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)

Of 54 male psychiatric patients undergoing dexamethasone suppression tests in a clinical setting, 40% of those with a major depressive disorder showed escape from suppression over the 24 hours after dexamethasone administration, while all of the patients with schizophrenia, neurosis, alcoholism,and drug abuse showed normal pituitary-adrenal suppression. Only 10% of the depressed patients showed resistance to suppression 8 hours after dexamethasone administration. There was no difference between depressed patients who did and did not show escape from suppression in type of previous episodes, family history, symptoms, or medication. However, those who showed escape tended to respond better to treatment and to be rated as having a more severe depression. The theoretical and clinical implications of these findings are not yet clear.
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PMID:The 24-hour dexamethasone suppression test in a clinical setting: relationship to diagnosis, symptoms, and response to treatment. 42 40

The activity of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 59 psychiatric patients has been analyzed by a highly sensitive radio-enzymatic assay. There was no sex difference in DBH, but there was a significant positive correlation with age. Probenecid administration had no effect on CSF DBH. DBH in CSF correlated positively (r = 0.60) with the plasma enzyme. Among patients hospitalized for major depressive disorder, unipolar or bipolar, schizo-affective disorder, schizophrenia, alcoholism, or personality disorders there were no significant between-group differences. Among the patients with bipolar affective disorder, DBH activity from manic patients was significantly lower than that from depressed or euthymic patients. The results are discussed with reference to the theory that the amount of DBH in CSF may serve as an indicator of central noradrenergic activity.
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PMID:Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase in the cerebrospinal fluid of psychiatric patients. 73 56

In a pilot study of 150 manic or depressive patients, the authors used the Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) and the Schedule for Affective Disorders and schizophrenia (SADS) to perform preliminary analysis of symptom pictures of the index episode of different diagnostic groups, joint diagnostic classification of the different subtypes of major depressive disorder, and differential outcome by diagnostic groups. The results suggest that schizophrenic symptoms in affective disorders do have diagnostic and prognostic significance, that the term "psychotic depression" should be limited to impaired reality testing without reference to degree of incapacitation, that situational-nonsituational and endogenous-nonendogenous classifications are separate depressive subtypes, and that it may not be true that patients with endogenous major depressive disorder have a better prognosis than patients with nonendogenous depression.
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PMID:Use of the Research Diagnostic Criteria and the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia to study affective disorders. 75 28

A study was made of burns patients who were referred for psychiatric problems. There were a total of 69 subjects, divided into three groups. The first group comprised thirty-four cases who attempted suicide by burning themselves--there were more women than men, the majority were less than forty years, and Indians were overrepresented. The majority of these were suffering from schizophrenia or a major depressive disorder. The second group of twenty-three patients were those who had a non-psychotic psychological reaction to their burns. The majority were also less than 40 years of age, and the main reactions were anxiety neurosis or reactive depression. The third group of twelve patients were suffering from delirium. All were pyrexic and in eleven, infective agents were cultured. Some of them also had electrolyte abnormalities and two had respiratory burns.
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PMID:Psychiatric disorders associated with burns. 129 99

One hundred American Indian patients with a Psychoactive Substance Use Disorder (PSUD) were studied with special reference to associated psychiatric disorders. This clinical sample was divided into three groups: PSUD only, PSUD plus an Organic Mental Disorder (OMD), and PSUD plus any other psychiatric disorder. OMD diagnoses included primarily Delirium Tremens and Alcoholic Hallucinosis; cases of Alcohol Amnestic Disorder, Alcohol Dementia, and trauma-induced OMD were also encountered. Other psychiatric disorders included primarily Major Depression and Anxiety Disorder, with smaller numbers of Schizophrenia, Conduct, Sexual, and other Disorders. Demographic and clinical characteristics were compared among these three groups. Those with PSUD+OMD tended to be older, male, and have more DSM-III Axis 3 disorders (American Psychiatric Association 1980) as compared to other patients; those with PSUD+other diagnoses tended to be single and younger. Education and occupational status were not related to the three diagnostic groups. The data were also subjected to MANOVA analysis. Even when corrected for sex, types of substance being abused, Axis 3 health status, and other factors, the three diagnostic groups still bore a significant relationship to age. Those with PSUD+Other psychiatric diagnoses besides OMD tended to be youngest. Those with PSUD-only were intermediate by age, while those with PSUD+OMD tended to be the oldest.
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PMID:Substance use and other psychiatric disorders among 100 American Indian patients. 130 30

Results of numerous community surveys of psychiatric illness suggest a striking change in the occurrence of depression, with younger generations experiencing higher lifetime risk and earlier age of onset. Data from the National Institute of Mental Health Epidemiologic Catchment Area Survey (a cross-sectional survey of psychiatric morbidity in five US communities conducted between 1980 and 1984) were reexamined for evidence of methods effects which might contribute to these unexpected findings. A pattern of higher lifetime risk and earlier age of onset among recent birth cohorts was observed for every psychiatric disorder examined, with schizophrenia, major depression, and panic disorder showing equally strong trends. For respondents of all ages, reported first onset of major depression clustered in the 10-year period prior to the study interview, in contrast to the expectation that older respondents would report onset in early adulthood. Examination of individual psychiatric symptoms revealed a nearly universal pattern of decreasing lifetime prevalence among older respondents, a reversal of the expected accumulation of lifetime symptoms with age. These findings suggest that effects of study methods may contribute to the apparent temporal trends in prevalence of depression and that cross-sectional surveys may underestimate lifetime psychiatric morbidity among older respondents. Generational changes in the lifetime risk of depression or other psychiatric disorders may not be reliably assessed by cross-sectional survey data.
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PMID:Reevaluation of secular trends in depression rates. 833 21

In Dutch samples of treated heroin addicts, high prevalences of a heterogeneous psychiatric co-morbidity can be found with regard to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (third edition) (DSM-III) classifications, Zung Depression Inventory, and sum scores of a 90-item Symptom Checklist (SCL-90). A high-threshold (N = 87) and a low-threshold (N = 116) program are compared with regard to psychopathology and severity of psychopathology. A consecutive admissions design was used. More than 50% of the respondents suffered from a lifetime DSM-III Axis I disorder (70% with antisocial personality disorder included), and 40% were still suffering from one of the disorders in the year preceding the interview. Schizophrenia was diagnosed five times as much as in normal population samples (5%). The most frequently diagnosed disorders were recurrent major depression, phobic disorders, alcohol abuse and dependence, dysthymic disorder, and antisocial personality disorder. The prevalences of DSM-III disorders, the total number of symptoms, and the score on the Zung Depression Inventory and 90-item Symptom Checklist were all significantly higher in treatment-seeking drug addicts entering the high-threshold program. Within each program, three clinically meaningful subgroups can be distinguished: one group with DSM-III Axis I lifetime or current psychopathology and/or antisocial personality disorder, one with antisocial personality disorder only, and one with neither DSM-III psychopathology nor antisocial personality disorder. Possibly, self-selection results in patients with more serious conditions entering more treatment-oriented facilities. Odds ratios show that schizophrenia and mood disorders and especially associated on a lifetime and current basis.
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PMID:Prevalence of psychopathology in drug-addicted Dutch. 131 65

Some investigators have speculated that structural brain alterations observed in some psychiatric patients might be related to increased limbic-hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (LHPA) activity. To explore this hypothesis, we prospectively studied 166 research volunteers (19 patients with research diagnostic criteria (RDC) major depression, 9 patients with RDC bipolar depression, 45 patients with RDC schizophrenia, and 94 RDC normal controls), examining the relationship between magnetic resonance image-determined ventricular-to-brain ratio (VBR) and indices of LHPA axis function (cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), CSF adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and 24-hour urinary-free cortisol secretion). We observed no significant differences in mean VBR among the three patient groups and the normal control volunteers. Of the indices of LHPA activity, only CSF CRF concentrations distinguished the four subject groups, with CSF CRF being significantly elevated in the more severely depressed major depression patients. Indices of LHPA activity were not significantly correlated with VBR in any of the three patient groups or in the normal volunteers. These preliminary results suggest that VBR is not highly associated with alterations in LHPA activity, at least as determined cross-sectionally. Further longitudinal studies with reference to diagnostic subtypes, severity, symptom profiles, and more specific neuroanatomic regions may allow the elucidation of possible relationships between LHPA pathology and structural brain alterations.
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PMID:Limbic-hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity and ventricular-to-brain ratio studies in affective illness and schizophrenia. 131 68

In this study, 7 hospitalized patients with major depression (MD), 5 hospitalized patients with schizophrenia (S), and 13 control subjects (C) were administered 0.15 units/kg of regular insulin at 1600 h by intravenous bolus infusion. ACTH, cortisol, and glucose levels were measured intermittently for 2h following infusion. Baseline ACTH, cortisol and glucose levels were similar in Cs, MDs, and Ss. The mean glucose nadir was equivalent for Cs, patients with MD, and patients with S. Patients with MD had a blunted ACTH response (F = 3.28; df = 12,126; p = .0004) and cortisol response (F = 4.20; df = 12,132; p = .0001) to hypoglycemia when compared to Cs and patients with S. Carroll Depression Rating Scale scores in patients with S (23 +/- 10) were similar to patients with MD (30 +/- 8) and significantly higher than in controls (1 +/- 2) (F = 55.2; df = 2.22; p = .0001). These findings suggest that patients with MD show different ACTH and cortisol responses to hypoglycemic stress which are not explained by negative feedback of baseline ACTH or cortisol, glucose nadir, or the number of depressive symptoms per se.
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PMID:Blunted ACTH response to hypoglycemic stress in depressed patients but not in patients with schizophrenia. 131 84

The relationship of age and of level of adaptive functioning to comorbidity of mental disorders among alcoholics was studied in a survey of all alcoholics seeking outpatient mental health treatment in the Veterans Affairs mental health care system during a one-month period in 1986 (N = 22,463). More than half of the alcoholic outpatients had one or more comorbid psychiatric diagnoses. Rates for comorbid substance abuse disorders, posttraumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia, and personality disorders peaked in younger alcoholics and then decreased with age. Age-related increases were observed for major depression, anxiety disorders, and organic brain syndrome or dementia. DSM-III axis V ratings of poor to grossly impaired functioning were consistent across age groups. More than half of alcoholics with a comorbid psychiatric disorder were rated as severely impaired, compared with less than a third of those with no comorbid mental disorder.
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PMID:Age-related psychiatric comorbidities and level of functioning in alcoholic veterans seeking outpatient treatment. 132 23


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