Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Self-induced vomiting has been associated with the psychiatric diagnosis of anorexia nervosa and a newly proposed disorder named bulimia. Two patients with a self-induced
vomiting
compulsion did not fulfill criteria for either of these diagnoses. One patient had an
affective disorder
, and the other had no psychiatric illness, but the habit had developed as a weight control measure. Systematic studies of these symptoms are not available. Clinical diagnostic decisions should not be base on one outstanding sign or symptom, eg, self-induced
vomiting
, unless research clearly relates the sign or symptom to only one disorder.
...
PMID:Self-induced vomiting. Psychiatric considerations. 65 Aug 45
Although it is widely recognized that eating disorders primarily begin during the adolescent period, the centrality of obsessive-compulsive symptomatology and dynamisms and their relationship to adolescent conflict and development has not been generally accepted or understood. Social pressures toward conformity with the ideal of feminine thinness, which are especially influential during the adolescent period, combine with obsessive-compulsive predispositions to produce eating disorder symptoms and patterns of behavior. Obsessive preoccupation with images of food as well as ruminative calorie counting, and ritualistic behavior regarding food, use of laxatives, and
vomiting
, together with an underlying focus on control, undoing and other obsessive-compulsive defenses, and a sado-masochistic orientation to the body all point to an essential obsessive-compulsive disorder. The presence of dysphoric affect and the erratic success of antidepressant medication with eating disorder patients has led to a belief in an underlying
affective disorder
. However, careful assessment of eleven studies presenting differential diagnostic data regarding anorexia nervosa reveals that noneating related obsessive-compulsive patterns and symptoms are second overall in incidence to depressive patterns and symptoms. With critical re-evaluation of data presented, the obsessive-compulsive condition equals or supersedes the depressive one in many samples. Moreover, given the intense achievement orientation of persons with obsessive-compulsive illness, along with other psychodynamic factors, depressive symptoms could well be considered a secondary breakdown effect. If the all-pervasive obsessive-compulsive nature of eating-related symptomatology discussed here is taken into consideration, depressive symptoms must be considered either secondary or incidental. As patients with eating disorders are notoriously secretive and oftentimes misleading about their symptoms and themselves, a diagnostic assessment of such patients in intensive treatment at a long-term hospital facility was carried out. Compared with a control group randomly selected from the remainder of the hospital patient population, obsessive-compulsive manifestations of rumination, ritualistic behavior, excessive cleanliness, excessive orderliness, perfectionism, miserliness, rigidity, and scrupulousness and self-righteousness were all significantly associated with the eating disorder patient group. The current eating disorder picture, therefore, appears to be a modern form of obsessive-compulsive illness beginning during the adolescent period.
...
PMID:Adolescence and eating disorder: the obsessive-compulsive syndrome. 223 95
We compared 23 obese subjects meeting DSM-III criteria for bulimia with 47 obese nonbulimic subjects and 47 normal-weight bulimic subjects using structured diagnostic interviews. The obese bulimic subjects were similar to the normal-weight bulimic subjects but different from the nonbulimic obese subjects in exhibiting a high lifetime rate of major
affective disorder
. However, the obese bulimic subjects were much less likely than the normal-weight bulimic subjects to use self-induced
vomiting
as a method of purging. These results suggest that obese individuals with bulimic symptoms may constitute a sizable but little-recognized population. Further studies will be required, however, to assess whether the syndrome of bulimia in obesity represents a valid diagnostic entity.
...
PMID:Bulimia in obese individuals. Relationship to normal-weight bulimia. 334 87
The most prevalent psychiatric disorders in the families of patients with anorexia nervosa are bipolar and unipolar major
affective disorder
. The presence of
affective disorder
, self-induced
vomiting
, or bulimia in the patient is not predictive of affective illness in the relatives. Thus these features do not define genetic heterogeneity within anorexia nervosa. There may be genetic factors shared between anorexia nervosa and affective disorders.
...
PMID:Clinical findings in patients with anorexia nervosa and affective illness in their relatives. 649 86
The effectiveness and safety of ECT in pharmacotherapy-refractory depression was examined in 11 hospitalized adolescents (ages 16.3 +/- 1.7 years, 10 females) with a primary DSM-III-R diagnosis of
mood disorder
, which had failed to respond to three or more adequate trials of antidepressant pharmacotherapy. After a thorough diagnostic evaluation, patients received a course of ECT involving 11.2 +/- 2.0 (range 8-15) administrations. ECT was commenced with bilateral treatment in 2 adolescents and nondominant right electrode placement in 9 patients; 5 of the 9 patients were subsequently changed to bilateral treatment. All 11 patients improved to a clinically significant degree. Significant improvements were noted in scores on the Children Depression Rating Scale-Revised (CDSR-R) and the Global Assessment of Functioning Scale (GAF) (p < 0.05). Euthymia, defined as CDRS-R score < or = 40, was achieved by 64% (7/11) of patients. The Mini-Mental State Examination showed no significant decline in cognitive functioning. Neuropsychological testing completed in 5 subjects both before ECT and 1-5 days after the last treatment, indicated a significant decline in attention, concentration, and long-term memory search. Minor side effects, experienced within the first 12 hours of treatment, were headache (80% of patients) and nausea/
vomiting
(64%). The potentially serious complication of tardive seizure (after full recovery of consciousness) occurred in 1 adolescent. Prolonged seizures (> 2.5 minutes) were noted in 7 of the 11 patients (9.6% of the 135 ECT administrations). Pending further research on ECT in youth, it is recommended that ECT should only be administered to youth in hospital settings, that all regularly administered psychotropic medications (including antidepressants) be discontinued before ECT and restarted after the final administration of ECT, and that physicians be aware that 12 treatments are usually sufficient, but that 15 treatments may occasionally be necessary for treating depressed adolescents. With the understanding that scientific evaluation of ECT in youth is lacking, it appears that ECT can be an effective and relatively safe treatment for depressed adolescents who have failed to respond to antidepressant pharmacotherapy.
...
PMID:Electroconvulsive treatment in adolescents with pharmacotherapy-refractory depression. 923 19
Practical strategies are available for primary care physicians to monitor psychiatric and medical outcomes as well as treatment adherence in patients with bipolar disorder. Current depressive symptoms can be assessed with tools like the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire or Beck Depression Inventory. Lifetime presence or absence of manic or hypomanic symptoms can be assessed using the
Mood Disorder
Questionnaire (MDQ). These measures can be completed quickly by patients prior to appointments. Sensitivity of such ratings, particularly the MDQ, can be increased by having a significant other also rate the patient. Clinicians should also screen
mood disorder
patients for psychiatric comorbidities that are common in this population such as anxiety and substance use disorders. While patients with bipolar disorder may commonly be nonadherent with prescribed medication regimens, strategies that can help include having frank discussions with the patient, selecting medication collaboratively, adding psychotherapy with a psychoeducation element, monitoring appointment-keeping, using patient self-reports of medication-taking, enlisting the aid of significant others, and measuring plasma drug levels. Medical monitoring is needed to assess the safety and tolerability of psychotropic medications. All of the approved medications for bipolar disorder have at least 1 boxed warning for serious side effects, but are also associated with other common management-limiting side effects such as sedation, tremor, unsteadiness, restlessness, nausea,
vomiting
, diarrhea, constipation, weight gain, and metabolic problems. Routine monitoring is particularly needed for obesity, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disorders, which lead to high rates of medical morbidity and mortality in patients with bipolar disorder. Monitoring protocols such as the one recommended by the American Diabetes Association for patients taking second-generation antipsychotics can be used for regular assessment.
...
PMID:Strategies for monitoring outcomes in patients with bipolar disorder. 2062 1
The role of anxiety has been emphasized in etiological/maintenance models of anorexia nervosa. This study identified daily patterns of anxiety in anorexia nervosa and examined the likelihood of the occurrence of eating disorder behaviors in each trajectory, the daily temporal distribution of eating disorder behaviors in each trajectory, and the extent to which the tendency to exhibit particular anxiety trajectories was associated with baseline diagnostic and trait-level personality variables. Women with full or subthreshold anorexia nervosa (N = 118) completed a 2-week ecological momentary assessment (EMA) protocol during which they reported on a variety of behavioral and affective variables, including anxiety and eating disorder behaviors. Using latent growth mixture modeling to classify EMA days (N = 1,526) based on anxiety ratings, we identified 7 distinct daily anxiety trajectories. Overall differences between trajectories were found for rates of binge eating, self-induced
vomiting
, body checking, skipping meals, and dietary restriction. Furthermore, distinct daily temporal distributions of eating disorder behaviors were found across the trajectories, with peaks in the probability of behaviors frequently coinciding with high levels of anxiety. Finally, traits of personality pathology (affective lability, self-harm, social avoidance, and oppositionality) and the presence of a co-occurring
mood disorder
were found to be associated with the tendency to experience particular daily anxiety trajectories (e.g., stable high anxiety). Findings support the presence of within-person variability in daily anxiety patterns in anorexia nervosa and also provide evidence for an association between these anxiety patterns and eating disorder behaviors.
...
PMID:Daily patterns of anxiety in anorexia nervosa: associations with eating disorder behaviors in the natural environment. 2364 24
Background:
The purpose of this review paper was to explore the components and their respective health effects and safety aspects regarding the consumption of diet drinks (DDs).
Methods:
A wide variety of the relevant publications (published before 2018) were identified through searching electronic databases (ScienceDirect, PubMed, SciELO, Google Scholar, Springer Link, and ResearchGate) on the basis of different keywords such as diet drink, market status, consumption pattern, composition, health effects, and regulations related to DDs. After the search of suitable literature, 139 papers were screened and reviewed.
Results:
Numerous brands of DDs have been introduced in the market along with a wide variety of modifications in order to attract the consumers of all age groups along with their respective professions. The major components of DDs are caffeine, taurine, ginseng, guarana, sodium, potassium, and sweeteners that contribute to the good taste, stimulating effect, increased performance and cognitive function, and reduced stress. However, ingestion of DDs over a prolonged course of time can pose multiple deleterious effects, i.e., intoxication,
affective disorder
, hypertension, reproductive toxicity, and neurological disorders. Consequently, different regulatory bodies of respective countries have formulated and enforced rules and regulations regarding the composition, consumption, labeling, distribution, and sales of DDs.
Conclusions:
An awareness regarding the components, consumption, and health effects is greatly required in the present era, and authors have tried to fill this gap.Key teaching pointsRise in socio-economic status, health awareness and change in dietary lifestyle are the major factors that fuel the demand of diet drinks; which has been witnessed by a drastic increase in the consumption pattern of the diet drinks among young to middle-age adults since last decade.A wide variety of the ingredients are used in the preparation of diet drinks including caffeine, ginseng (
Panax ginseng
), guarana (
Paullinia cupana
), taurine, artificial sweeteners, B Vitamins, sodium, potassium etc.Diet drinks are generally served cold and contain high levels of caffeine and other artificial sweeteners; which based on dosage, have been known to be beneficial as well as harmful.These ingredients possess numerous health benefits including anti-hypertensive, anti-oxidant, anti-cancer properties, improved metabolic functions, stress reduction and enhanced endurance, exercise and performance and increased cognitive function.A wide range of the adverse health effects such as nervousness, sleeplessness, behavioral changes, decreased appetite, heart palpitations, nausea,
vomiting
, dehydration etc. is being possessed by diet drinks upon the ingestion of these drinks over a prolonged course of time.Regulatory bodies should determine the safe limits of all ingredients for different age groups to get maximum health benefits.
...
PMID:Nutraceutical Potential of Diet Drinks: A Critical Review on Components, Health Effects, and Consumer Safety. 3134 56