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)

33 cases of schizophrenia received normal food and no premedication. After a clinical improvement which showed itself 3--6 weeks after the beginning of the chlorpromazine treatment, the 17-ketosteroids, the 17-ketogenic steroids and also the electrolytes were dertermined in the blood serum, the erythrocytes and the urine. 12 schizophrenics each received 25 mg of ACTH for three days puring the maximum chlorpromazine dosage. The separate results of examination were tabulated. The final results showed a restriction in the steroid synthesis, an increase in the excretion of potassium through the kidneys along with a decrease in the excretion of sodium. There was an appreciable drop in the sodium potassium concentration in the erythrocytes. It can be assumed that there is a connection between the variations in the membrane permeability to electrolytes and pharmacogenic dyskinesia.
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PMID:The adrenocortical secretion in schizophrenics during chlorpromazine treatment. 20 56

After exposure to a low and high dose dexamethasone regime, 11 of 34 acute psychiatric inpatients demonstrated abnormal dexamethasone suppression characterized by morning and/or mid-afternoon escape from suppression. This abnormality of suppression was found in primary depression, in mania, and in acute schizophrenia. In primary depression, the presence of abnormal dexamethasone suppression failed to discriminate "endogenous" depressed from "other depressed" subjects. Because nonsuppression to a high dose of dexamethasone is also found in patients with ectopic ACTH secretion and in patients with autonomous adrenal tumors, caution is necessary in the interpretation of nonsuppression which persists after recovery from psychiatric illness. As patients with Cushing's syndrome of uncertain etiology may be referred to a psychiatrist for a diagnostic evaluation, the psychological correlates of abnormal dexamethasone suppression need to be established with greater certainty.
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PMID:A two-dose dexamethasone suppression test in patients with psychiatric illness. 59 3

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

Several classes of drugs that modify serotonin (5-HT) neurotransmission are either currently used, or are being evaluated for their potential use in the treatment of anxiety, schizophrenia, and depression. 5-HT1A agonists are considered potential anxiolytics, while some atypical antipsychotics are potent 5-HT2 antagonists (and also have modest dopamine D2 affinity). Furthermore, there is a diverse group of serotonergic drugs that may be effective antidepressants. Secretion of ACTH, corticosterone/cortisol, prolactin, renin, oxytocin and vasopressin are stimulated by activation of different 5-HT receptor subtypes, while other neurotransmitter receptors also influence the secretion of these hormones. We compared the receptor binding profiles of 5-HT anxiolytics, antipsychotics and antidepressants with their endocrine effects. These comparisons could aid in understanding both the therapeutic and side effects of these drugs.
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PMID:Endocrine and receptor pharmacology of serotonergic anxiolytics, antipsychotics and antidepressants. 135 27

In seventy-two patients affected by hyperphagic obesity and forty age-matched, normal weight volunteers we performed a psychological assessment, through various mental tests, and evaluated the beta-endorphin (B-Ep), ACTH and cortisol circulating levels, in basal condition and following an overnight short dexamethasone suppression test (DST). The hormones were measured by radioimmunoassay either directly in the serum (cortisol) and the plasma (ACTH), or after affinity gel column chromatography (B-Ep). In obese subjects B-Ep levels in basal conditions were four times greater than in normal weight controls and showed significantly less reduction after DST. ACTH and cortisol levels, in contrast, were in the normal range and were suppressed following dexamethasone as was also true in the control group. Psychological evaluation on M.M.P.I. (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) revealed a trend toward hypochondria, depression, hysterias, psychoasthenia and schizophrenia. However, no significant correlation has been found between M.M.P.I. clinical scale scores and circulating levels of B-Ep and cortisol either in basal conditions or after DST. In conclusion, these data do not support the hypothesis that abnormalities of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in hyperphagic obesity are related to affective disorders.
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PMID:Hyperendorphinemia in obesity is not related to the affective state. 196 3

Patients with primary affective disorders, such as melancholic depression and anorexia nervosa, frequently have a hyperactive hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, characterized by hypersecretion of CRH and a blunted ACTH response to exogenous CRH. Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is a luteal phase dysphoric disorder characterized by primarily affective and behavioral disturbances. HPA axis function was compared in PMS patients and control women, respectively, diagnosed by DSM3-R criteria or found to have no current psychiatric disorders, determined by the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Interview. Urinary free cortisol excretion was the same in PMS and normal women, and no differences in urinary free cortisol excretion between the follicular and luteal phases occurred in either group. Two HPA axis abnormalities, however, were noted when PMS patients were compared to normal women. First, basal evening cortisol concentrations in plasma were significantly decreased, while the time-integrated response of plasma cortisol to ovine (o) CRH was significantly increased. Second, the negative correlation between time-integrated plasma ACTH and cortisol responses to oCRH and basal luteal progesterone concentrations present in normal control women was not seen in the PMS patients. These changes in basal and oCRH-stimulated plasma cortisol levels in association with normal urinary free cortisol excretion suggest that women with PMS might have transient or episodic disturbances of their HPA axis, which appear adequately corrected by this system's servomechanisms. This probably explains the maintenance of regular menstrual cycles in PMS patients, which contrasts with the irregular menses observed in patients with depression, anorexia nervosa, or women who participate in chronic strenuous exercise.
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PMID:Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function in patients with the premenstrual syndrome. 217 72

The authors presented evidence for the effect of 6 analogues of ACTN4-10 on teaching of albino rats in a labyrinth with negative electrocutaneous reinforcement. Sixteen series of experiments on 192 rats demonstrated a positive effect of corticotropin fragments on memory processes. The activating ACTH fragment effect was shown in recording the background and bioelectrically induced rabbit brain activity in response to a photo-flash in 36 experiments on 18 animals. Three groups of 30 patients with alcohol withdrawal syndrome, posttraumatic craniocerebral effect and schizophrenia received injections of corticotropin as a therapeutic agent. A high efficacy of corticotropin in the treatment of the alcohol withdrawal syndrome and after effect of craniocerebral injury and a low efficacy and sometimes aggravation of symptoms in schizophrenia patients were shown.
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PMID:[Psychotropic properties of corticotropin and its analogs]. 300 19

During a drug-free period a group of schizophrenic subjects (N = 9) showed normal mean basal plasma ACTH and cortisol levels in association with normal plasma ACTH and cortisol responses to an infusion of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). Administration of fluphenazine had no effect on basal ACTH and cortisol levels or their responses to CRH (N = 8). These data differ from those previously reported in depressed patients, who showed elevated basal cortisol values in association with a blunted ACTH response to CRH, and add to a growing body of literature which suggests that hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal regulation is less disturbed in schizophrenia than in depression.
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PMID:The corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation test in chronic schizophrenia. 302 12

This article comprises a systematic ans schematic survey of neuroleptics and antidepressants, their mode of action in the central nervous system, indications and side-effects. Psychic disorders in the aged may be due to anatomical cerebral lesions, but they may be also "functional'. Both types of disorders are concisely described. The possibilities and limitations of treatment with psychotropic drugs are reviewed and special attention is given to the specific problems of this type of therapy in patients of advanced age. It is pointed out that psychic disorders in the aged are multiconditional and that psychopharmacotherapy is just one component of the treatment. The neuropeptide concept is described. The putative clinical significances of neuropeptides derived from ACTH, vasopressin and beta-endorphin (e.g. DTgammaE) are mentioned with respect to learning- and memory processes and schizophrenia.
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PMID:[Mechanism of action and indications for psychopharmaceutic agents; possibilities and limitations in the elderly]. 611 93

Distorted biorhythms and altered neuroendocrine function may accompany depressive disorders. Restoration of the above derangements occurs with effective therapy, whereas persistence of the biological abnormalities is found in patients incompletely cured and may be predictive of early relapse. The commonest hormonal abnormalities are: decreased suppressibility of the ACTH-cortisol axis to dexamethasone, subnormal thyrotropin response to TRH and growth hormone release to hypoglycemia; attenuated gonadotropin production and abnormal light-dark entrained melatonin secretion. The observed hormonal derangements seem to be epiphenomena of the primary disorder. The reversibility of the disordered neuroendocrine control with treatment of the depressive syndrome suggests that the hormonal abnormalities represent a state rather than trait disorders. Finally, the lack of similar neuroendocrine derangements in schizophrenia or secondary exogenous depression suggests that different neurochemical alterations underlie these disorders.
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PMID:Depression: biological and neuroendocrine aspects. 614 19


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