Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
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There is much individual variability in the clinical manifestations of hypocalcemia. The rapidly of the development of hypocalcemia will determine whether or not symptoms will be present. Signs and symptoms of hypocalcemia consisted of tetany (Chvostek's and Trousseau's signs), seizures, diminshed to absent deep tendon reflexes, papilledema, mental changes (weakness, fatigue, irritability, memory loss, confusion, delusion, hallucination), and skin changes. Etiologic factors for hypocalcemia in man include (1) decreased calcium absorption or increased loss from the gastrointestinal tract; (2) parathyroid hormone deficiency; (3) skeletal resistance to parathyroid hormone; (4) ineffective parathyroid hormone; (5) decreased production or increased degradation of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol or 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol; (6) increased complex formation with calcium; (7) increased skeletal uptake of calcium; (8) hypomagnesemic state; and (9) direct inhibition of bone resorption. Measurement of total and ionic calcium, magnesium, parathyroid hormone, vitamin D metabolites (25-hydroxycholecalciferol, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol), and nephrogenous cyclic adenosine monophosphate are especially helpful in the laboratory evaluation of the hypocalcemic patient.
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PMID:Hypocalcemia. Differential diagnosis and mechanisms. 22 22

A survey of 131 psychotic subjects treated with carpipramine and a synthesis of the Japanese, German and French publications about this drug were done. The most valuable results were obtained in hebephrenics and in depressed schizophrenics. Carpipramine has a definite desinhibitory action against motor retardation, lack of energy, ideo-motor slowliness and blunting of the affect. At low doses, paranoid schizophrenics become worse. The emerged delusional and anxious phenomena, can be avoided by using higher doses. This drug possesses two kinds of effects: antidelusional and desinhibitory actions. If it does not seem to be a true antidepressant, Carpipramine proves useful in deficits of the psychomotor tone, which were resistant to antidepressant drugs.
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PMID:[Carpipramine in psychoses]. 38 Sep 70

As part of a systematic research project on the influence of gender factors on age at onset, symptomatology, and course of schizophrenia, data on gender differences in age at onset and symptomatology of schizophrenia from the WHO Collaborative Study "On Assessment and Reduction of Psychiatric Disability" were compared between seven research centres of three different cultural regions. Results on age at onset of five European centres confirmed the well known fact of an earlier onset in men. The earlier onset in women seen in Khartoum and Ankara could be attributed to patient selection because male/female differences in age at onset and male/female ratios in the various samples covary. In the Islamic centres no relevant gender differences in real age at onset and in symptomatology could be detected as probable causes of earlier hospitalisation of women. Major gender differences in symptomatology were found in the Balkan centres of Sofia and Zagreb with a high prevalence of delusional symptoms in women and depression in men. In Western Europe centres, nuclear schizophrenic symptoms were equally prevalent in either sex, while nonspecific symptoms like irritability and tiredness (more frequent in women) and maladaptive illness behaviours like alcohol abuse and social withdrawal (more frequent in men) differed between the sexes. Explanatory hypotheses and the implications of these results are discussed.
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PMID:Gender differences in schizophrenia in three cultures. Results of the WHO collaborative study on psychiatric disability. 162 Nov 35

The majority of persons with dementia are cared for in the home by family and friends. The goals of treatment in this setting are to maximize the quality of life of the demented person and minimize burdens on the caregiver. Behavioral problems are common with dementia and can lead to significant caregiver burden. Behaviors that are most common or most serious to caregivers include behaviors related to memory disturbances, restlessness and agitation, catastrophic reactions, day/night disturbances, delusions, wandering, and physical violence. A general method for clinicians to manage these problems involves the identification of the behavior and its antecedent and consequent events. Stressors that may cause behavioral problems include fatigue, a change of routine, excessive demands, overwhelming stimuli, and acute illness or pain. Caregivers can be taught to identify these stressors in order to prevent or alleviate troublesome behaviors. When behavioral techniques are not successful and the behaviors are particularly dangerous or burdensome, therapy with low doses of high-potency neuroleptics has been suggested. Measures such as these to help caregivers in the management of dementia at home can be instrumental in improving the quality of life for the person with dementia.
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PMID:Managing the behavioral problems of dementia in the home. 176 Jul 95

The overall effect of zotepine was a "slightly improved" or better response in 20 patients (64.5%), "unchanged" in 10 (32.3%) and "worsened" in 1 (3.2%). Zotepine exhibited some degree of improvement in 54.5% of patients unresponsive to prior drugs. The onset of effect of zotepine was within one month in 19 patients. The improvement rate in the hebephrenic type (66.7%) was almost the same as in the paranoid type. The improvement rate classified by psychopathology was highest for hypobulia, followed by restlessness-excitement and hallucination, depressive mood, hypochondria and delusion. The side-effects were subjective complaints, such as general fatigue, dryness of mouth, sleepiness or fainting in a small number of cases. There was a slight increase in S-GPT in one patient and a slightly increased blood platelet count, also in one patient. Serial EEG changes associated with zotepine studied in another 17 chronic schizophrenics could be classified into three groups: those with increased slow waves, those with enhanced alpha waves and those with unchanged EEGs. There was a positive correlation between the incidence of slow waves and higher plasma levels of zotepine.
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PMID:Clinical and EEG studies of zotepine, a thiepine neuroleptic, on schizophrenic patients. 288 87

Schizophrenia and affective disorders selected according to the Feighner criteria can be differentiated on the basis of 40-year outcome. Within schizophrenia the presence of disorganized thoughts at the index admission was associated with poor outcome, whereas better outcome was associated with the presence of delusions or hallucinations. Within the affective disorders, bipolar patients with grandiose delusions or ideas showed a poor outcome; a better outcome was found in unipolar patients with complaints of fatiguability or tiredness at the time of the index admission.
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PMID:An evaluation of the Feighner criteria for schizophrenia and affective disorders using long-term outcome data. 726 70

A 39-year old woman presented with hallucinatory paranoid state, particularly with erotomania, around September, 1988 (at the age of 39), and was hospitalized in a mental hospital for 9 days from May 1, 1989, to receive major tranquilizer therapy. At admission, the leukocyte count was 10,400/mm3 showing a mild leukocytosis, and there was temporary adynamia in the upper extremities. Thereafter, mild leukocytosis persisted intermittently. On May 12, 1989, the patient visited the Department of Neuropsychiatry, Kansai Medical University, and clinical examinations revealed mental symptoms including insomnia and erotomania, delusion of reference and auditory hallucination without persecutory taint. She showed clear consciousness and well understanding. Characteristically, her expression and behavior were smooth and emotional communication was available. There were neither alterations in her basic mood, nor flaccid association of idea. No abnormalities were seen in the hair and skin, and buffalo hump was not observed. Blood examination revealed a leukocyte count of 10,700/mm3, suggesting a mild leukocytosis. According to the patient, the menses have been regular. Although major tranquilizer therapy has been maintained, she gradually developed emotional instability, and tended to show fatigue and regressive changes in her personality. She was hospitalized in a mental hospital from October 25, 1989 to July 24, 1991. Since 1990, when she was in the hospital, she gradually developed obesity, hypertension, acne, and diabetes mellitus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of Cushing's disease: hallucinatory paranoid state preceding physical symptoms]. 793 10

The authors explored differences in the clinical characteristics of 17 male and 13 female patients experiencing their first admission for psychotic depression. Few differences were observed for most depressive and psychotic features, but fewer male than female patients reported fatigue, psychomotor agitation, and systematized and mood-incongruent delusions and more male patients reported feelings of worthlessness. Overall, the findings were consistent with those derived from samples of patients with chronic, nonpsychotic mental illness.
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PMID:Gender differences in clinical characteristics of first-admission psychotic depression. 821 86

A 28-year-old, ambitious, academically successful Asian man with a zeal for hard work develops infectious mononucleosis and its resultant lethargy and fatigue. He becomes depressed, then develops symptoms of mania before turning floridly psychotic. In his psychotic state he develops grandiose delusions about being the second son of God after Christ and takes it upon himself to rid the world of all evil by defeating the anti-Christ. He kills four people and seriously injures a fifth. He is arrested and found not guilty by reason of insanity. He remains a diagnostic puzzle for a long time before starting to respond to neuroleptic medication.
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PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome associated with a psychotic state resulting in multiple murders. 863 89

The authors rated 137 outpatients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) on the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia (CSDD) as part of routine evaluation. Principal-factors analysis with varimax rotation resulted in a four-factor solution that accounted for 43.1% of the common variance. The four factors included general depression (lack of reactivity to pleasant events, poor self-esteem, pessimism, loss of interest, physical complaints, psychomotor retardation, sadness); rhythm disturbances (difficulty falling asleep, multiple night awakenings, early morning awakenings, weight loss, diurnal variation of mood); agitation/psychosis (agitation, mood-congruent delusions, suicide); and negative symptoms (appetite loss, weight loss, lack of energy, loss of interest, lack of reactivity to pleasant events). The observed factor structure showed moderate concordance with the five symptom clusters proposed in the original presentation of the CSDD.
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PMID:The factor structure of the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia among probable Alzheimer's disease patients. 965 54


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