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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Depression
is a common mood disturbance in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. Epidemiologic data suggest a causative relationship between depressive symptoms and cerebral demyelination, although a specific lesion site responsible for depressed mood has not been identified. Given that
depression
in neurologic disease is closely related to frontal and temporal lobe damage, we focused our study on investigating the extent to which lesions in the white matter connecting both cerebral lobes may account for depressive symptoms in MS. Forty-five patients were assessed using the Beck
Depression
Inventory and an
MRI
protocol conceived to quantify lesions separately in the basal, medial, and lateral frontotemporal white matter. The presence of lesions in the left suprainsular white matter, the region that mainly includes the arcuate fasciculus, was specifically associated with depressive symptoms, accounting for a significant 17% of the
depression
score variance. Although a multifactorial origin is suspected for
depression
in MS, this finding gives support to the existence of a direct negative effect of demyelination on mood.
...
PMID:Lesions in the left arcuate fasciculus region and depressive symptoms in multiple sclerosis. 933 97
Twenty relapsing-remitting (RR) clinically definite MS patients were treated with 9 MIU intramuscular recombinant interferon alpha-2a (rIFNA) (Roferon-A, Roche) (n = 12) or placebo (n = 8) every other day for 6 months and followed up for a further 6 months after stopping treatment. Numbers of active lesions at
MRI
and of patients with clinical-
MRI
signs of disease activity and lymphocyte interferon gamma production, which were decreased during treatment, returned to values similar to baseline and placebos after stopping treatment. rIFNA chronic therapy seems therefore needed in order to maintain drug efficacy. Side effect profile was monitored, too, for over 1 year in the same 20 patients plus 25 additional RR MS patients. Besides the typical side effects of type I interferon therapy (fever, fatigue,
depression
, lymphopenia, hepatic enzyme elevation), occurrence of serum autoAbs was noted in 30% patients (in 60% antinuclear and in 80% antithyroid autoAbs). In two patients rIFNA treatment was stopped, in one case for antithyroid autoAbs and hypothyroidism, in the other for antinuclear autoAbs and a five-fold increase of ALT. A careful monitoring of serum autoAbs and of signs of thyroid or liver damage must always precede and accompany longterm type I IFN therapy.
...
PMID:Long term recombinant interferon alpha treatment in MS with special emphasis to side effects. 934 19
In this study, 12 patients over age 60 with
depression
with moderate to severe subcortical hyperintensities (SH) localized to the periventricular white matter were identified by quantitative
MRI
. Using the California Verbal Learning Test, they were compared with 12 age-, education-, and severity-matched patients with
depression
with minimal white matter changes on specific aspects of memory performance. Patients with cortical lesions, neurologic or systemic illness affecting cognition, and history of substance abuse were excluded. Patients in the group with high SH showed reduced use of semantic encoding strategies (p < 0.05), reduced learning efficiency (p < 0.05), and a greater discrepancy between free recall and recognition discriminability (p < 0.05) than their low SH counterparts. This pattern of performance on memory tasks is similar to that found in previous studies to be associated with subcortical degenerative disorders such as Huntington's and Parkinson's diseases. Geriatric patients with
depression
with SH may represent a subgroup with greater subcortical involvement, with associated cognitive and functional decline.
...
PMID:Memory processes in depressed geriatric patients with and without subcortical hyperintensities on MRI. 944 86
In this article the authors describe two different ways in which the relationship between affective disorders and cerebrovascular disease can be studied. First, the occurrence of so called 'post stroke
depression
' offers an opportunity to study this relationship. Second, neuroradiological investigations in patients with a major depressive disorder can be performed. The authors review the literature on both subjects. Until now, unequivocal conclusions concerning vascular lesions on CT or
MRI
and depressive features in the elderly cannot be drawn from research data available. Moreover, the so-called Post-stroke
depression
is still not fully understood. Some difficulties encountered in this area of research are also addressed. The authors suggest a neurological cause for the late onset types of major depressive illness and also suggest that these depressions are phenomenologically different from the early onset subtypes of depressive illness. The post stroke
depression
also seems to differ phenomenologically from major depression according to DSM-criteria.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular lesions and depression]. 952 96
Thirty-nine elderly depressed patients as well as 15 demented patients with Alzheimer's disease and 11 healthy volunteers were imaged at rest with a high resolution single-slice 12-detector head scanner (SME-Neuro 900) and the cerebral perfusion marker 99mTc-Exametazime (HM-PAO). Statistical parametric maps were computed to compare early- and late-onset depressed, Alzheimer patients and healthy volunteers and to examine associations between regional perfusion and clinical and
MRI
variables. Patients with late-onset
depression
showed reductions in temporal lobe perfusion compared with early-onset
depression
and controls. Alzheimer patients had the expected reduced perfusion in temporoparietal and prefontal cortex, as well as basal ganglia, compared with healthy controls. Compared with depressed patients, they showed a relative reduction in temporoparietal cortex, only. This difference was more pronounced between Alzheimer patients and early onset, compared to late-onset patients with
depression
. Periventricular white matter changes on
MRI
were associated with temporal lobe reductions of tracer uptake in
depression
. In the Alzheimer group, deep white matter
MRI
changes were associated with frontal perfusion deficits. Our results support a vulnerability hypothesis, which predicts that patients with late-onset
depression
will show more brain changes than patients with an early onset of their illness. Statistical parametric mapping in patients with organic psychiatric brain syndromes is feasible and promising as a clinical and research method.
...
PMID:A voxel-based analysis of cerebral perfusion in dementia and depression of old age. 959 61
Thalamic lesions may induce a diffuse hypometabolism and subsequent decrease of cortical cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and cerebral blood volume (rCBV). Up to now PET was used to assess these changes. However this latter method cannot be applied routinely to stroke patients because it is expensive and not currently available. The purpose of this preliminary study was to evaluate the effects of 'pure metabolic
depression
' induced by thalamic stroke on rCBV and rCBF by using a non invasive method perfusion-
MRI
. Two patients experienced aphasia, with motor and sensory impairment related to thalamic hemorrhage. Four weeks later, dynamic T2*-weighted echo planar imaging was used to produce perfusion-MR images during an intravenous bolus injection of gadopentetate dimeglumine. A decrease of cortical rCBV and rCBF mainly confined to sensorimotor cortex was observed in both cases ipsilateral to the lesion. Although a sequential assessment of this abnormalities is needed in a larger series of patients in order to establish relevant correlations with neurological status, this preliminary study indicates that perfusion-
MRI
might be a practical and promising tool in the assessment of cortical rCBV and rCBF changes.
...
PMID:Effects of thalamic hemorrhage on cortical hemodynamic parameters assessed by perfusion MR imaging: preliminary report. 960 Jun 79
The purpose of our study was to examine the neuroanatomical correlates of late-onset minor and major depression and to compare them with similar measures obtained from nondepressed controls. Our study groups were comprised of 18 patients with late-onset minor
depression
, 35 patients diagnosed with late-onset major depression, and 30 nondepressed controls. All subjects were scanned by using a 1. 5-tesla
MRI
scanner. Absolute whole brain volume and normalized measures of prefrontal and temporal lobe volumes were obtained and used for comparison among groups. Our findings indicate that patients with minor
depression
present with specific neuroanatomical abnormalities that are comparable with the major depression group but significantly different from the controls. Normalized prefrontal lobe volumes show a significant linear trend with severity of
depression
, with volumes decreasing with illness severity. Whole brain volumes did not differ significantly among groups. These findings have broad implications for the biology of late-life
depression
and suggest that there may be common neurobiological substrates that underlie all clinically significant forms of late-onset mood disturbances.
...
PMID:Late-onset minor and major depression: early evidence for common neuroanatomical substrates detected by using MRI. 963 5
Two girls with florid extrapyramidal parkinsonism complicating systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are reported. One patient (15 years old) presented with extreme rigidity, irritability, and mutism initially diagnosed as acute psychosis. Examination revealed severe extrapyramidal akinetic mutism, along with marked restlessness. CT and
MRI
imaging of the brain were unremarkable. EEG revealed moderate generalized disturbance of background activity. 99mTc-HmPAO SPECT cerebral scanning detected decreased regional cerebral blood flow at the basal ganglia. Dopamine-agonist drugs led to complete recovery after 3 months, along with normalization of EEG and SPECT alterations. The second patient (16 years old) was assessed for progressive bradykinesia and apathy impeding her active daily activities, and she was suspected to have developed
depression
. Neurologic assessment revealed a parkinsonian syndrome that was less severe than that of the first patient. The EEG showed mild disturbance of background activity, and 99mTc-HmPAO SPECT demonstrated impaired regional cerebral blood flow over the basal ganglia. A parkinsonian extrapyramidal syndrome complicating SLE should therefore be taken into account in any patient with SLE presenting with marked behavioral alterations, rigidity, or akinetic mutism.
...
PMID:Parkinsonian syndrome complicating systemic lupus erythematosus. 965 Jun 92
Dementia is a clinical syndrome and is diagnosed on clinical grounds. Various types can be distinguished: the Alzheimer-type, frontal lobe dementia and subcortical dementia syndromes. Neuropsychological examination can contribute to the clinical diagnosis. Differentiation from delirium and
depression
, which may co-exist with dementia, is necessary. Once a dementia syndrome has been diagnosed its cause has to be ascertained. Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause and can often be diagnosed clinically. The clinical suspicion of vascular dementia has to be confirmed by imaging methods. Drug intoxication may cause or contribute to dementia. Blood tests should be performed routinely, but EEG, CT or
MRI
, SPECT and genetic tests can be carried out on clinical indication. Subsequently the need for care of the patient has to be established, as well as the ability of the carers to meet it. Regular follow-up is necessary. A definite diagnosis can only be made post-mortem when neuropathological examination has been performed. The organisation of diagnosis in the dementia syndrome should preferably take place in specialised multidisciplinary teams.
...
PMID:[Revised consensus 'Diagnosis of the dementia syndrome']. 986 19
We have studied the intervertebral discs adjacent to fractured vertebral bodies using
MRI
in 63 patients at a minimum of 18 months after injury. There were 75 thoracolumbar fractures of which 26 were treated conservatively and 37 by posterior reduction and fusion with an AO internal fixator. We identified six different types of disc using criteria based on the morphology and the intensity of the
MRI
signal. The inter- and intraobserver variability of this system was good. Most of the discs showed predominantly morphological changes with no variation in signal intensity. Some disc types were associated with progressive kyphosis in patients treated conservatively. In those managed by operation, recurrent kyphosis appeared to result from creeping of the disc in the central
depression
of the bony endplate rather than from disc degeneration. Changes in the disc space after posterior fixation should not be seen as a form of chronic instability but as a redistribution of the disc tissue in the changed morphology of the space after fractures of the endplate.
...
PMID:Changes in the disc space after fractures of the thoracolumbar spine. 976 94
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