Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085632 (apathy)
4,089 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study suggests that patients receiving daily doses of 40 mg of prednisone or its equivalent, are at greater risk for developing steroid psychosis. Psychotic reactions were twice as likely to occur during the first 5 days of treatment as subsequently. Premorbid personality, history of previous psychiatric disorder, and a history of previous steroid psychosis did not clearly increase the patient's risk of developing psychotic reaction during any given course of therapy. Steroid psychoses present as spectrum psychoses with symptoms ranging from affective through schizophreniform to those of an organic brain syndrome. No characteristic stable presentation was observed in these 14 cases reported here. The most prominent symptom constellation to appear some time during the course of the illness consisted of emotional lability, anxiety, distractibility, pressured speech, sensory flooding, insomnia, depression, perplexity, agitation, auditory and visual hallucinations, intermittent memory impairment, mutism, disturbances of body image, delusions, apathy, and hypomania. Phenothiazines administered in average daily doses of 212 mg produced excellent response in all patients studied. Of particular note was the fact that tricyclic antidepressants produced an exacerbation or worsening of the clinical state in all patients to whom they were administered.
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PMID:Presentation of the steroid psychoses. 43 94

Twelve patients (8 females, 4 males) with panhypopituitarism who had been thoroughly examined psychiatrically in 1957 and 1958 were reexamined in 1974 for psychopathologic alterations in the course of their endocrine disease. Eleven patients had been receiving an adequate hormonal treatment during the intervening years or (four patients) until the time of their death. Seven patients showed a good or excellent result of hormonal therapy, in respect of the psychic symptoms: the endocrine psychosyndrome which had been observed prior to treatment had improved considerably. Signs of organic brain syndrome were judged to be caused by age and not by the endocrinopathy. The factors influencing prognosis of psychic symptoms are: alteration in mental activity, in the sense of apathy and lack of drive, and the extent of social distegration caused by these alterations; the age of the patient at the onset of symptoms and the lapse of time prior to the beginning of adequate therapy; finally the personality structure and the social situation of the patient.
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PMID:[The endocrine psychosyndrome in the long term. I. A cantamnestic reexamination of patients suffering from panhypopituitarism (author's transl)]. 93 95

The diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia have been extensively changed by the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, recently adopted by the American Psychiatric Association (DSM III). To receive this diagnosis, the patient must have onset of illness before age 45 years, have had a chronic course, manifest the presence of characteristic symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, or loose associations during a phase of the illness, and have experienced a downhill social and vocational course; affective disorders and organic brain syndrome must be carefully excluded. The utilization of this "narrow" definition has caused a major shift toward increasing the diagnosis of affective disorders and decreasing the diagnosis of schizophrenia in the United States. The etiology of schizophrenia is still uncertain, but recent research has elucidated one subgroup of schizophrenic patients who have subtle indices of neurological damage and a clinical course similar to that found in dementia. Dopamine excess in the mesolimbic system is the predominant inferred cause for the majority of schizophrenia cases, and antipsychotic medications all rely on dopamine receptor blockade for their efficacy. Antipsychotic medications are effective in schizophrenia but are less potent against such negative symptoms as apathy, neglect of personal hygiene, and social withdrawal.
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PMID:Schizophrenia. 613 80