Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Comparison of the properties of blood platelets and serotonergic synaptosomes suggests that the human platelet can serve as an appropriate model for the transport, metabolism, and release of serotonin (5-HT) by CNS serotonergic neurons. The study of blood 5-HT levels and platelet 5-HT pharmacodynamics in patients with a variety of psychiatric and neurologic disorders has generated interesting leads into possible abnormalities of CNS 5-HT neurons in these patients. This article reviews the experimental evidence, which uses the human platelet model to investigate neurotransmitter-related abnormalities in
Down syndrome
, mental retardation, infantile autism, hyperactivity syndromes (minimal brain dysfunction),
schizophrenia
, affective disorders, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Parkinson disease, Huntington chorea, and migraine headaches.
...
PMID:The human platelet. A diagnostic and research tool for the study of biogenic amines in psychiatric and neurologic disorders. 14 Jun 32
Amniocentesis, the obtaining of a small amount of amniotic fluid with fetal cells for testing, has made it possible to diagnose some diseases in utero early enough in pregnancy to permit abortion. The current major indications for prenatal diagnosis are
Down's syndrome
(
Trisomy 21
), numerous rare inborn errors of metabolism, and neural tube closure defects. Chromosoml screening in prisons has identified men with sex chromosomal abnormalities with higher frequency than in the general population, e.g., the XYY syndrome and the XXY or Klinefelter syndrome. Some of the disorders of sexual differentiation of behavioral interest range from hermaphrodites, the Turner syndrome, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and testicular feminization. Depression and
schizophrenia
are 2 psychiatric disorders that are probably influenced by genetic factors but cannot be tested for at present. Behavioral syndromes associated with abnormal chromosomes or biochemical markers may be suitable for early detection int he future. There are many social and psychological problems in testing and counseling for genetic and chromosomal diseases.
...
PMID:Intrauterine diagnosis and genetic counseling in psychiatry. 79 88
The total number of adults with
Down's syndrome
living in Leicestershire, ascertained by widespread enquiry, was found to be 378. Of these, 371 were matched with adults with mental handicap due to other pathologies, on the basis of age, sex, and type of residence. Those with
Down's syndrome
were found to have a different spectrum of mental disorders from those without the syndrome. In particular,
Down's syndrome
patients were more likely to have been diagnosed as having depression and dementia; the controls were more likely to have been diagnosed as suffering from conduct disorder, personality disorder, or
schizophrenia
/paranoid state. The same proportion of each group had been given a diagnosis of autism.
...
PMID:Differential rates of psychiatric disorders in adults with Down's syndrome compared with other mentally handicapped adults. 833 Jan 25
Neuronal thread protein (NTP) is a recently characterized molecule that is over-expressed in brains with Alzheimer's disease (AD) lesions. The present study encompasses a detailed analysis of NTP expression in AD compared with other neurodegenerative diseases and aged controls. Using a specific monoclonal antibody, NTP immunoreactivity was evaluated in 309 paraffin-embedded sections from 8 different regions of the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes of 73 brains with AD, AD +
Down's syndrome
(DN), AD + Parkinson's disease (PD), PD dementia (PDD), aged controls, and disease controls with Huntington's disease, multi-infarct dementia, or
schizophrenia
. In 250 adjacent blocks of snap-frozen unfixed tissue the concentration of NTP (ng/mg of protein) was measured using a 3-site forward sandwich monoclonal antibody based immunoradiometric assay (M-IRMA). Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that brains with AD, AD + PD, and AD + DN contained significantly higher densities of NTP immunoreactive neurons and more frequent immunostaining of neuropil and white matter fibers compared with PDD and aged controls (both P < 0.001) which had few or no AD lesions. In addition, the overall mean concentrations of NTP in AD, AD + PD, and AD + DN were significantly higher than in PDD and aged controls (P < 0.005). Greater degrees of NTP immunoreactivity and higher concentrations of the protein in cerebral tissue were significantly correlated with AD diagnosis and abundant neurofibrillary tangles (P < 0.005). The findings suggest that NTP over-expression may serve as a marker for the type of neuronal degeneration that occurs in AD.
...
PMID:Neuronal thread protein over-expression in brains with Alzheimer's disease lesions. 148 53
Fifty-three controlled trials of the effects of niacin, vitamin B6, and multivitamins on mental functions are reviewed. The results are interpreted with emphasis on the methodological quality of the trials. It turns out that virtually all trials show serious short-comings: in the number of participants, the presentation of baseline characteristics and outcomes, and the description of changes in concomitant treatments. Only in autistic children are some positive results are found with very high dosages of vitamin B6 combined with magnesium, but further evidence is needed before more definitive conclusions can be drawn. For many other indications (hyperactive children, children with
Down's syndrome
, IQ changes in healthy schoolchildren,
schizophrenia
, psychological functions in healthy adults and geriatric patients) there is no adequate support from controlled trials in favor of vitamin supplementation.
...
PMID:Niacin and vitamin B6 in mental functioning: a review of controlled trials in humans. 182 3
Eighty-one parents of 42 autistic probands and 34 parents of 18
Down syndrome
probands were examined using a semistructured, investigator-based version of the Schedule for Affective Disorders and
Schizophrenia
Lifetime Version to estimate the lifetime risk of psychiatric disorder. The lifetime prevalence rate of anxiety disorder was significantly greater in parents of autistic probands than in parents of
Down syndrome
probands. The lifetime prevalence rate of major depressive disorder, while not significantly different in cases and controls, may be high in the parents of autistic probands (27%) in comparison with populations rates.
...
PMID:Psychiatric disorders in the parents of autistic individuals. 156 43
Free radicals are reactive chemical species with an unpaired electron that are produced through a variety of physiologic and pathologic processes. Free radicals have been implicated in a variety of neuropsychiatric conditions, many of which are marked by the gradual development of psychopathologic symptoms and movement disorder. There is evidence that radical-induced damage may be important in Parkinson's disease, tardive dyskinesia, metal intoxication syndromes, and
Down's syndrome
, and possibly also in
schizophrenia
, Huntington's disease, and Alzheimer's disease. Although some of this evidence is highly speculative, it may offer an avenue for further understanding and treatment of these conditions.
...
PMID:Oxygen radicals and neuropsychiatric illness. Some speculations. 184 28
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were measured in anterior and posterior grey matter of the lumbar spinal cord and in temporal and frontal cortex from six cases of Alzheimer-type dementia (ATD), one case of
Down's syndrome
, three cases of
schizophrenia
(SZ) and six controls. Compared with control and SZ values, ChAT and AChE were reduced in ATD cerebral cortex. ChAT was reduced, and AChE unaltered, in ATD spinal cord. Decreased cord ChAT may be related to electrophysiological abnormalities which have been reported in motor nerves of patients with Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Cholinergic enzymes in the spinal cord in Alzheimer-type dementia. 253 18
During the 1970s, vitamins and vitamin therapy became household words. Vitamin therapy, better known as "orthomolecular psychiatry," is both appealing and very popular. The question that must be asked is: Does this popularity and appeal validate this form of therapy? This paper presents findings from various sources that give results of research in megavitamin nutritional therapy. The following categories are examined: learning disabilities in general,
schizophrenia
, autism, mental retardation and
Down's syndrome
, and hyperkinesis.
...
PMID:Behavioral disorders, learning disabilities and megavitamin therapy. 296 2
Diet clearly influences neurotransmission. This can be important in grossly undernourished children. It can also be important in children in whom normal homeostatic mechanisms governing food intake are bypassed. Subtle differences in behavior can occur with physiologic variation in food intake. Components of foods can also be used as drugs. Starvation can impair neuronal maturation and can have lasting effects upon behavior and intellectual performance. The extent of starvation's impact upon the brain depends upon whether undernutrition occurred during a critical phase in brain development. Short-term fasting has small, but significant, effects upon intellectual performance. Even when gross malnutrition is not present, subtle changes in diet may modulate brain function. Tryptophan, tyrosine, and choline in the diet are used as precursors for neuronal synthesis of serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine, and acetylcholine, respectively. It is likely that the brain's sensitivity to certain components of the diet exists to permit monitoring of food intake by the central nervous system. Tryptophan, tyrosine, and choline may be useful in treatment of humans with sleep disorders, pain depression, mania, hypertension, shock, or dyskinesias. Other components of the diet that may affect behavior include food additives, sugar, and caffeine. Food additives may exacerbate hyperactive symptoms in a small proportion of children with attention deficit disorder. Given that there is little potential for harm and that there is a subpopulation that may respond, a trial of a diet that contains no food additives may be a valid diagnostic approach for children with attention deficit disorder who do not respond to stimulant therapy or for children for whom stimulant therapy is not desired. Refined sugar has been blamed for many behavioral abnormalities. Subtle effects of carbohydrate upon behavior have been reported, but the existing data do not support the hypothesis that sucrose or fructose exert special effects upon neurotransmission. Caffeine is easily detected as a stimulant by humans, but it has little effect upon cognitive function. Administration of large doses of vitamins has no beneficial effect in most humans with
schizophrenia
, attention deficit disorder, autism,
Down's syndrome
, or drug addiction. Large doses of niacinamide may even be harmful, as they may cause hepatic damage.
...
PMID:Dietary influences on neurotransmission. 302 51
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>