Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relationship between ventricular size, as a measure of brain atrophy, and performance on a vigilance task was investigated in 39 patients with anorexia or bulimia nervosa during the acute stage of their illness. Compared to normal controls, the patients performed significantly more poorly in the cognitive task. Half of the patients displayed enlarged ventricles. However, the patients with ventricular dilatation did not perform worse in the cognitive test than patients with normally sized ventricles. Other clinical characteristics, such as symptom severity or duration of illness, were also not correlated with ventricular size. These results support the interpretation that cerebral atrophy per se does not have severe consequences on the neuropsychological or psychopathological status in eating disorder patients.
...
PMID:Cerebral atrophy and vigilance performance in patients with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. 263 Sep 34

Computed tomographic (CT) brain scans were performed in 50 inpatients with bulimia nervosa, 50 anorectic inpatients, and 50 age-matched control subjects. A number of patients with bulimia nervosa had enlarged ventricles and/or sulcal widening, but the degree and frequency of ventricular dilatation and sulcal widening were not so pronounced as in patients with anorexia nervosa. As the bulimic patients were of normal body weight, the CT abnormalities cannot be attributed to emaciation, which has often been suggested as the cause of abnormalities found in anorectic patients. Since many bulimic patients repeatedly attempt to lose weight by going on restrictive diets, the morphological brain alterations may reflect the endocrine and metabolic reactions to starvation--regardless of whether starvation has led to emaciation, as in the case of anorexia nervosa, or only counterbalanced the binges of high-caloric food. This assumption is supported by the finding that in both bulimic and anorectic patients ventricular size is inversely correlated with the plasma levels of triiodothyronine, a low concentration of which is an indicator for starvation.
...
PMID:Structural brain abnormalities in patients with bulimia nervosa. 292 42