Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: depression + may + trigger  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Birth Trauma: Stress Disorder Afflicts Moms
Wall Street Journal -
PTSD is much less common than postpartum depression, which has become better-understood by the public as celebrities like actress Brooke Shields and former ...

HealthJockey.com
Depression could primarily cause cardiovascular trouble
HealthJockey.com, India - Aug 4, 2008
Apparently HealthDay reporter, Karen Pallarito, affirms that a recent research reveals that symptoms of depression may trigger cardiovascular trouble. ...
Buying trouble: When shopping becomes a real compulsion
Chicago Tribune, United States -
Echoing the observations of many compulsive shoppers and those who treat them, JP says that what seems to trigger his impulse to spring for something is "a ...
Depression Meds May Trigger GI Tract Bleeding
Evening Bulletin, PA - Jul 11, 2008
Many different medications fall into the category of SSRIs, which are widely prescribed to treat conditions such as depression and attention deficit ...
Will Consumer Spending Drive the US Economy into Recession?
istockAnalyst.com, OR -
Nevertheless, because consumption is more than 70 per cent of GDP a decline in consumer spending would "trigger a full-blown recession". ...
Diabetes And Depression
Evening Bulletin, PA - Aug 1, 2008
On the flip side, depression may trigger behaviors that worsen or cause diabetes, such as smoking, overeating or not exercising. ...
Credit crunch one year on
Independent, UK -
In my opinion, in addition to the housing bubble that was the trigger that set off the financial crisis, there is a super bubble that has been going on for ...
New Trends In Celiac Disease
Boston Channel.com,  USA -
?I?d been diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome and kept looking for trigger foods, but nothing seemed to work,? says Stanhope. ...
Henry Paulson has lost control over US finance and economy
Online Journal, FL -
It was Pritzker together with Merrill Lynch 10 years ago who first developed the model for securitizing ?subprime? real estate, the trigger for the current ...
The Prosperity Myth
theTrumpet.com, OK -
Won?t that just push the stock market even lower and trigger more margin calls, leading to more selling again? Yes. And couldn?t that become a vicious cycle ...
Source: Google News

The Manitoba Project: a re-examination of the link between menopause and depression. -
PA Kaufert, P Gilbert, R Tate - Maturitas, 1992 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... hormonal changes, it seems to be her health coupled with the shifts and stresses
of family life in a woman's menopausal years which may trigger her depression. ...

Major depression following smoking cessation -
LS Covey, AH Glassman, F Stetner - Am J Psychiatry, 1997 - Mass Med Soc
... Women's Health>; Summary and Comment. Smoking Cessation May Trigger Depression.
Smoking accounts for much of women's morbidity and mortality in our society. ...

… receptor in rat and human hippocampus: implications for the neurobiology of depression.
JF Lopez, DT Chalmers, KY Little, SJ Watson - Biol Psychiatry, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Suicide victims with a history of depression showed changes that were very similar
to ... balance may be one of the mechanisms by which stress may trigger and/or ...

Cigarette Smoking, Major Depression, and Other Psychiatric Disorders among Adolescents. -
RA BROWN, PM LEWINSOHN, JR SEELEY, EF WAGNER - Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent …, 1996 - jaacap.com
... constellation of problems that include problem- atic use of substances, problems
in school, and conflict with parents may serve as a trigger for depression. ...

Depression and Anxiety in Early Pregnancy and Risk for Preeclampsia -
T KURKI, V HIILESMAA, R RAITASALO, H MATTILA, O … - acogjnl, 2000 - acogjnl.highwire.org
... hypertension. 33 It is also possible that depression may trigger such vascular
changes and eventually induce preeclampsia. However ...

… , life stress, and interpersonal approaches to a developmental psychopathology model of depression
C Hammen - Development and Psychopathology, 1992 - doi.apa.org
... Discusses a model of depression in which depression is hypothesized to result from
complex transactions among cognitive ... These may trigger depressive reactions. ...

… NR2A and NR2B-Containing NMDA Receptors in Cortical Long-Term Potentiation and Long-Term Depression -
PV Massey, BE Johnson, PR Moult, YP Auberson, MW … - Journal of Neuroscience, 2004 - neuroscience.org
... a dissociation between the two forms of synaptic depression, because LTD ... Thus, different
NMDAR subtypes may trigger the separate signaling cascades required ...

Depression and 18-Month Prognosis After Myocardial Infarction -
N Frasure-Smith, F Lesperance, M Talajic - Circulation, 1995 - Am Heart Assoc
... ischemia, and negative emotional arousal could easily trigger fatal ventricular ... reduced
heart rate variability, 28 suggesting that depression may be associated ...

Treatment of Depression Is Associated With Suppression of Nonspecific and Antigen-Specific TH1 … -
DC Mohr, DE Goodkin, J Islar, SL Hauser, CP Genain - Archives of Neurology, 2001 - Am Med Assoc
... response to MOG may trigger autoimmune demyelination in the central nervous system.
44, 45, 46 Thus, our observation that treatment of depression is associated ...

… anxiety disorder: Metacognitions and worry in GAD, panic disorder, social phobia, depression, and … -
A Wells, K Carter - Behavior Therapy, 2001 - Elsevier
... A group of individuals with major depression was also examined as a ... form of attempts
to suppress or remove from consciousness thoughts that may trigger worrying ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Mild sadness may trigger depression anew

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - For people who have recovered from a bout of clinical depression, mild emotional stress or sadness can reactivate depressive thinking and this may increase the risk of relapse, researchers report.

Remission from depression can be "a period of marked sensitivity to emotional stress as well as an increased risk of relapse," Dr. Zindel V. Segal, of the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and colleagues write in the Archives of General Psychiatry.The researchers examined if mood-linked changes in thinking predicted relapse in 301 adults recovering from a major depressive disorder.

In the first phase of the study, the patients were treated with antidepressant medication or cognitive behavior therapy. In phase 2, regular clinical assessments were conducted for 18 months in the 99 patients who achieved clinical remission.

 

During the second phase, the subjects underwent sad mood provocation. They were asked to recall a time in their lives when they felt sad, and at the same time the researchers had them listen to the orchestral introduction to "Russia Under the Mongolian Yoke" by Prokofiev, played at slow speed. Previous studies have found this to bring on an unhappy mood.

Compared with patients who underwent cognitive behavior therapy, those who received antidepressant medication showed a greater tendency to have depressive thoughts after mood provocation. The magnitude of the mood-linked response predicted relapse during the 18 months, regardless of the type of previous treatment.

These findings suggest that "even a mild negative mood, when experienced by someone with a history of depression, can re-instate some of the cognitive features observed in depression itself," Segal's team concludes.

SOURCE: Archives of General Psychiatry, July 2006.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 
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Kidneys seem unaffected by uranium-tainted water

Last Updated: 2006-07-11 11:33:14 -0400 (Reuters Health)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A study based in Finland that examined people living in an area where wells are contaminated with uranium found no direct toxic effects on the kidneys from this uranium exposure.

However, an increase in blood pressure may be an indirect effect, researchers at STUK-Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority in Helsinki report in the American Journal of Kidney Diseases.

Dr. Paivi Kurttio and colleagues measured uranium exposure in 95 men and 98 women who drank well water for an average of 16 years. Of these, 55 percent drank water from wells with uranium levels exceeding the World Health Organization maximum of 15 micrograms per liter

The researchers also found that 34 percent of the subjects ingested uranium levels that exceeded the minimal risk level of 2 micrograms per kilograms of body weight per day.

The team confirmed that uranium levels in hair and nails were good indicators of uranium exposure.

Even at relatively high exposures, there was no evidence of an adverse effect of uranium on the kidneys, according to ten measures of kidney toxicity.

The only effect seen among those exposed to high uranium levels was a statistically significant increase in glucose excretion in the urine, and an increase in the upper reading of blood pressure -- but this did not reach levels indicating clinical hypertension, the team reports.

SOURCE: American Journal of Kidney Diseases, June 2006.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 

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