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Depression and neurological disorders
Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 2006Clinical studies support a bidirectional link between depression and neurological diseases. Here we review the most recent findings supporting the hypothesis that major depression is a medical illness of the brain which can be elicited by neurological illnesses.In the last year major improvements in brain-imaging techniques allowed correlations to be ...
Benedetti F.+2 more
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Childhood Depressive Disorders
The Journal of School Nursing, 2000About 5% of children and adolescents in the general population suffer from depressive disorders at any given point in time. Children under stress, those who experience loss, or children who have attention, learning, conduct, or anxiety disorders are at a higher risk for depressive disorders.
Tina Morgan-Judge, Debra E. Lyon
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2020
The main and best evidence-based indication to date to apply repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) in psychiatric disorders is major depression. Nevertheless, given that the high occurrence of major depressive disorders poses a major challenge for health systems worldwide, there is an urgent need for improving the clinical efficacy of the
Brem, Anna Katharine+13 more
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The main and best evidence-based indication to date to apply repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) in psychiatric disorders is major depression. Nevertheless, given that the high occurrence of major depressive disorders poses a major challenge for health systems worldwide, there is an urgent need for improving the clinical efficacy of the
Brem, Anna Katharine+13 more
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Thinking Disorder in Depression
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1974Abstraction ability was measured in 67 subjects consisting of depressives, schizophrenics, and normals. Depressives and schizophrenics showed a clear abstraction deficit compared with normals. Schizophrenics had more deficit than the depressives. When degree of depression was correlated with abstraction deficit an important overall relationship was ...
Aaron T. Beck, David L. Braff
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Depression and eating disorders
Depression and Anxiety, 1998Both depressive disorders and eating disorders are multidimensional and heterogeneous disorders. This paper examines the nature of their relationship by reviewing clinical descriptive, family-genetic, treatment, and biological studies that relate to the issue.
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Depression and Cardiovascular Disorders
Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 2013During the past two decades, research in the field of depression and cardiovascular disorders has exploded. Multiple studies have demonstrated that depression is more prevalent in populations with cardiovascular disease, is a robust risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease in healthy populations, and is predictive of adverse outcomes ...
Mary A. Whooley, Jonathan M. Wong
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Depression in Autistic Disorder
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1991Depressive illness in a patient with Down's syndrome and autism responded to fluoxetine. The importance of diagnosing superimposed depression in people with developmental disorders is emphasised.
Luke Y. Tsai, Mohammad Ghaziuddin
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Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1990
Plasma zinc levels were measured in 14 patients with primary affective disorder on admission to hospital; they were compared with plasma zinc levels in group of 14 age‐ and sex‐matched controls. A significant difference in zinc levels was found between the 2 groups.
J. S. Hodge, I. J. McLoughlin
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Plasma zinc levels were measured in 14 patients with primary affective disorder on admission to hospital; they were compared with plasma zinc levels in group of 14 age‐ and sex‐matched controls. A significant difference in zinc levels was found between the 2 groups.
J. S. Hodge, I. J. McLoughlin
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Cannabinoids in depressive disorders
Life Sciences, 2018Cannabis sativa is one of the most popular recreational and medicinal plants. Benefits from use of cannabinoid agents in epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, and others have been suggested. It seems that the endocannabinoid system is also involved in the pathogenesis and treatment of depression, though its role in ...
Ewa Poleszak+5 more
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Depression as a communicable disorder
Medical Hypotheses, 2004'Communicable disorder' can be defined as a disorder capable of being transmitted in the form of negative emotion(s) from living or non-living being(s) to susceptible host. Thus, communicable disorder is transmitted from the source or reservoir of disorder to the susceptible host.
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