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

Records of 11 postmenopausal parkinsonism patients were evaluated in comparison with those of 11 postmenopausal depression patients. None had a history of encephalitis, stroke, drug-induced or toxic extrapyramidal disorders, or active bleeding within six months before admission. There was no significant differences between the two groups with regard to time interval from menopause to onset of symptoms, height, weight, or age at first admission. Both groups showed normal height, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and erythrocyte counts. Parkinsonism patients were underweight and had a shorter interval from menopause to onset of symptoms (12.4 +/- 1.9 vs. 16.8 +/- 2.5 yr.). These findings are compatible with the hypothesis that in parkinsonism, hereditary predisposition to positive body iron balance may be associated with alteration of the blood-brain barrier in parkinsonism.
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PMID:Postmenopausal Parkinsonism: brain iron overload? 93 Jul 48

25-yr old female identical twins of Italian-American origin concordant for sickle beta-thalassemia were studied to explain their clinical differences. One of them has been severely affected from childhood with one aplastic crisis, an earlier onset of vaso-occlusive crises, and recent cardiac decompensation; the other twin shows no cardiac decompensation. Similar are their degree of anemia, RBC indices, blood volumes, absence of splenic sequestration, depression of pO2, elevation of p50 and 2,3-DPG, hemoglobin composition, and peripheral blood globin-synthetic rates. Regarding differences, the more severely affected has a shorter 51Cr RBC life span, a greater menstrual blood loss, and is more overweight, whereas the less severely affected has functional asplenia by 99mTc scanning and a larger proportion of RBC with decreased cellular deformability. We conclude that in sickle beta-thalassemia: (1) genotype alone does not determine the clinical course; (2) significant differences in clinical course can occur with almost identical hemoglobin composition and globin synthetic rates; (3) cellular deformability changes do not correlate exactly with clinical course; and (4) functional asplenia and leanness may be advantageous.
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PMID:Sickle beta-thalassemia: identical twins differing in severity implicate nongenetic factors influencing course. 98 45

In order to study the relationship between nutritional status and immunity, certain biochemical and immunological parameters were examined in 53 children with mild or severe malnutrition and 35 normal controls. The levels of hemoglobin, total serum protein and complement (C'3) were not affected by malnutrition. There was a significant depression of serum albumin, transferrin and ceruloplasmin in the severely malnourished children. Serum IgM, IgG and IgD were normal in both malnourished groups. The level of serum IgA was elevated only in the severely malnourished children. The proportion of B cells was the same in all groups; howver, the frequency of T cells was reduced in the severely malnourished cases.
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PMID:Effect of malnutrition on several parameters of the immune system of children. 108 23

An initial clinical phase I trial of inosine dialdehyde has been carried out in 40 patients at dose levels of 30-4000 mg/m2 for 5 days given intravenously (iv) monthly. At 1.5 g/m2, noncumulative dose-related toxicity occurred in all patients which consisted of nausea and vomiting, local pain, alterations in coagulation mechanism, elevated partial thromboplastin time, and positive Coombs' test. No dose-limiting leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, or bleeding occurred; however, depression of the leukocyte and platelet counts, and decreased hemoglobin value were observed. The dose-limiting toxic effect was renal tubular damage with reversible acute renal failure in one of four patients who received 3000 mg/m2 iv for 5 days. Refractory hypercalcemia was controlled in three of three patients without tumor effect. Responses occurred in patients with seminoma, oat cell carcinoma, and melanoma. A starting dose of 2 g/m2 for 3 days monthly is recommended for phase II trials and a trial in lung carcinoma is now being conducted.
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PMID:Clinical phase I trial of inosine dialdehyde (NSC-118994). 110 41

Electrolyte balances, serum electrolyte concentrations, and fluid changes in the liver, spleen, kidney, heart, and brain of albino rats were studied at Denver (1620 m) and Pike's Peak (4300m), in Colorado. Control animals were subjected to pair feeding and equal transportation stress. Animals were sacrificed after 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 h, and 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, and 12 d of exposure. There was no significant growth depression after the first 24 h at altitude. The water content of all tissues were increased during the first day of exposure. Liver showed an increased percent dry weight following 1 d, possibly due to an increase in fat content. Serum Na plus concentrations were significantly increased throughout the 12 d of exposure while K plus was decreased. Hematocrit and hemoglobin values were immediately increased at altitude with the RBC count being significantly higher by Day 9. Altitude rats retained more Na plus, K plus, Ca plus plus, and Mg plus plus than controls, with K plus and Ca plus plus showing the highest retention. The data indicated a shift of fluids from the extra- to the intracellular compartment, especially during the first 12 h of exposure.
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PMID:Organ fluid changes and electrolyte excretion of rats exposed to high altitude. 111 90

Hematocrit, hemoglobin and erythrocyte 2,3-DPG concentrations were examined in normothermic control, hibernating, and helium-cold hypothermic hamsters. Hematocrit was not signigicantly different (P greater than 0.05) between groups, but did reflect alterations reported for hemoglobin. Hemoglobin concentration did not change from control values during 12 hr at Tre 7 degrees; however, approximately a 20% decrease occurred in hibernators (48 hrs) and animals hypothermic (24 hr). 2,3-DPG concentrations declined 39.1 and 33.9% from control values in the hibernating and 24 hr hypothermic groups, respectively. No change was observed in animals hypothermic for 12 hr. Both parameters were studied in the aroused animal. Hemoglobin returns to control values immediately after the animals reached a stable Tre approximately equal to 37 degrees. Although 2,3-DPG levels increased during arousal, they were still 10% lower than control values in both metabolically depressed groups. 2,3-DPG remained approximately 10% less than controls in rewarmed hypothermic animals studied 2 hr after reaching stable Tre approximately equal to 37 degrees. The data are discussed in terms of cold depression of erythrocyte glycolysis.
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PMID:Erythrocyte 2,3-diphosphoglycerate concentrations in hibernating, hypothermic, and rewarming hamsters (38589). 112 11

A pilot study was conducted to determine the differences in frequency of physical complaints between 179 Black patients (112 oral contraceptive (OC) users and 67 IUD users) with sickle cell trait (AS) and those without AS. 6 physical complaint types were analyzed: dysmenorrhea; mental depression; vaginal discharge; fatigue; headaches; and nausea-vomiting. Out of 5690 Black patients with hemoglobin AA, 112 OC users and 67 IUD patients with similar age and parity were randomly selected to serve as controls. Cumulative complaint rates (CCR) were measured in comparing the experiences of AS and control patients in the 6 complaint categories. No significant differences between AS and control CCRs at level .05 for any of the 6 complaints were observed for both the OC and IUD groups. For OC users, AS patients reported higher CCR's than control patients for cramps and mental depression while for IUD users, AS patients had higher CCR's for mental depression. The relationship between OCs and mental depression is not clear yet, and further research would benefit AS patients. Another major concern for OC users is the possible development of hypercoagulable state with resultant thromboembolism. Also, evidence suggests that crisis, splenic infarction, and hematuria can develop in AS patients under special conditions; the role of OCs in enhancing the infarctive process in AS patients is not known and needs to be studied further. Further clinical research should also be done to determine the effect of contraception on dysmenorrhea and mental depression in AS patients. AS patients should be observed regularly.
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PMID:Physical complaints of patients with sickle cell trait. 112 75

A patient with a biochemically "new" type of congenital erythropoietic porphyria has been studied under various therapeutic trials. Splenectomy had no demonstrable effect on porphyrin excretion or clinical picture. Vitamin E caused a moderate fall in porphyrin excretion, however, there was no significant improvement in light tolerance and tendency to hemolysis. Beta-carotene reduced skin photosensitivity appreciably, while total porphyrin excretion remained unchanged and the tendency to develop hemolytic anemia showed only slight improvement. Red cell transfusion caused a rapid, dramatic fall in prophyrin excretion (in 4-5 days) and a transient increase in light tolerance, while the distribution of the different porphyrins excreted remained unchanged. These observations indicate that all or nearly the abnormal porphyrins excreted are of erythropoietic origin, and that the overwhelming part of the porphyrins originate from an abnormal population of shortlived red cells. Findings on fluorescence microscopy of blood and bone marrow support this view. Meticulous protection against light of the shorter wavelengths caused a similar rise in hemoglobin level as produced by red cell transfusion, however, in this instance the total excretion of porphyrins did not fall. It is suggested that the inhibitory effect of transfusion on erythropoiesis (and thereby porphyrin excretion) might be due partly to a depression of erythropoietin formation, partly to the presence of an erythropoiesis inhibiting factor (chalone) in the transfused red cells.
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PMID:The effect of various therapeutic trials on the prophyrin excretion in a case of congenital erythropoietic prophyria. 113 Jan 87

Fifty patients with lymphocytic lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia underwent splenectomy for various combinations of anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia. All of these patients had advanced lymphoproliferative disease, and most had infiltration of bone marrow by neoplastic cells. Good response in all hematologic parameters was obtained in 27 of 48 evaluable patients. An additional 13 patients responded in one or two parameters; there were only 8 complete failures. The over-all surgical mortality was 8%. The median duration of response was 4 months, and the mean, 7 months. Increased tolerance to further antitumor therapy and a decreased transfusion requirement were seen among responding patients. Those patients with anemia who had evidence of shortened erythrocyte survival and splenic sequestration of 51Cr-labelled erythrocytes uniformly responded with rises in hemoglobin. However, half of the patients with negative splenic sequestration also showed improvement of anemia. Preoperative diagnostic studies failed to predict favorable responses of patients with thrombocytopenia or leukopenia. The classical criteria for the diagnosis of hypersplenism are not applicable in many cases of neoplastic lymphoproliferative disease; splenectomy could have been considered "contraindicated" in most of the patients in this series. We conclude that splenectomy is worth undertaking in patients with lymphoproliferative disease complicated by hematologic depression regardless of marrow findings or the results of other diagnostic studies.
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PMID:Splenectomy for hematologic depression in lymphocytic lymphoma and leukemia. 117 72

Young broiler chicks inoculated with Eimeria tenella and given a diet containing 2.5 mug aflatoxin/g had significantly higher mortality than birds with aflatoxicosis or coccidiosis alone or uninoculated controls. This effect was seen even when a light coccidial infection alone did not increase mortality or cause weight depression. In addition this higher mortality with the combination began earleir and occurred at a higher rate than did mortality from aflatoxin or cecal coccidiosis alone. Dietary monensin sodium (99 umg/g) did not completely prevent mortality and weight depression when aflatoxin and E. tenella were in combination. Aflatoxin and E. tenella singly significantly depressed three-week body weights; however, the depression was most severe when the two were in combination. Both dietary aflatoxin and E. tenella significantly reduced hemoglobin, packed cell volume, and plasma pigmentation, and in combination resulted in more severely reduced hemoglobin, packed cell volume, and plasma pigmentation. Coccidial lesion scores were significantly less for the combination of E. tenella and aflatoxicosis than for coccidiosis alone. This atypical response of the ceca to E. tenella in the presence of dietary aflatoxin was characterized by less distended ceca, very little coagulated blood in the ceca, and apparently more profuse cecal hemorrhage.
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PMID:Interaction of aflatoxin with Eimeria tenella infection and monensin in young broiler chickens. 120 Sep 47


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