A study is reported of mean arterial blood pressure and heart rate in four patients suffering from Shy-Drager syndrome. Blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) was recorded by transcranial Doppler sonography. Concomitant changes in cerebral blood flow and the effect of cerebral autoregulation were thus examined. During tilt (60 degrees, head up) mean arterial blood pressure decreased by 40 mm Hg or 35%, while MCA blood flow velocity dropped by 14 cm/s or 28% (mean values). The lower percentage reduction in flow velocity may indicate a preserved cerebral autoregulation in central autonomic insufficiency.
Between September 1st, 1994, and the end of August, 1995, 3% of all inpatients (21 of 731) were treated with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) at the Department of General Psychiatry at the University Hospital for Psychiatry in Vienna. These patients suffered from psychotic and/or therapy-resistant depression (n = 15), therapy-resistant schizoaffective psychosis (n = 3), and catatonic schizophrenia (n = 3). ECT was administered in short-time anaesthetised and muscle relaxed patients. On average, each patient was treated with ECT on 9 non-consecutive days. As a rule, electrodes were placed unilaterally over the non-dominant hemisphere at the beginning. In four cases electrodes were placed bifronto-temporally. To be considered as effective the seizure had to last for at least 25 s. In shorter seizure duration ECT was repeated up to a maximum of three times in one session. With this procedure a reduction in clinical global impressions of -3.7 points was achieved in ECT-treated patients, who had been considered to be "severely" to "most severely" ill according to CGI before starting ECT. ECT proved to be effective for treating severe depression and catatonic schizophrenia, with only minor and reversible side effects. For establishing a favorable relation between good clinical outcome and remarkable few side effects, the following factors seem to be of importance, in accordance with the literature: (1) application of biphasic short-impulse stimuli in anaesthetised and muscle relaxed patients; (2) measurement of static impedance to avoid high skin impedance and short circuits. (3) at the beginning of each ECT series unilateral electrode placement over the non-dominant hemisphere; (4) ECT three times weekly on non-consecutive days.
Elderly depressive patients complaining about cognitive symptoms are at particular risk of being labelled as demented. It is well documented that depressive disorders frequently cause mild cognitive deficits which manifest in psychometric procedures. A wide spectrum of potentially reversible cognitive deficits related to a depressive syndrome are summarized under the term of "Depressive Pseudodementia (DPD)". Most depressive patients who are referred to "DPD" suffer from cognitive dysfunctions outside the range of dementia. The clinical interface between depression and dementia is complex. There is some evidence that depression may be a risk factor for the expression of Alzheimer's disease in later life and that depression may occur as a prodrome for Alzheimer dementia. Moreover, depression often complicates the course of dementing disorders. However, there is no evidence that depressive disorders cause dementia without coexisting depressive symptoms. It is essential to search for depressive symptoms even after cognitive symptoms have been found.
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