1558 96
Measuring
depression
in patients with chronic illnesses such as multiple sclerosis (MS) is potentially complicated by the fact that several somatic symptoms of
depression
are also common in chronic illnesses. Whether standard assessment measures such as the Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI) and Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
(HRSD) should exclude certain somatic symptoms when used in MS has been examined previously, but there is no clear consensus on this issue. The present study evaluated the utility of individual BDI and HRSD items for assessing
depression
in MS patients by examining how individual items responded to
depression
treatment in 42 (29 female) depressed MS patients. All 21 BDI items and 12 of 17 HRSD items decreased significantly with treatment, suggesting that all BDI items
tap
depression
, as do 12 of 17 HRSD items. Thus, the present data support the inclusion of all BDI items when measuring
depression
in MS. Decisions on whether or not to use all HRSD items or only the 12 shown here to capture
depression
may depend on the study purpose and design.
...
PMID:The validity of Beck Depression Inventory and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression items in the assessment of depression among patients with multiple sclerosis. 1588 74
Given the pervasive nature of executive deficit, assessment of executive functions is of crucial importance in neuropsychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, and other related areas. A number of neuropsychologic tests of executive function commonly are used in assessing several clinical disorders, including but not limited to traumatic brain injury, schizophrenia,
depression
, attention deficit disorder/attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and dementia. Because the concept of executive control in its current form constitutes an over arching construct, a construct that is based on the cognitive symptoms of the frontal lobe disorder caused by many disparate underlying conditions, no single measure of executive function can adequately
tap
the construct in its entirety.Therefore, it is necessary to administer several tests of executive function,each assessing a particular aspect of the executive function. An appropriate combination of such neuropsychologic tests and batteries, including the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, Tower test, Stroop test, the D-KEFS, and the ECB, provides an adequate but relatively crude mechanism for assessing executive systems dysfunction. Neuroscientists continue to refine their understanding of the nature of executive control, and additional innovative procedures that reflect state-of-the-art insights of cognitive neuroscience have been introduced recently. Among a few first steps in that direction are nonveridical, actor-centered procedures such as the CBT and the Iowa Gambling Test.
...
PMID:Neuropsychologic assessment of frontal lobe dysfunction. 1612 67
Resting frontal electroencephalographic (EEG) asymmetry has been hypothesized to
tap
a diathesis toward
depression
or other emotion-related psychopathology. Frontal EEG asymmetry was assessed in college women who reported high (n = 12) or low (n = 11) levels of premenstrual negative affect. Participants were assessed during both the follicular and the late luteal phases of the menstrual cycle. Women reporting low premenstrual dysphoric symptomatology exhibited greater relative left frontal activity at rest than did women high in premenstrual dysphoric symptomatology, an effect that was not qualified by phase of cycle. Although women with extreme levels of symptomatology were assessed, the question of whether such symptoms qualified for premenstrual dysphoric disorder criteria was not assessed. These results are consistent with a diathesis-stress model for premenstrual dysphoric symptomatology.
...
PMID:Frontal EEG asymmetry and premenstrual dysphoric symptomatology. 1649 9
This study examined associations between temperament at age 3 and depressotypic cognitive styles at age 7 in a community sample of children. Sixty-four preschool aged children were assessed for positive emotionality (PE) and negative emotionality (NE) using a standardized battery of laboratory tasks and naturalistic home observations. At follow-up 4 years later, the children completed laboratory tasks designed to
tap
helplessness in social and problem-solving situations, positive and negative information-processing biases, and self-reports of attributional style. Lower PE at age 3 predicted greater helplessness in the interpersonal task and decreased positive schematic processing. There was little evidence for a relationship between NE and depressotypic cognitive styles. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that some portion of cognitive vulnerability to
depression
may stem from early-emerging differences in the expression of positive emotions.
...
PMID:Positive emotionality at age 3 predicts cognitive styles in 7-year-old children. 1660 61
The central nervous system (CNS) is, after the peripheral nervous system, the second most frequently affected organ in mitochondrial disorders (MCDs). CNS involvement in MCDs is clinically heterogeneous, manifesting as epilepsy, stroke-like episodes, migraine, ataxia, spasticity, extrapyramidal abnormalities, bulbar dysfunction, psychiatric abnormalities, neuropsychological deficits, or hypophysial abnormalities. CNS involvement is found in syndromic and non-syndromic MCDs. Syndromic MCDs with CNS involvement include mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactacidosis, stroke-like episodes syndrome, myoclonic epilepsy and ragged red fibers syndrome, mitochondrial neuro-gastrointestinal encephalomyopathy syndrome, neurogenic muscle weakness, ataxia, and retinitis pigmentosa syndrome, mitochondrial depletion syndrome, Kearns-Sayre syndrome, and Leigh syndrome, Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy, Friedreich's ataxia, and multiple systemic lipomatosis. As CNS involvement is often subclinical, the CNS including the spinal cord should be investigated even in the absence of overt clinical CNS manifestations. CNS investigations comprise the history, clinical neurological examination, neuropsychological tests, electroencephalogram, cerebral computed tomography scan, and magnetic resonance imaging. A spinal
tap
is indicated if there is episodic or permanent impaired consciousness or in case of cognitive decline. More sophisticated methods are required if the CNS is solely affected. Treatment of CNS manifestations in MCDs is symptomatic and focused on epilepsy, headache, lactacidosis, impaired consciousness, confusion, spasticity, extrapyramidal abnormalities, or
depression
. Valproate, carbamazepine, corticosteroids, acetyl salicylic acid, local and volatile anesthetics should be applied with caution. Avoiding certain drugs is often more beneficial than application of established, apparently indicated drugs.
...
PMID:Central nervous system manifestations of mitochondrial disorders. 1694 41
Across phylogeny, early experience plays a critical role in nervous system development. In these experiments, we investigated the long-term effects that specific patterns of sensory experience during development had on the biology and function of the Caenorhabditis elegans nervous system. The delivery of a specific pattern of mechanosensory stimulation in the first larval stage (L1) produced significant enhancement in the
tap
withdrawal behavioral response, expression patterns of an ionotropic glutamate receptor (iGluR) subunit and mRNA levels for that receptor in 3-day-old adult worms and a
depression
of these same three measures in 5-day-old adult worms. A critical period for the 3-day enhanced behavior and GLR distribution was observed in L1, whereas there was no critical period for the depressed effects observed in 5-day-old worms. The spaced pattern of stimulation was essential for expression of this effect: Various forms of massed training produced neither the enhancement at 3 days nor the
depression
at 5 days. The 5-day depressed behavioral response had many features in common with long-term memory, including sensitivity to disruption following retrieval. The different behavioral and molecular effects that early patterned mechanosensory stimulation produced in 3 and 5-day-old worms led us to hypothesize that separate cellular phenomena produced the enhanced 3-day and depressed 5-day behaviors and molecular effects.
...
PMID:Early patterned stimulation leads to changes in adult behavior and gene expression in C. elegans. 1705 18
In a person-centered approach to dementia-care, the self-concept of people suffering from dementia receives more and more attention. There is, however, a lack of direct measures of self-esteem, which is the evaluative component of the self-concept. An 8-item scale to
tap
global self-esteem was administered to 245 consecutive visitors of a psychogeriatric day care centre. Mokken scale analysis revealed a scalability coefficient of H = 0.44, which is in the medium range. The item responses were explained by a double monotonicity model, allowing for a reliable ordering of subjects and items on the latent trait 'self-esteem'. One-week test-retest reliability on the self-esteem scale was 0.68. Scalability and reliability were about equal across subgroups differing in severity of dementia. Patients were asked to give themselves a rating (1-10) for their estimated sense of self-worth. These ratings correlated 0.55 with scores on the self-esteem scale. Self-esteem was negatively related to measures of
depression
, fatigue and loneliness, but not to the level of cognitive impairment of the patient. As an independent measure of subjective well-being, self-esteem deserves particular attention in the assessment and treatment of dementia patients.
...
PMID:[Measurement of global self-esteem in dementia. Reliability and validity of Brinkman's self-esteem scale]. 1764 18
Studies involving alcohol and its interactions with other neurotoxicants represent the focus of several works of research due to the fact that the use of alcohol can sometimes leads to serious health problems. Fetal exposure to alcohol and mercury has a high incidence in some regions of Brazil, where there are pregnant women who are alcoholics and live in mining areas. This work was conducted to examine the effects of combined exposure to ethanol (EtOH) and methylmercury (MeHg) in rats during the development of the central nervous system (CNS). Experimental behavioral animal models/tests were used in order to examine locomotion, anxiety,
depression
and memory. Pregnant rats received
tap
water or EtOH 22.5% w/v (6.5 g/kg per day), by gavage) during pregnancy and breast-feeding. On the 15th day of pregnancy, some groups received 8 mg/kg of MeHg (by gavage). The groups were as follows: control, EtOH, MeHg and EtOH+MeHg. The experimental results showed that the EtOH, MeHg and EtOH+MeHg groups reduced the percentage of frequency and time spent in the open arms entries of the elevated plus-maze (EPM) test, when compared to the control group. This result suggests an anxiogenic behavioral response. The MeHg group increased locomotor activity in the arena and the immobility time in the forced swimming test, suggestive of
depression
-like behavior. The EtOH+MeHg group showed greater reductions in the percentages of frequency and time spent in the open arms entries in the EPM test, suggesting a sedative-behavior since the frequency of enclosed arm entries was affected. In the inhibitory avoidance task, the EtOH+MeHg group reduced the latency of the step-down response onto the grid floor, suggesting a cognitive and behavior dysfunctions. Taken together, the results suggest that EtOH and/or MeHg intoxication during the developing CNS may be a risk for deficits related to locomotor impairment, anxiety,
depression
and neurocognitive functions. There is a possibility that EtOH may prevent some of the MeHg responses, but the precise mechanism of action involved in this process needs to be considered for future research.
...
PMID:Interference of ethanol and methylmercury in the developing central nervous system. 1910 Feb 88
In order to induce the state of anhedonia, a key symptom of
depression
, mice were subjected to a one-month stress procedure comprised of various stressors. Anhedonic state was defined by a reduction of preference for sucrose solution over
tap
water. Conventional cortical and neck-muscle electrodes were implanted to control and stressed animals under chloral-hydrate anesthesia. After a two-week recovery and habituation period, mice from chronically stressed group were re-subjected to five-day stress, and the anhedonic state was verified. As not all the stressed mice displayed a decrease in sucrose preference, animals were divided in two groups: stressed-non-anhedonic and stressed-anhedonic animals. Seven-day continuous polygraphic recording was carried out in animals from both stressed groups and the control group in recording chambers under conditions of 12/12-hour light/dark schedule. The anhedonic mice demonstrated a significant advanced shift in circadian distribution of paradoxical sleep and increased amount of paradoxical sleep during the light period. In the course of the dark period, the anhedonic group showed a slight but significant decrease in total amount of slow-wave sleep as compared to the non-anhedonic and control groups. The results suggest that the changes in sleep structure documented in the model of anhedonia are similar to those described for human
depression
.
...
PMID:[Depressive-like state and sleep in laboratory mice]. 1917 75
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>