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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied the effect of periventricular hyperintensity (PVH) in T2 weighted MRI on memory function and post-stroke depression in 159 patients with cerebrovascular diseases. Memory function was assessed with Hasegawa's scale, and depressive state was estimated with Zung's self-rating depression scale. Patients showing diffusely distributed PVH had significantly low scores in memory function tests. Localized PVH around the anterior horns of the laterals ventricle was also associated with impaired memory function when the area of PVH was large. The incidence of post-stroke depression was high in patients with large PVH around the anterior horn in comparison with patients with PVH around the posterior horn. The severity of PVH around the posterior horn did not affect memory function and post-stroke depression. These findings suggest that memory dysfunction and post-stroke depression were accelerated by the diffusely or anteriorly distributed PVH.
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PMID:[Significance of periventricular hyper-intensity in T2 weighted MRI on memory dysfunction and depression after stroke]. 792 54

A method is demonstrated for the noninvasive detection and study of spreading cortical depression. Spreading depression (SD) was elicited in rats by topical application of potassium chloride to the exposed cortex. The apparent diffusion coefficient (Dapp) of water in a region of the cortex, measured using a PFG-NMR spin echo sequence with an observation time of 40 ms, declines 35% within 30 s and recovers to the normal value within the next 30 s. The region of decreased Dapp was shown to be 2 mm in size and to move in the cortex, away from the point of application, with a uniform velocity of 3.3 +/- 0.5 mm/min. The behavior of the affected region is consistent with other reports of the behavior of SD as monitored by electrophysiological means. The technique can be implemented on currently available MRI equipment and makes possible the noninvasive study of SD in animal models of neurological disorders, their therapeutic intervention, and possibly the study of SD in humans.
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PMID:Spreading waves of decreased diffusion coefficient after cortical stimulation in the rat brain. 796 41

Musical hallucinations (MH) occurred in 7 patients (5 women and 2 men, age 58-90 yrs) with mild to severe unilateral or bilateral deafness. The hallucinations usually consisted of musical memories (childhood songs, past "hits"). They started abruptly and were identified, sometimes after a period of doubt, as hallucinations. They became "louder" in the silence and, when iterative, could be distressing. By concentrating, 3 patients could change the ongoing tune for another. Elementary (1 case) or verbal (3 cases) auditory hallucinations could be associated and, in one case, vivid visual hallucinations occurred which were not criticized. One patient suffered depression and the MH faded after antidepressive treatment. In the other cases, no psychiatric disorder was identified. Neurological examination, EEGs and brain MRI (in 5 cases) were normal in all but one case, in which MH followed seizures secondary to a left parietal metastasis. Such MH may be termed hallucinosis according to Ey's description. They share some characteristics with other hallucinatory phenomena associated with sensory deprivation, such as the Charles Bonnet syndrome and "pain memories" in phantom limbs. However, the role of deafness, the underlying central mechanisms and psychological factors are poorly understood.
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PMID:[Musical hallucinations: 7 cases]. 767 61

A 60-year-old lady with previous hypertension was studied with PET in the acute (early recovery) phase of an otherwise typical episode of transient global amnesia (TGA). Follow-up over > 1 year was uneventful, and delayed CT scans and MRI showed no brain damage. No medical cause was disclosed despite extensive work-up. The PET study revealed a matched reduction in cerebral blood flow and oxygen consumption over the entire lateral frontal cortex on the right side, with an associated, less significant reduction in ipsilateral thalamic and lentiform nucleus metabolism, but sparing the hippocampal area. These changes, which had resolved at a repeat PET study 3 months later, suggest right prefrontal metabolic depression, possibly secondary to thalamic dysfunction, as the underlying mechanism for TGA in this case, consistent with the emerging involvement of the prefrontal cortex in strategies or control of memory traces retrieval. Thus, in analogy with permanent amnesia, TGA may be a core syndrome with several possible foci of dysfunction along the neuronal networks that subserve explicit memory. In the future, combined PET neuropsychological assessment in the acute stage of TGA may prove useful in defining distinct neuropsychological-topographical subtypes of this intriguing clinical entity.
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PMID:Right frontal cortex hypometabolism in transient global amnesia. A PET study. 803 64

Twenty post-stroke depressive patients who obtained more than 11 points on Self-Rating Questionnaire for Depression, were treated with 0.075 mg/day lisuride maleate for 12 weeks. The drug effect on depression was evaluated quantitatively by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. The relationships between brain CT or MRI and SRQ-D score were investigated in 24 subjects. More than 80% of post-stroke depressive patients improved after lisuride maleate treatment for 8 or 12 weeks. In particular, depressed mood, hypobulia, sleep disturbance, anxiety, etc. were significantly improved compared to the baseline condition. As for the relationships with CT and/or MRI findings, the group with moderate to severe brain atrophy had a significantly higher grade of depressive state than those without.
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PMID:[Therapeutic effect of lisuride maleate on post-stroke depression]. 815 72

At the moment 9 seemingly independent families with the clinical diagnosis of MJD are known in Brazil. The largest family tree of Azorean ancestry contains 622 individuals in 9 generations. 236 were examined, 39 found to be affected by two examiners. Phenotypes I, II and III were expressed by 12, 23 and 4 patients with age of onset by phenotypes being 10-48, 14-54 and 30-55 respectively. Although clinically more severe, juvenile onset type I disease did not show as severe a ponto-mesencephalic atrophy on MRI as the father with type II disease of similar symptomatic duration. None of the 8 patients examined with MRI showed olivary atrophy or pallidal abnormalities. 12 affected and 23 at risk were evaluated with neuropsychological tests. Attention was normal in both groups. Verbal memory scores were below normal in the affected and there was greater decay with time than in the risk group. Both scored below normal in identifying silluettes and constructional praxis. Visual memory scores were well below normal for both, with many rotations but no omissions or confabulations. A peculiar pattern of multiplying internal details called "the fly-eye effect" was observed in 6 affected and 8 at risk. Defective color distinction when multiple colors presented close to each other, in face of proper naming of individual colors ("color simulatanagnosia"), was looked for in 29 people. 4/10 affected and 4/19 at risk showed this phenomenon. Cognitive dysfunctions in this MJD family are prominent in the sphere of vision. Whether they constitute an early manifestation in those at risk and thus serve as a clinical identifier of the illness is yet to be established. Depression was looked for in the history of the family with DSM III-R criteria and an attempt at quantification with the Montgomery-Asberg Rating Scale. There was no significant quantitative difference between affected and at risk. Once undeniably symptomatic however, the patients had no, or less depression than themselves before or at the early stages of the illness. Covert depression was appropriately excluded. Fully established MJD in this family seemed to exert a protective effect from depression.
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PMID:Machado-Joseph disease of Azorean ancestry in Brazil: the Catarina kindred. Neurological, neuroimaging, psychiatric and neuropsychological findings in the largest known family, the "Catarina" kindred. 821 26

The authors report two cases of hepatic encephalopathy with chronic hepatic failure. Case 1 was a 78-year-old woman with liver cirrhosis, admitted because of general fatigue and loss of appetite. Her electroencephalogram showed frequent slow waves in the theta range with intermittent triphasic waves T1-weighted MR images showed increased signal intensity in the globus pallidus and the putamen. Case 2 was a 71-year-old woman with chronic hepatitis, admitted because of depression. Her electroencephalogram showed frequent slow wave activities in the theta-delta range with intermittent trisphasic waves. Her serum ammonia level was 84 micrograms/dl (normal 12-54 micrograms/dl). T1-weighted MR images showed increased signal intensity in the globus pallidus, the putamen and the hypothalamus. On the basis of these findings, both patients were diagnosed as having hepatic encephalopathy, although disturbance of consciousness was not obvious. The observed MR image abnormalities might be due to the metabolic and pathological changes of chronic hepatic failure. Such MRI findings may be useful for the diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Two cases of hepatic encephalopathy associated with a high-intensity area in the basal ganglia on T1-weighted MR images]. 823 Jul 86

The syndromes associated with dementia and depression in old age show a considerable overlap and even coincidence, not only for statistical reasons. Starting with a critical evaluation of the term "pseudodementia", possibilities for a differentiation of both types of syndromes by characteristics of clinical features and history and by additional investigations are shown. A critical review of the literature with focus on the differentiating properties of the following methods is given: neuropsychology and rating scales (e.g., "cortical" mediated versus motivational changes), neurophysiology (electroencephalography, EEG; evoked potentials, EP; event-related potentials, ERP), sleep physiology (REM-sleep changes; sleep deprivation results), neuroendocrinology (dexamethasone suppression test), neuroradiology (cranial computed tomography, CCT; magnetic resonance imaging, MRI) and especially the dynamic imaging methods of nuclear medicine (cerebral glucose metabolism with fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography, FDG-PET; cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements with PET and single photon emission tomography, SPET). Developments during recent years concerning better imaging of early hippocampal lesions (MRI) or analysis of CBF--changes induced by activation methods may be very helpful. In conclusion, one can say that the diagnosis of dementia and depression remains primarily a clinical one that can be ascertained by means of valuable diagnostic tools.
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PMID:[Early diagnostic differentiation of primary dementia from primary depressive syndromes in the aged--a contribution to the discussion of pseudodementia]. 831 28

A Sixty-one-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of generalized convulsion. He had suffered from intractable epilepsy for 26 years. CT and MRI showed the right frontal cavernous angioma. On operation, intraoperative electrocorticography was performed after lesionectomy including surrounding glial scar and hemosiderin laden tissue. It showed epileptiform potentials in neighbor gyrus of the lesion. Because the removed sphere would be so broad, and we performed multiple subpial transection (MST). After MST, depression of background electrical activity and disappearance of spike discharge are seen. One and half year after operation, seizure was controlled by only phenobarbital administration.
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PMID:[Multiple subpial transection after lesionectomy in an intractable epilepsy case]. 832 23

Gradually progressive memory loss is the keystone of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Other diagnostic signs include deterioration of language and perception, judgment losses, and behavioral problems such as agitation and paranoia. The clock drawing test is a simple in-office measure of spatial orientation. CT or MRI is recommended to rule out vascular injury; blood tests can exclude other types of dementia. Serial mental status exams can document disease progression. Drug therapy is appropriate for managing mental symptoms, including early depression and anxiety. Some patients may derive benefit from tacrine. Management must also include education and support of the AD patient's caregivers.
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PMID:New Alzheimer's drug expands your options in symptom management. 833 40


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