All Relations between Mood Disorders and affective value

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
P Hinkl. Bipolar illness in primary care: an overview. Lippincott's primary care practice. vol 4. issue 2. 2001-05-24. PMID:11143627. the patient presenting in primary care with an affective disturbance must be evaluated for a major mood disorder, which includes unipolar and bipolar illness. 2001-05-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
S L Minde. Mood disorders in multiple sclerosis: diagnosis and treatment. Journal of neurovirology. vol 6 Suppl 2. 2000-07-27. PMID:10871806. this paper outlines the symptoms and diagnostic criteria for mood disorders and affective disturbances, reviews current treatment options, summarizes data from epidemiologic and pathophysiological studies, and suggests areas for future research. 2000-07-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
A S Rob. Bipolar disorder in children and adolescents. Current opinion in pediatrics. vol 11. issue 4. 1999-09-10. PMID:10439204. bipolar disorder is an affective or mood disorder that affects children and adolescents as well as adults. 1999-09-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Toomey, S V Faraone, J C Simpson, M T Tsuan. Negative, positive, and disorganized symptom dimensions in schizophrenia, major depression, and bipolar disorder. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 186. issue 8. 1998-08-27. PMID:9717864. similar symptom factors in schizophrenia and mood disorders suggest a continuity in the major affective and psychotic disorders that appears to reflect the underlying dimension of a psychotic process. 1998-08-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
J F López, D T Chalmers, K Y Little, S J Watso. A.E. Bennett Research Award. Regulation of serotonin1A, glucocorticoid, and mineralocorticoid receptor in rat and human hippocampus: implications for the neurobiology of depression. Biological psychiatry. vol 43. issue 8. 1998-06-17. PMID:9564441. studying the effect of stress on these two neurobiological systems may give us important clues into the pathophysiology of affective illness and help us understand how stress and mood disorders are related. 1998-06-17 2023-08-12 human
G Perugi, H S Akiskal, L Lattanzi, D Cecconi, C Mastrocinque, A Patronelli, S Vignoli, E Bem. The high prevalence of "soft" bipolar (II) features in atypical depression. Comprehensive psychiatry. vol 39. issue 2. 1998-05-11. PMID:9515190. these data suggest that the "atypicality" of depression is favored by affective temperamental dysregulation and anxiety comorbidity, clinically manifesting in a mood disorder subtype that is preponderantly in the realm of bipolar ii. 1998-05-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
H S Akiskal, L L Judd, J C Gillin, H Lemm. Subthreshold depressions: clinical and polysomnographic validation of dysthymic, residual and masked forms. Journal of affective disorders. vol 45. issue 1-2. 1997-10-30. PMID:9268775. many characterological depressives (outpatients with early insidious onset and fluctuating chronicity of subthreshold manifestations falling short of full syndromal depression), were shown to have shortened rem latency, increased rem%, redistribution of rem to the first part of the night, classic diurnality, high rates of family history for mood disorders, positive response to antidepressants and sleep deprivation, and prospective follow-up course leading to major affective episodes. 1997-10-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
M A Schuckit, J E Tipp, M Bergman, W Reich, V M Hesselbrock, T L Smit. Comparison of induced and independent major depressive disorders in 2,945 alcoholics. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 154. issue 7. 1997-07-18. PMID:9210745. this study tested three hypotheses regarding the rates and clinical characteristics of two potential subtypes of these affective states: those that appear to be substance-induced mood disorders and those that are independent major depressive episodes. 1997-07-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
S L McElroy, H G Pope, P E Keck, J I Hudson, K A Phillips, S M Strakowsk. Are impulse-control disorders related to bipolar disorder? Comprehensive psychiatry. vol 37. issue 4. 1996-12-13. PMID:8826686. although no studies directly compare a cohort of icd patients with a cohort of mood disorder patients, available data suggest that icds and bipolar disorder share a number of features: (1) phenomenologic similarities, including harmful, dangerous, or pleasurable behaviors, impulsivity, and similar affective symptoms and dysregulation; (2) onset in adolescence or early adulthood and episodic and/or chronic course; (3) high comorbidity with one another and similar comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders; (4) elevated familial rates of mood disorder; (5) possible abnormalities in central serotonergic and noradrenergic neurotransmission; and (6) response to mood stabilizers and antidepressants. 1996-12-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
J F Goldberg, M Harrow, L S Grossma. Recurrent affective syndromes in bipolar and unipolar mood disorders at follow-up. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. vol 166. issue 3. 1995-07-24. PMID:7788132. recurrent affective syndromes in bipolar and unipolar mood disorders at follow-up. 1995-07-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
S L McElroy, K A Phillips, P E Kec. Obsessive compulsive spectrum disorder. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. vol 55 Suppl. 1994-12-23. PMID:7961531. finally, because most of these conditions appear to be related to mood disorder, we hypothesize that the ocd spectrum disorder family may belong to the larger family of affective spectrum disorder. 1994-12-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
G B Cassano, H S Akiskal, G Perugi, L Musetti, M Savin. The importance of measures of affective temperaments in genetic studies of mood disorders. Journal of psychiatric research. vol 26. issue 4. 1993-02-26. PMID:1491352. the importance of measures of affective temperaments in genetic studies of mood disorders. 1993-02-26 2023-08-11 Not clear
G B Cassano, H S Akiskal, G Perugi, L Musetti, M Savin. The importance of measures of affective temperaments in genetic studies of mood disorders. Journal of psychiatric research. vol 26. issue 4. 1993-02-26. PMID:1491352. building on akiskal's latest model on the multifactorial origin of mood disorders, we submit that these temperamental dysregulations constitute the intermediate step between predisposing familial-genetic factors in affective illness and gender-related clinical expressions of mood disorders. 1993-02-26 2023-08-11 Not clear
R C Youn. Geriatric mania. Clinics in geriatric medicine. vol 8. issue 2. 1992-07-16. PMID:1600488. strategies that can be pursued include: longitudinal studies to evaluate differences in affective, cognitive, and other outcomes in geriatric patients with late-onset compared with early-onset illness; studies of psychopathology, family history, and illness course in organic mood disorder, manic; retrospective categorization when cognitive impairment accompanies acute episodes; studies of mania occurring in the context of dementing illness; application of neuroimaging and other laboratory measures to geriatric manic states; contrast of clinical and laboratory findings in early-onset geriatric patients and young adult patients to assess effect of age; definition of lithium concentration-effect relationships in regard to efficacy and toxicity in patients with and without cognitive impairment/dementia. 1992-07-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Ramcharan, E J Love, G H Fick, A Goldfie. The epidemiology of premenstrual symptoms in a population-based sample of 2650 urban women: attributable risk and risk factors. Journal of clinical epidemiology. vol 45. issue 4. 1992-05-28. PMID:1569434. however, observed risk factor interactions led to the conclusion that premenstrual distress is a discrete mood disorder, affecting women aged 25-35 years, with probable ovulatory cycles, and vulnerable to stress; and that the risk of affective symptoms attributable to the premenstrual state was one percent. 1992-05-28 2023-08-11 Not clear
M Gasperini, M Battaglia, P Scherillo, G Sciuto, G Diaferia, L Bellod. Morbidity risk for mood disorders in the families of borderline patients. Journal of affective disorders. vol 21. issue 4. 1991-08-14. PMID:1829748. the mr in the families of borderline subjects who had never developed an affective episode was not significantly different from that found in the families of borderline pd with a history of mood disorders. 1991-08-14 2023-08-11 human
K L Benson, R King, D Gordon, J A Silva, V P Zarcon. Sleep patterns in borderline personality disorder. Journal of affective disorders. vol 18. issue 4. 1990-06-27. PMID:2140379. if one assumes that rem latency is a biological marker for mood disorder, then our results do not support the hypothesis that borderline personality disorder is a variant of affective illness. 1990-06-27 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Kasper, T A Wehr, J J Bartko, P A Gaist, N E Rosentha. Epidemiological findings of seasonal changes in mood and behavior. A telephone survey of Montgomery County, Maryland. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 46. issue 9. 1989-09-27. PMID:2789026. the influence of environmental factors on mood disorders and mood changes in the general population might provide valuable insight into pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention of affective illness. 1989-09-27 2023-08-11 human
R M Parikh, J R Lipsey, R G Robinson, T R Pric. A two year longitudinal study of poststroke mood disorders: prognostic factors related to one and two year outcome. International journal of psychiatry in medicine. vol 18. issue 1. 1988-09-02. PMID:3397225. in a prospective study of mood disorders in 103 stroke patients, we examined the predictive value of affective, cognitive, social and neurologic variables obtained in-hospital and at six months poststroke in terms of outcome as determined by the same measures at one and two years follow-up. 1988-09-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
E Gabrie. Dysphoric mood in paranoid psychoses. Psychopathology. vol 20. issue 2. 1988-02-05. PMID:3321119. in this paper two points are examined: (1) the interrelation between dysphoric and depressive and/or manic affective disorders in paranoid psychoses, cross-sectionally and longitudinally, in order to test the hypothesis of their independence, and (2) the relation of dysphoric mood disorders in paranoid psychoses to their course, again in comparison with other types of affective symptoms. 1988-02-05 2023-08-11 Not clear