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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The conception of a specific association between maturity-onset
diabetes
and
manic-depressive psychosis
, on a common basis with diencephalic functional obesity, has been recently taken again in consideration by the psychiatric literature. Investigations on this problem from diabetological point of view have been so far completely lacking, and are proposed with the present study. Symptomatic depressive conditions in
diabetes
are frequent and should be primarily separated from depressive endogenous psychosis. The pathogenesis of the association between
diabetes
of the adult-obese type and psychosis might be discussed according to a transactional theoretical model, assuming a positive feed-back mechanism of the two relationships:
diabetes
-psychosis and psychosis-
diabetes
. With these criteria, 4 observations of the clinical association were collected out of 274 admissions for
diabetes
, during 1976.
Diabetes
is intended as overt
diabetes
; obesity presented with the stenic picture; psychosis had a monopolar melancholic course. Similar clinical features were characteristic in all cases. The relationship
diabetes
-psychosis showed no evidence, unless importance should be given to a potential
diabetes
in 3 cases. On the contrary, the relationship psychosis-
diabetes
could be demonstrated in the four cases. A psychosomatic scheme connecting the neuro-hormonal correlations to a genetically conditioned exhaustion of the beta-function, is postulated. During melancholic recurrences,
diabetes
proved to be insulin-dependent and even insulin-resistent in 2 cases. Tricyclic antidepressant theraphy did not modify the metabolic situation.
...
PMID:[Association of adult obese-type diabetes and depressive psychosis (clinical cases)]. 61
The problem of the association between adult
diabetes
, obesity and
manic-depressive psychosis
is examined in the light of new endocrinological and psychopharmacological findings. After a critical review of the vast old and recent literature on the matter, a physiopathological interpretation of the clinical association is put forward on the basis of mental, nervous and endocrine correlations in carbohydrate metabolism, with special reference to
manic-depressive psychosis
. The insulin-like effect of lithium on carbohydrate metabolism and correlated ions (phosphates, calcium, magnesium, potassium) at cell membrane level is then discussed. Theoretical and practical conclusions are drawn on the basis of these data. The former propose an essentially "structural" or "intersection" hypothesis of the association and suggest depth study of the insulin function especially in the "normal" phase of
manic-depressive psychosis
. The latter show the possibility of a clinical trial with lithium and other anti-depressant drugs in obese diabetics, with a close cooperation between psychiatrist and diabetologist.
...
PMID:[Introduction to new research on correlations between manic-depressive psychosis and adult obesity-linked diabetes]. 123 Jan 36
American former prisoners of war (POWs) are an aging group who seek health care with increasing frequency. To examine the prevalence of long-term physical and emotional consequences of captivity in this population, the authors analyzed medical and psychiatric examination data for 426 former POWs. Detailed psychiatric diagnostic criteria were used to assess the POWs' mental health. Compared with general population groups, POWs had moderately elevated lifetime prevalence rates of depressive disorders and greatly elevated rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), although their rates of hypertension,
diabetes
, myocardial infarction,
bipolar disorder
, schizophrenia, and alcoholism were not elevated. POWs who lost more than 35 percent of their body weight during captivity had higher rates of anxiety disorder, depressive disorders, PTSD, and schizophrenia, compared with other POWs.
...
PMID:Prevalence of somatic and psychiatric disorders among former prisoners of war. 189 54
Lithium carbonate was administered to a female
manic depressive
patient who also had maturity onset
diabetes mellitus
. She was found to have lowered blood glucose levels with administration of lithium without change in the other variables which could effect blood glucose levels. In could be concluded that lithium carbonate had antidiabetic effects in this case.
...
PMID:Antidiabetic effects of lithium. 681 66
It seems that the genetic basis of common psychiatric diseases such as schizophrenia and
manic-depressive psychosis
is amenable to the genetic mapping strategies that have been successful in other complex disorders such as
diabetes
. The next challenge is the genetic dissection of quantitative behavioural traits such as mood, personality and intelligence. Quantitative traits pose new problems for gene cloning experiments. We argue that one way forward is by using animal models. One of the features of quantitative traits is that the DNA sequence variants which are responsible for them are unlikely to be immediately recognizable. In contrast to many qualitative traits where a discrete phenotypic difference is often the consequence of an inactivating mutation, the allelic variation responsible for quantitative traits probably has a more subtle basis. This distinction means that strategies to clone the genetic basis of quantitative behavioural traits will have to rely on functional assays of alleles thought to be important in determining the phenotype. We suggest that an efficient strategy for detecting sequences that give rise to quantitative behavioural traits can be devised in the mouse. The importance and utility of the mouse for quantitative trait analysis make it worthwhile to investigate mouse models of human behaviour; these advantages outweigh the difficulties that arise in attempts to validate the animal models. As an example we review the evidence that validates rodent emotionality as an animal model for susceptibility to human anxiety. We show that there is good evidence that rodent emotionality is a central nervous system state with a genetic basis, and that there are neuropharmacological and neuroanatomical parallels with human anxiety. Furthermore, our own work has shown that the genetic basis of the trait is relatively simple, and that the task of characterizing it at a molecular level is feasible. We expect that future experiments will show us how genetic variation gives rise to quantitative behavioural traits.
...
PMID:Do animal models have a place in the genetic analysis of quantitative human behavioural traits? 889 56
Although monogenic diseases often show extreme clinical phenotypes, the major burden of genetic ill health lies in the more prevalent polygenic disorders, such as
diabetes
, hypertension and multiple sclerosis. These conditions affect many thousands of individuals and their management consumes vast amounts of health care resources: in the UK some 80,000 people have multiple sclerosis; the estimated financial cost to society of introducing treatments, such as beta interferon, could be as high as 250 million pounds per year. Knowledge on the genetics of these common diseases is poor, but has potentially received a considerable boost with the arrival of whole genome screening. The genome screen in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) reported in 1994 was the first in a human polygenic disease. Since this publication, whole genome screening has been performed in a variety of human polygenic diseases, including schizophrenia,
bipolar affective disorder
, non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM), inflammatory bowel disease, asthma and multiple sclerosis.
...
PMID:The genetic analysis of multiple sclerosis. 919 29
A 41-year-old man died in 1995 during ketoacidotic coma. He suffered from chronic
manic depression
, used lithium carbonate, and consulted the psychiatrist and the general practitioner (GP) frequently.
Diabetes
had not been diagnosed. Late in 1994 the situation worsened, the patient complaining of general illness, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, thirst and excessive drinking of soft drinks. The GP referred the patient to a neurologist who found no neurological disorder but who asked for determination of blood glucose and lithium levels, and of thyroid function. The day afterwards the neurologist went on holiday. The blood glucose level proved to be elevated (16.9 mmol/1) but nobody took any action and the GP was not informed. Six days after returning from his holiday, the neurologist who had an administration backlog, found the laboratory findings only after he had been informed that the patient had just died. The court gave the neurologist a warning. Lessons are that somatic problems should be treated as such, even in a psychiatric patient, and that a good administrative signalling system is a prerequisite for quality in medical practice.
...
PMID:[Medical and administrative neglect of high blood glucose levels; comments on a decision by a medical disciplinary tribunal]. 954 47
Dysthymia and cyclothymia are chronic affective disorders with a minimum duration of 2 years. Both ICD-10 and DSM-IV define cyclothymia as a
bipolar disorder
with low intensity. This disorder is rare and little research has been done on it. Its economic and social consequences vary from case to case. In contrast dysthymias, chronic depressive disorders, are frequent (prevalence 3-6%) and cause considerable distress. They have serious economic and social consequences, which are comparable to those caused by other chronic conditions such as arthritis or
diabetes mellitus
. Despite widely held conviction a majority of dysthymias improves under consequent pharmaco- and psychotherapy.
...
PMID:[Dysthymia and cyclothymia--serious consequences of rarely diagnosed disorders]. 988 92
Depression and
bipolar disorder
are two of the commonest illnesses in the developed world. While some patients can be treated effectively with available drugs, many do not respond, especially in the depression related to
bipolar disorder
. Depression is associated with
diabetes
, cardiovascular disease, immunological abnormalities, multiple sclerosis, cancer, osteoporosis and ageing: in each case depressed individuals have a worse outcome than non-depressed individuals. In all of these conditions there is now evidence of impaired phospholipid metabolism and impaired fatty acid-related signal transduction processes. Impaired fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism may be a primary cause of depression in many patients and may explain the interactions with other diseases. Several novel gene candidates for involvement in depression and
bipolar disorder
are proposed.
...
PMID:Depression and bipolar disorder: relationships to impaired fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism and to diabetes, cardiovascular disease, immunological abnormalities, cancer, ageing and osteoporosis. Possible candidate genes. 1039 3
Wolfram syndrome, a rare autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder, was originally described as a combination of familial juvenile-onset
diabetes mellitus
and optic atrophy. It was later demonstrated that Wolfram syndrome patients were highly prone to psychiatric disorders. Mutations in exon 8 of the Wolfram syndrome gene account for 88% of the patients with Wolfram syndrome. To examine whether the gene responsible for causing Wolfram syndrome is involved in psychiatric disorders, we screened exon 8 of the Wolfram syndrome gene for mutations in 119 patients with schizophrenia, one patient with schizoaffective disorder, 12 patients with
bipolar disorder
and 15 patients with major depression, using sequence analysis. In Wolfram syndrome patients, this gene has been shown to have primarily nonsense or frameshift mutations, which would result in a premature truncation of the protein. None of the psychiatric patients screened in this study carried these types of mutations. We identified, however, 24 new variations whose significance remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Mutation screening of the Wolfram syndrome gene in psychiatric patients. 1124 83
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