Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The validity of the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D) as a measure of depressive symptomatology in schizophrenic patients is questionable since it was not developed for this purpose, nor has it been validated in a schizophrenic population. Accordingly, 80 schizophrenic inpatients were administered the HAM-D, the 18-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), and the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) at drug-free baseline and after 4 weeks of neuroleptic treatment. The findings revealed that the HAM-D total score was nonspecific, while individual HAM-D subfactors provided a better index of various symptom complexes. The HAM-D contained a depressive factor that correlated strongly with the BPRS depression factor and a negative symptom factor that correlated strongly with the SANS and the BPRS negative symptom factor. These findings suggest the need to utilize specific assessment techniques rather than global measures when assessing depression in schizophrenia.
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PMID:Measurement of depression and negative symptoms in schizophrenia. 135 5

To establish the differential indication of trazodone and to find the predictors of its efficacy, we conducted a study in which 45 patients with major depressive disorder and 75 patients with acute schizophrenia were randomly assigned under double-blind conditions to either 400 mg trazodone daily, 150 mg amitriptyline daily, 20 mg haloperidol daily, or placebo daily. At the beginning of the investigations, numerous variables (basic data, MMPI, AMDP, HAM-A, HAM-D) were documented and evaluated on days 3, 7, 14, and 21. In our study, trazodone proved to be as effective an antidepressant drug as amitriptyline. In group comparison, no antipsychotic action of trazodone in schizophrenic patients could be proved. Yet the trazodone treatment was clearly of less risk than the amitriptyline treatment. Under trazodone, provocation of schizophrenic symptoms, which occurred numerously under amitriptyline, was found only in one patient out of 17 schizophrenics. Related to anamnesis and characteristics of the schizophrenic patient, a predictor-variable concerning the antipsychotic effect was not found. It can be assured, however, that patients with depressive symptoms (regarding the entity classification) respond to trazodone. After only 7 days of trazodone treatment, a relatively reliable decision can be established as to whether a therapeutical success can be expected if treatment is continued.
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PMID:Experimental examination of trazodone. 274 48

Thirty-four newly admitted patients who met the Research Diagnostic Criteria for schizophrenia were assessed on admission and in their 8th week of hospitalization. The data were obtained using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D), and the Extrapyramidal Involvement Rating Scale (EPRS). A significant reduction in BPRS scores was observed on Week 8 scores compared with baseline scores (p less than .001); however, no significant difference could be found between baseline and Week 8 HAM-D scores. In addition, no significant correlation between the HAM-D scores and the EPRS scores was seen. Depressive symptoms appear to be present during the acute phase of schizophrenic psychosis and do not remit as rapidly as the psychotic symptoms.
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PMID:Depressive symptoms in acute schizophrenic hospitalized patients. 405 8

Depression, as a feature of schizophrenia, is well established. However, clarifying the exact nature of this relationship has been problematic. The clinical measures routinely utilized to evaluate depression have not been specifically designed for use in schizophrenia, and it is well recognized that a variety of depressive symptoms overlap with other features common to this illness, e.g. negative symptoms, neuroleptic induced side effects. The present study compared three commonly used measures of depression (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (Ham-D), Calgary Depression Scale (CDS) and the depression subscale of the Positive and Negative Syndrome scale (PANSS-D) in a group of outpatients with schizophrenia, evaluating the degree of association between the scales. Additionally, the relationship between each of the depression measures, negative symptoms and extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) was calculated. Results revealed that all three measures of depression were significantly correlated, although the CDS was unique in its ability to distinguish between depression, negative symptoms and EPS. It is concluded that the CDS, when compared with the HAM-D and the PANSS-D, is the most suitable measure of depression in schizophrenia.
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PMID:Depression in schizophrenia: a comparison of three measures. 879 11

Reports of an 18-fold higher incidence of schizophrenia among second-generation Afro-Caribbeans, and especially Jamaican migrants in the United Kingdom were soon called "an epidemic of schizophrenia," with the inference that a novel virus, likely to be perinatally transmitted, was a possible etiological agent. This intriguing observation led us to explore a possible link with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type one (HTLV-I), because it is a virus that is endemic in the Caribbean Island, is perinatally transmitted, known to be neuropathogenic, and the cause of a chronic myelopathy (tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-I associated myelopathy. We therefore examined inpatients as the Bellevue Mental Hospital, Kingston, Jamaica and did standard serological tests for retroviruses HTLV-I and HTLV-II and HIV-I and HIV-II on 201 inpatients who fulfilled ICD-9 and DSM III-R criteria for schizophrenia. Our results produced important negative data, since the seropositivity rates for HTLV-I, the most likely pathogen, were no greater than the seropositivity range for HTLV-I carriers in this island population, indicating the HTLV-1 and the other retroviruses tested do not play a primary etiological role in Jamaican schizophrenics.
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PMID:Retroviruses and schizophrenia in Jamaica. 887 65

A 35-year-old man died after 30 months following the onset of the disease. There was a history of changes in his mental condition, including disturbances of behavior as well as the evidence of progressing dementia. The patient revealed gait disturbances and finally became bed ridden. Bizarre behavior and changes of mood with concurrent growing irritability which predominated during the course of disease, may explain the initial diagnosis of schizophrenia. Then cerebellar and spastic movement disorders leading to paraparesis and sphincters disturbances developed. Clinical symptoms of adrenal failure were not found apart from episodes of arterial pressure fall. After two years a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an extensive diffuse demyelinative process in white matter of cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres. Activity of lysosomal enzymes was normal. A general autopsy revealed atrophy of adrenal cortex and the presence of ballooned cells with striated cytoplasm in the reticular and fasciculate zones. Neuropathological examination revealed an extensive demyelination of white matter in cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres and of the long paths of the brain stem, corresponding to changes in MRI examination. Within demyelination areas damage of axons and diffuse cellular and fibrous gliosis were found as well as perivascular lymphocytic infiltrations with the presence of strong PAS (+) and Sudan (+) macrophages. Immunocytochemical reactions with HAM-56 and RCA1 in macrophages were positive. Electron microscopy examination revealed lamellar inclusions in cytoplasm of macrophages. Similar structures were present in the lysosomes of astrocytes. Morphological examination of adrenal glands as well as morphological and ultrastructural study of the brain allowed us to diagnose the cerebral form of adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD). Topography and character of the brain changes seems to be in keeping with a rare schizophrenic-like variant of ALD with progressive dementia. Abnormal plasma profile and increased VLCFA concentration in the patient's 13-year-old daughter confirm the ALD diagnosis.
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PMID:Adult schizophrenic-like variant of adrenoleukodystrophy. 981 21

To analyze psychopathological and phenomenological post-schizophrenic depressions (PSD) (F20.4 according to ICD-10) 40 patients with shift-like schizophrenia were examined. 6 PSD types are described: apatho-adynamic with disorders of thinking, adynamic, melancholic-adynamic, asthenic-hypochondriac, psychoasthenic-phobic, dysphoric with heterogeneous elements. Dynamics and the degree of reversibility on the background of antidepressive therapy of both depressive and negative symptoms in clinical picture of typologic PSD variations were studied clinically using Hamilton's scale (HAM-D) and negative disorders' subscale (PANSS) estimation. There wasn't observed any correlation in reduction of depressive and negative symptoms in each type of PSD. It was found that the more atypical were clinical manifestations of PSD (as compared with endogenous depression), the more pronounced were negative signs conditioned by schizophrenic disease and the less was their reverse dynamics. Participation of the primary deficiency disorders in forming clinical picture of different types of PSD is discussed.
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PMID:[The correlation of depressive and negative symptoms in the picture of post-schizophrenic depressions]. 1044 60

Several studies have implied cultural differences in the psychopathology of schizophrenia between migrants and natives. In a diagnostically strictly controlled study, including comparison of diagnosis with a Turkish-speaking psychiatrist, 74 patients of Turkish and 48 of German origin, all with a diagnosis of schizophrenic disorder, were compared using PANSS and HAM-D. The Turkish sample showed higher depression and hostile excitement, even in the subsample of those with paranoid schizophrenia, and no differences in positive, negative or cognitive symptoms. The similarities especially concerning core symptoms reflect evidence from cross-cultural studies on schizophrenia. In conclusion this study shows main differences in psychopathology between psychotic migrants and natives, as discussed in the literature, may be mainly due to diagnostic differences.
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PMID:Schizophrenic disorders among Turkish migrants in Germany. A controlled clinical study. 1154 31

Depressive symptoms frequently occur during the course of schizophrenia. This study explored the relationships between the schizophrenia symptomatology and three measures of depression. Eighty-one drug-free inpatients with acute schizophrenia were assessed with the positive and negative syndrome scale (PANSS), the Calgary depression scale for schizophrenia (CDSS), and the Hamilton rating scale for depression (HAM-D). The depressive subscale of PANSS (PANSS-D) was also considered as a third scale for measuring depression. A principal component analysis (PCA) of PANSS items identified five clinical dimensions of schizophrenia called 'negative', 'positive', 'anxio-depressive', 'excitement', and 'disorganisation and others'. Our anxio-depressive dimension (PANSS-ad) was strictly identical with the PANSS-D. Scores on CDSS and HAM-D were highly inter-correlated and highly correlated with the PANSS-ad. Furthermore, while scores on CDSS were correlated only with this dimension, scores at HAM-D were also positively correlated with the negative dimension and negatively correlated with the excitement dimension. In conclusion, our results suggest that PANSS evaluation itself may be sufficient to give a correct approximation of the depression in patients with schizophrenia. However, depression scales are of course needed to assess specifically depressive symptoms in patients with schizophrenia; hence, the CDSS could be a more specific instrument than HAM-D.
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PMID:Validity of the depressive dimension extracted from principal component analysis of the PANSS in drug-free patients with schizophrenia. 1208 26

In order to improve our understanding of depression in chronic schizophrenia, depressive symptoms were assessed in institutionalized, so called Kraepelinian, patients with schizophrenia (N = 43). The patients had been ill and dependent on others for at least 5 years. Depressive symptoms as measured by the Hamilton Depression (HAM-D) scale were less prevalent in this population compared to published data on non-Kraepelinian patients. Only 5% of our Kraepelinian patients had a HAM-D score >/= 16. There was also a low prevalence of core depressive symptoms (depressed mood, suicidal ideation, and guilt). The relationship of depression to other dimensions of schizophrenia was explored. Depression had a modest positive correlation (r = 0.44) with general psychopathology as measured by the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), but not with positive symptoms as measured by BPRS positive subscale or negative symptoms as measured by the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS). Depression also showed a modest positive correlation (r =.48) using the Simpson-Angus Rating Scale (SAS) for extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS). These results indicate that in Kraepelinian schizophrenia, depression is not prevalent, even though patients are severely ill both in symptom and functioning domains. The results of our analysis support that Kraepelinian schizophrenia is a distinct subtype, and raise questions regarding the boundary between schizoaffective disorder and non-Kraepelinian schizophrenia. Finally, the low rate of depression observed revives the notion that preservation of core functional abilities is important for a depressive reaction to evolve in schizophrenia.
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PMID:Depression in Kraepelinian schizophrenia. 1252 29


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