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 principles of positron emission tomography (PET) are described, and illustrations of how these can be applied to clinical psychiatric questions relating to schizophrenia and depression are delineated. The metabolic changes in the frontal lobes which have been described in both depression and schizophrenia and depression are reviewed and discussed. More recent PET techniques allow several serial measurements of changes in regional blood flow in response to either a pharmacological challenge or a specific psychological task. This method provides a promising new approach to the study of the dopaminergic system in schizophrenia. New tracer methods of quantitating changes in in vivo concentrations of opioid receptors allow direct pharmacological access to the endogenous opioid system in the brain. Observations of regional cortical differences in opioid receptor concentration in relation to the medial and lateral pain systems are described. In addition, changes in receptor occupancy during sleep using [11C]diprenorphine and changes in the mu-specific tracer [11C]carfentanil in temporal lobe epilepsy are discussed.
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PMID:Positron emission tomography as a research tool in the investigation of psychiatric and psychological disorders. 164 17

Self-aggression is a behavioural disorder in which an individual damages its own body parts by intense biting or scratching. Self aggression has been reported in human patients in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and in cases of schizophrenia, depression, and congenital analgesia. In human patients as well as in experimental animals some kind of dysesthesia of the part of the body that is mutilated has been suggested. This study was conducted to find out the underlying pain mechanisms in self-aggressive behaviour arising out of stereotypy. The study was performed in 40 adult male rats. In all these animals, self-aggression was produced as part of amphetamine induced stereotyped behaviour. A predetermined scale was used for quantifying this behaviour. Reserpine and phenoxybenzamine pretreatment led to an increase in the incidence of self-aggression. Naloxone administration in reserpine pretreated animals led to a further significant increase in the incidence of self biting as compared to controls. From these studies it appears that self-aggressive behaviour may be associated with increased pain sensation.
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PMID:Role of opioid receptors in self-aggression in rats. 166 47

Starting from a case of marked pain insensitivity in a patient suffering from catatonic schizophrenia we state in this paper that analgesia seems to be an ubiquitous phenomenon which is not only caused by physical disorders of the central nervous system. Different models of interpretation as to be found in scientific literature are reviewed. On the basis of today's physiological knowledge, five hypotheses on causal explanation of pain insensitivity in schizophrenics are discussed: Hypalgesia and analgesia are an expression of motorial inability to react; a consequence of a disorder of consciousness; an analgetic effect of neuroleptic drugs; a basic deficit in schizophrenia and; a result of a disturbed psycho-physiological development.
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PMID:[Disorders of pain perception in schizophrenia]. 170 99

Depressed patients and suicidal patients are common Emergency Department patrons with the potential for serious morbidity or death. Dysphoric mood, vegetative symptoms, and negative perceptions of oneself, the environment, and the future are characteristic of depression. Often, the patient is unaware of the depression and presents with a variety of somatic complaints, chronic fatigue, or pain syndromes. In these instances, the physician must consider the diagnosis of depression and ask the patient about any history of depressive symptoms. In all depressed patients, a careful history and physical examination are needed to identify any drugs or concurrent medical illnesses which might cause or exacerbate the depression. If depression is suspected or if the patient presents after a suicide attempt, then a thorough evaluation of suicide potential is mandatory. Several risk factors for completed suicide exist. Male sex, age under 19 or over 45, few social supports, and a history of previous suicide attempts are all factors associated with increased suicide rates. Concurrent chronic or severe medical illnesses and certain psychiatric illnesses, notably depression, schizophrenia, and substance abuse, also increase an individual's risk for suicide. The method of suicide attempt and the chance for rescue must also be considered when determining risk as well as the presence of an organized plan. Acute psychosis in the suicidal patient is an ominous finding and these patients should be admitted to the hospital. The physician must adopt an empathetic and nonjudgmental attitude when caring for potentially suicidal patients. Disposition can be determined after careful evaluation of risk factors, circumstances surrounding the attempt, and the patient's current feelings. Consultation with a psychiatrist or another mental health professional is desirable for any potentially suicidal patient. Many such patients can be safely treated as outpatients with proper referral; certain high-risk individuals will need to be admitted to the hospital. The decision to either hospitalize or discharge can be difficult and the emergency physician should admit the patient if doubt exists.
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PMID:Depression and suicide assessment. 200 61

Pimozide, a diphenylbutylpiperidine neuroleptic which is FDA-approved as a backup treatment for Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome, has been used abroad for many years as a treatment of schizophrenia and has been recently reported to be particularly effective in treating monosymptomatic hypochondriacal psychosis and delusional jealousy. Pimozide may also have a role in the treatment of negative schizophrenic symptoms, pain syndromes, and obsessive compulsive disorder. After reviewing the relevant clinical literature supporting these indications, the authors review preclinical studies that provide points of departure regarding biochemical mechanisms underlying this unique therapeutic profile.
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PMID:The role of pimozide in clinical psychiatry: a review. 175 55

The immune system is proposed as the key to understanding the etiology and treatment of psychosocial disease. There is a dense communication network between the immune system and the central nervous system (CNS). Immune cell cytokines, via direct action on the CNS, induce fever, alter sleep, pain perception and pituitary hormone release and reduce appetite and activity in animals. Interleukin-2 and interferon given to humans result in global behavioral and cognitive pathology. Activation of the immune system by pathogens produces global cognitive and behavioral pathology also. Recently, controlled trials have demonstrated that diet can cause psychosocial disease, presumably by an immune mechanism. Immune system abnormalities have been identified in manic-depressive psychosis, schizophrenia and alcoholism. Lithium carbonate is not only prophylactic for all three of these diseases, but it also powerfully stimulates the immune system. This is proposed as the mechanism of lithium's therapeutic effect. The antipsychotics, haloperidol and the phenothiazines, affect the immune system also. The rapid development of AIDS dementia complex can be explained by the remarkable influence the immune system has on the CNS.
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PMID:The immune system is a key factor in the etiology of psychosocial disease. 205 27

The syndrome of "painful legs and moving toes" is characterised by spontaneous causalgic pain in the lower extremities associated with peculiar involuntary movements of the toes and feet. It has been observed after a variety of lesions affecting the posterior nerve roots, the spinal ganglia and the peripheral nerves. The pathophysiology of the syndrome is unknown. I report a patient who developed the syndrome during treatment for schizophrenia with the antipsychotic agent molindone hydrochloride. The patient's response to the combination of clonazepam and baclofen suggests that the pathophysiology of the "painful legs and moving toes" may be linked to impairment of spinal serotonergic and GABA functions.
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PMID:Neuroleptic-induced "painful legs and moving toes" syndrome: successful treatment with clonazepam and baclofen. 208 81

This paper examines the relationship between agitation and medical and psychiatric diagnoses. Agitation marked by aggressive behaviors (e.g., hit, kick) was related to dementia and impairments in activities of daily living. Physically nonaggressive behaviors (e.g., pacing, disrobing inappropriately) correlated with cognitive impairment, fewer medical diagnoses, and absence of a hearing loss. Verbally agitated behaviors (e.g., constant complaints) were manifested by residents with more physical diagnoses, mental disease (other than schizophrenia and affective disorders), more reported pain, and higher cognitive functioning than the population as a whole.
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PMID:Medical correlates of agitation in nursing home residents. 222 68

A 39-year-old female with several past psychiatric hospitalization for schizophrenia was admitted to our hospital because of severe pain and swelling of her legs. A few days before onset, she had often sat down upon her heels in water closet, agitated and talking to herself for many hours. Two days before the admission, she had suffered from severe pain and swelling of her bilateral calf-muscles, and her urine became brownish. On admission, neurological findings revealed delirious state, moderate rigidity of limbs, hyporeflexia of legs, marked swelling and severe spontaneous pain in bilateral legs. She was afebrile with body temperature of 36.4 degrees C. Laboratory data showed marked increase of levels of serum CK to 163,000 U/1, myoglobin to 9,860 ng/ml and aldolase to 42.8 IU/1, and the diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis was made. Although she fell into acute renal failure, the renal function recovered after repeated hemodialysis. Several days after admission, swelling and pain of calf-muscles began to improve, and serum CK, myoglobin and aldolase decreased rapidly. One month later, she was able to walk on her own legs. In the literature, rhabdomyolysis associated with immobile posture caused by schizophrenia is extremely rare, and this is the first case reported in Japan. The relationship between rhabdomyolysis and schizophrenia was discussed.
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PMID:[A case of rhabdomyolysis following long time immobile posture caused by schizophrenia]. 259 45

A 54-year-old female, who had been mediated for simple type schizophrenia for the past eleven years, was hospitalized with left lumbar discomfort or pain. After admission, the following abnormalities were apparent serologically; leucocytosis of 15700/mm, erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 147 mm/h, hyper alpha 2-globulinemia (675 ng/dl of haptoglobulin). Urine cultures were negative. Left renal simple cyst with infection was evaluated by intravenous urography, ultrasonogram, computed tomographic (CT) scan., and renal angiogram. In addition, left subphrenic abscess behind the spleen, which had to be penetrated through retroperitoneum, could be diagnosed. So, in our case, cystic wall resection (unroofing) and/or conservatively percutaneous cystotomy for pus drainage were all not indicated instead of radical operation for abscess removal completely. CT scan is mostly available to make differential diagnosis whether the infectious renal cyst influence to the neighbouring organs beyond the renal capsule, or not. Here, we discussed the pathogenesis on the infection of solitary renal cyst, and some problems reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Infected solitary renal cyst extending to subphrenic abscess--a case study and review of the literature]. 267 64


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