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)

Unlike conventional antidepressants, rolipram (a new approach in the treatment of depression) stimulates both the presynaptic and the postsynaptic component of monoaminergic transmission. Several double blind trials are under way to assess the clinical efficacy and safety of this compound. The present study was a randomized, 4-week interindividual double blind double-dummy comparison with desipramine in inpatients with major (DSM-III) and/or endogenous (ICD-9) depressions. After a minimum washout period of three days the patients received either 0.50 mg rolipram or 25 mg desipramine orally t.i.d. for the first three days, then 0.75 mg rolipram or 50 mg desipramine t.i.d. until day 28. Rating tests were based principally on the AMDP-system and the HAMD scale. The study showed no differences between the two drugs as regards the efficacy, but a definite trend in favour of rolipram as regards the side effects and, in particular, anticholinergic effects.
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PMID:Is phosphodiesterase inhibition a new mechanism of antidepressant action? A double blind double-dummy study between rolipram and desipramine in hospitalized major and/or endogenous depressives. 306 34

The aims of the present study were to investigate the value of adding DSM-III diagnosis and Newcastle Scale Rating to the ICD-8 diagnosis currently used and to investigate the association between Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST) and the Thyrotropine Releasing Hormone- Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TRH-TSH) test and the three classification systems for depression. Twenty-six depressed in-patients were included, 17 women and 9 men, with a mean age of 51.5 years. Fourteen patients were psychotic depressed. DST and Newcastle Scale Rating were performed on 18 patients and TRH-TSH test was performed on 16 patients. The addition of DSM-III diagnosis on the 4-digit level did not have any value compared to the ICD-8 diagnosis. However, DSM-III diagnosis on the 5-digit level added important clinical information which corresponded better to Newcastle Scale scores and DST and TRH-TSH test results than ICD-8 diagnosis. The main advantage of the DSM-III classification of depression on the 5-digit level compared to ICD-8 concerns depression on the border between psychosis and neurosis. In clinical practice there is a risk of underestimating the severity of a depression if ICD-8/9 is used as the only criterion for severity. This may have tragic consequences for the patient. This study suggests that rating of the depression on the Newcastle Scale or provision of a DSM-III diagnosis on the 5-digit level are valuable assessment procedures of severity.
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PMID:A comparison of DSM-III and ICD-8 diagnoses for major affective disorders and the use of biological markers for depression. 309 84

The tolerance and efficacy of trazodone were studied in subjects between 20 and 70 years of age. The first step was to conduct an open trial. Each patient (in- and out-patients) received increasing doses (range 25 mg-200 mg/day/2h) for a period of 10 days. Disorders diagnosed as depressive were classified by ICD-9. Blood-pressure and pulse rate were determined before and after infusion. The side effects (TWIS), Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD), Depression Self Rating Scale (DS v. Zehrssen), and Clinical Global Impression (CGI) were assumed after medication. The results are demonstrated.
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PMID:Clinical experience with antidepressive infusion therapy: trazodone. 313 11

The performance of the dexamethasone suppression test was assessed in 90 consecutive admissions with a diagnosis of depression, categorised according to two classification systems (DSM-III and ICD-9). Non-suppression was found in most of the diagnostic categories, but there was a highly significant association with the DSM-III classification 'major depressive episode with melancholia' (52%) in comparison with the ICD group 'manic-depressive illness-depressed' (29%).
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PMID:Performance of the dexamethasone suppression test in depressive illness according to ICD and DSM-III classification systems. 316 10

This study tries to replicate findings of a previous outpatient study, which revealed some clinical predictors of doxepine response in depressed patients. 314 depressed outpatients were treated by a total of 262 private practice psychiatrists for 6 weeks with 100 mg doxepine daily. The following findings of the previous study could be confirmed: 74% of the patients were therapy responders (score on the Hamilton Depression Scale after 6 weeks less than or equal to 8); unpredictability of diagnostic subtyping into endogenous and non-endogenous depression (clinically according to ICD-9 and operationally according to the Newcastle Scale); response-predictability of the personality assessment as not being deviant, defined according to the Newcastle Scale (no previous "nervous breakdowns", no previous neurotic symptoms, no severe social maladaptation); response-predictability of an improvement after 2 weeks over the initial Hamilton score of greater than or equal to 30%. The practical relevance of these three findings for outpatient therapy with antidepressive drugs is stressed.
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PMID:[Psychopathologic prediction of ambulatory doxepin response. A replication trial]. 317 95

Contrasting the classification systems ICD-9 and DSM-III-R, a comparison of diagnoses for unipolar depressive disorders is presented from a sample of 168 psychiatric outpatients. A relatively clear correspondence existed between ICD-9 endogenous depression and DSM-III-R major depression. Neurotic depression (ICD-9) divided into either dysthymia or major depression in DSM-III-R. A generally greater variety of corresponding ICD-9 diagnoses was observed for DSM-III-R categories, since patients with eating disorders, alcohol or drug dependence, or with neuroses other than depressive type often received an additional specific DSM-III-R diagnosis for depression. For ICD-9 diagnostics, a decreased threshold was found for diagnosing depressive reaction, as compared with the equivalent DSM-III-R diagnosis of adjustment disorder with depressed mood. A new technique is introduced in order to adjust corresponding proportions according to base rate differences.
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PMID:Divergence and convergence of diagnoses for depression between ICD-9 and DSM-III-R. 321 19

A study aimed at the standardization of symptom evaluation of patients with depression was carried out as the first step in an extensive collaborative study on affective disorders between centers in Nagasaki, Shanghai and Seoul. This study was initiated in order to clarify the factors affecting the low reported prevalence rates of depressive disorders in Asia. No significant difference in evaluation of psychiatric symptoms was observed between the 3 centers. Nevertheless, the diagnoses given by ICD-9 showed very interesting differences. For any given case, Nagasaki tended to make a diagnosis of an affective psychosis depression, while Shanghai made a diagnosis of neurotic disorder. No significant tendency was observed in the Seoul center. These findings are discussed in terms of their importance for future international collaborative studies.
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PMID:Comparative study of affective disorders in three Asian countries. I. Differences in diagnostic classification. 322 28

A study was carried out to document the psychiatric disturbances among consecutive first-day attenders to an internal medicine out-patient clinic in Spain. Subjects were interviewed in three different stages using standardized procedures, basically the Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS). As hypothesized, the rate of disturbances was high (46.9%) and their classification with ICD-9 criteria was problematic. Minor affective disturbances were the most common diagnoses; the distribution of anxiety and depression scores followed the 'two correlated dimensions' model. The psychopathological differences between 'cases' and 'non-cases' seemed quantitative rather than qualitative. Absence of organicity, a pattern of multiple consultations and social problems were more frequent among the 'cases'. These data support the use of multiaxial classificatory systems. Ten supervised interviews significantly improved the internist recognition of 'cases' and the suggestion is made that a single routine question about the patients' mood would sensibly improve the detection rates.
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PMID:Psychiatric morbidity among medical out-patients in Spain: a case for new methods of classification. 323 64

The effects of age on sex differences in depression were studied in an inpatient-sample of the Department of Psychiatry, Free University Berlin. The dependent variable depression was defined by nosological classification (ICD) and by the severity of the Depressive Syndrome of the AMP-Rating Scale on admission. With the exception of the 40-49 years olds women were more often diagnosed as depression compared to men, the preponderance of women was significant till the age of 40. With regard to the Depressive Syndrome women manifested a more pronounced symptomatology up to the age of 70. The difference diminished for male and female patients 50-69 years old and changed to a higher score for men older than 70. The results were discussed in comparison to other findings published in the last years.
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PMID:[Effect of aging on the sex distribution of depressive disorders]. 348 28

Classification of depressive states is at the present time an open issue. Depression is ambiguously defined, either as a syndrome, or as a disease whose manifestation can be the depressive syndrome or other pathological manifestations (depressive equivalents). No agreement exists about the basic problem of the categorial or the dimensional nature of the classification, the later having being recently supported by several authors. The paper discusses the most commonly used classifications: the primary-secondary dichotomy, the ICD 9 and the DSM-III and especially the central problem of the endogenous- non endogenous dichotomy.
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PMID:Classification of depressive states. 357 15


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