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)

We experienced perioperative management of thirty two surgical patients complicated with either schizophrenia or depression on long-term administration of psychotropic drugs during a period of three years from 1989 through 1991. They underwent various operative procedures under either general anesthesia or epidural anesthesia. Mental confusion was most frequently encountered in immediate postoperative period. The longer the patients had been treated with psychotropic drugs, the more postoperative complications were observed. We lost four patients within two weeks postoperatively. They all underwent laparotomy and had been treated with psychotropic drugs for a prolonged period. No significant association between the types of anesthesia and postoperative complications was observed. Surgical patients on long-term administration of psychotropic drugs should be managed carefully particularly during postoperative period.
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PMID:[Perioperative management of patients on long-term administration of psychotropic drugs]. 835 Apr 74

Ketamine has been considered to be contraindicated for schizophrenic patients because it may induce psychological emergence reactions and psychiatric deterioration. Total intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA) with ketamine combined with droperidol and fentanyl (DFK) has been used in 14 schizophrenic patients undergoing various surgical procedures. Two patients died post-operatively of concomitant severe disease rather than from schizophrenia related pathophysiology or anaesthetic complication. One patient showed transient mild anxiety in the early post-operative period soon relieved by the patient's routine medication. However, no patient developed exacerbations of psychosis or psychological emergence reactions during the first post-operative month. The cardiovascular state during and after DFK remained stable in all cases. It is concluded that ketamine when combined with droperidol and fentanyl is a satisfactory anaesthetic for patients with schizophrenia.
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PMID:Uneventful total intravenous anaesthesia with ketamine for schizophrenic surgical patients. 904 58

Depression is a common condition that often responds to a variety of treatment modalities. Concerns about antidepressant medications' safety and efficacy and individuals' lack of response or their problems complying with medication regimens have prompted a resurgence in electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for specific mental health conditions. Outpatient maintenance ECT, performed under general anesthesia, is a safe, effective follow-up treatment for individuals with major depression who have undergone inpatient ECT. Individuals with bipolar disorders, catatonia, mania, and schizophrenia and those with Parkinson's disease also can benefit from outpatient ECT. Perioperative nursing care for individuals who undergo outpatient ECT is similar to the care provided to patients scheduled for ambulatory surgery. Successful performance of outpatient ECT requires collaboration by skilled perioperative nurses, psychiatrists, anesthesia care providers, affected individuals, and family members.
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PMID:Treatment of depression with outpatient electroconvulsive therapy. 906 Nov 52

Between January 1985 and September 1994, 21 patients with psychiatric disorders underwent various forms of surgery at our hospital. There were 12 men and 9 women with an average age of 57.6 years. The coexisting psychiatric disorders were schizophrenia in 15 patients, depression in 2, dementia in 2, mental retardation with epilepsy in 1, and Parkinson's disease in 1. All the patients had been receiving neuroleptic medications for a long period. The indications for surgery were: cholelithiasis in 6 patients, acute appendicitis in 4, perforation of the small intestine in 3, incarceration of an inguinal hernia in 2, and esophageal cancer, stomach cancer, bleeding from a gastric ulcer, perforation of a duodenal ulcer, strangulating ileus, and burns in 1 patient each, respectively. All of the patients who underwent elective surgery were given epidural anesthesia with or without general anesthesia. Antipsychotic medications were given until just prior to surgery and recommenced concurrent with the first meal. Abnormal behavior was observed in 11 patients (52.4%) postoperatively, but all the patients were discharged in accordance with recovery from their surgical disorder. Intra- and postoperative hypotension resistant to intravenous catecholamine administration was recognized in 9 patients (42.9%), and this peculiar complication should be borne in mind when patients with psychiatric disorders require surgical management.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of patients with psychiatric disorders: a review of 21 patients. 913 Mar 38

ECT, in which first experiments were made by the italian Cerletti more than half a century ago, underwent, in the seventies, a definite decline, as it was less and less applied to patients, a result of the influence of anti psychiatry. During the last fifteen years, there has been a legitimate renewal of the interest for this therapy; its indications seem now well codified and its techniques and practises have evolved considerably. Actually, in order to carry out ECT under general anaesthesia, it is necessary to have a pluridisciplinary team, assembling nurses, anaesthesists and psychiatrists that will use more and more effective appliances and adequate anaesthetics. Many of the parameters able to influence ECT's effectiveness are now well known and can be used and adapted according the individual characteristics of each patient. These parameters are: the lateralisation of the electrodes, the intensity of the electric current, the duration of the epileptic fit, the modification that appear in electroencephalography and the frequence of the sessions. According to different investigations, it seems that we must systematically question the medical treatments we associate to ECT. For instance, it is highly recommended not to prescribe with ECT benzodiazepines or antiepileptic mood stabilizers, while antidepressants or neuroleptics do not seem to exert any influence on the effectiveness of the treatment. Some authors think caffeine and triiodothyronin (T3) could have an interesting effect when combined with ECT. As to the indications of shock therapy, they can be now more and more precisely defined making of this treatment an indispensable instrument in the cure of depressive disorders. But ECT is also appropriate in maniac disorders once neuroleptic treatment has failed or else in the very beginning in highly acute cases, and mainly in mixed episodes for which medical treatment is often difficult to adapt. In schizophrenia, ECT can also be prescribed in definite circumstances as catatonia, paranoid states or schizoaffective episodes. Therefore, ECT constitutes a safe and comfortable therapy for the patient since its side effects are essentially characterized by cognitive disorders, and its main contraindications consist of severe cardiovascular diseases. ECT is also an essential tool in some definite cases.
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PMID:[Indications for electroconvulsive therapy]. 933 57

Our previous findings in female rats suggest that the potent effects of sex steroids on mood and mental state may be mediated, in part, by the effect of estrogen on the 5-hydroxytryptamine2A receptor (5-HT2AR) in brain. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of acute (approximately 32h) sex steroid manipulation on central 5-HT2AR in the adult male Wistar rat. Castration (under halothane anesthesia) decreased while testosterone or estrogen, but not 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone (5alpha-DHT), increased significantly the 5-HT2AR mRNA content in dorsal raphe nucleus and the density of 5-HT2AR binding sites in frontal, cingulate and primary olfactory cortex and nucleus accumbens. The lack of effect of 5alpha-DHT, a potent androgen which cannot be converted to estrogen, suggests that the action of testosterone depends upon its conversion to estrogen by aromatase. This may also explain why estrogen, but not testosterone or 5alpha-DHT, increased the density of 5-HT2AR binding sites in the caudate-putamen, a brain region where aromatase is scarce. These findings are discussed in relation to the possible role of the 5-HT2AR in depression, schizophrenia and Alzheimer's Disease.
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PMID:Testosterone as well as estrogen increases serotonin2A receptor mRNA and binding site densities in the male rat brain. 972 88

The management of the behavior of mentally challenged adults when providing required dental care is often a problem, whether in the dental office or in a hospital setting. Our institution has a designated program to provide required dental care to this group of patients. Because of the high incidence of poor cooperation, which may include aggressive antagonistic behavior, many of these patients are scheduled for dental care under general anesthesia with an incomplete preoperative medical assessment. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact and limitations that an incomplete medical assessment may present in the delivery of dental care under general anesthesia to these adults with developmental disability. After approval from the institutional review board, the medical records of 139 patients treated in this program between 1992 and 1994 were reviewed to determine the patient profiles, anesthesia management, and complications. The charts of these patients, who underwent dental and radiographic examination, scaling and prophylaxis, and restoration and extraction of teeth under general anesthesia, were reviewed. There were 149 procedures performed on these patients, some more than once. The mean age was 29.5 yr. Males predominated females by a ratio of 2:1. All had multiple diagnoses, medical problems, and medications. Twenty-three patients had Down's Syndrome, four had schizophrenia disorders, 42 had seizure disorders, 11 had hypothyroidism, seven had heart disease, and 14 had central nervous system and neuromuscular disorders. The remainder had a variety of diagnoses, including rare syndromes. One hundred had intravenous (i.v.), 25 had mask inhalation, and 24 had intramuscular ketamine (Ketalar) induction. Nasotracheal intubation was uneventful in 139 patients, five had difficult visualization of the larynx and intubation. Ten patients experienced intraoperative complications, including nonfatal ventricular arrhythmia, slight fall in blood pressure and hypertension (greater than 20% of preoperative value), and four individuals developed laryngospasm. In the Post Anesthetic Care Unit, five patients experienced minor airway problems resulting in a desaturation of oxygen to a level below 85%. Adults with developmental disabilities can be safely managed under general anesthesia for dental treatment in a hospital setting with minimal morbidity and without extensive preoperative investigations.
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PMID:General anesthesia for the provision of dental treatment to adults with developmental disability. 979 4

Schizophrenia is associated with both increased dopaminergic activity and perinatal complications. To test whether dopamine-mediated behavior can be altered by birth complications, we investigated effects of amphetamine (AMPT) on activity levels in adult rats that had been born vaginally or by Caesarean section (C-section) from isoflurane-anesthetized dams with or without addition of 10 min global anoxia. For comparison with our previous results, we also included rats born by C-section from decapitated dams. The main finding is that rats born by C-section from isoflurane-anesthetized dams, either with or without added anoxia, showed greater AMPT-induced activity as adults compared to vaginally born controls. C-section from decapitated dams also enhanced AMPT-induced activity, however the time course differed from that following maternal anesthesia. Thus subtle alterations in birth procedure can produce long-lasting increases in dopamine-mediated behavior, supporting a role for birth complications in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
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PMID:Caesarean section birth with general anesthesia increases dopamine-mediated behavior in the adult rat. 980 97

The pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia remains a critical component in the short- and long-term management of this disease. Considerable progress has been made in delineating different domains of this illness, ranging from positive and negative symptoms to cognitive dysfunction and psychosocial vulnerabilities. Increasingly, treatments are being studied in relation to a variety of different outcome measures with functional ability and quality of life achieving appropriate emphasis. The introduction of a new generation of antipsychotic drugs has helped to raise optimism and expectations. Overall, second-generation drugs do provide clear advantages in terms of reducing adverse effects (particularly drug-induced Parkinsonism, anesthesia, and, hopefully, tardive dyskinesia). Advantages in alleviating refractory symptoms, negative symptoms, depression, and suicidal behavior are found in some reports; however, much remains to be done methodologically in establishing the relative merits of specific drugs in the multiple domains of interest.
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PMID:Pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia. 1057 54

The electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), which provokes a generalized epileptic seizure by an electrical stimulus, was first administered in 1938 and performed without anesthesia during thirty years. Nowadays, ECT is carried out using brief anesthesia (preferably methohexital) and skeletal muscle relaxation (succinylcholine) to avoid fearful complications like bone and muscle fractures. ECT is a safe treatment without absolute contraindications; the treatment risk corresponds to the risk of general anesthesia. ECT is indicated in depression, mania and schizophrenia. It plays an important role in the treatment of therapy resistant, severely ill patients with affective disorders, suicidal drive, delusional symptoms, vegetative dysregulation, inanition and catatonic symptoms. The response rate (remission or marked improvement) is about 70%. Usually ECT is performed 3 times per week, resulting in an ECT course with a total number of 6 to 12 single treatments. Within 2 or 3 weeks a substantial improvement can be expected. Further controlled studies are required with regard to antidepressive and/or antipsychotic continuation therapy after successful ECT course. Brief pulse stimulation, unilateral nondominant electrode placement and individual stimulus titration with respect to seizure threshold (EEG monitoring is required!) can minimize cognitive side effects. The apprehension that ECT could cause prolonged amnesia and structural brain damage has not been confirmed by the available scientific data. Modern brain imaging methods could elicit the until now unknown mode of action of ECT.
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PMID:[Clinical value of electroconvulsive therapy in treatment of depression]. 1063 58


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