J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol
March 1991
Several experiments were conducted to validate the use of a two-channel microprocessor-based electroencephalographic (EEG) device for detecting changes in EEG background rhythm in the clinic or at the bedside. The reliability of background measures in healthy individuals was evaluated by obtaining EEG data on 20 control subjects on two occasions separated by at least 1 day. The sensitivity to an experimental toxic encephalopathy was evaluated using measures of EEG and the Buschke Memory Selective Reminding Test after the administration of scopolamine hydrobromide, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychopharmacology
September 1989
The frail elderly, for whom chronic disease and disability are essentially universal, are at high risk for depression and are specifically vulnerable to the adverse effects of antidepressant medication. There have, however, been few investigations of either the pharmacokinetics or the clinical investigations of either the pharmacokinetics or the clinical response to antidepressants in such patients. We report on the pharmacokinetics of nortriptyline at steady state in a group of 22 patients, average age 84, living within an institutional setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe prevalence of depression among nursing home residents was estimated by screening a group of residents selected from a random sample on the basis of cognitive status; it ranged from 18-20% for major depression to 27-44% for other dysphoric states. Though individual patients were observed to change over a 6-month period, depression as assessed with the Geriatric Depression Scale was, in general, persistent. Major depression was clinically confirmed in 8 of 10 patients identified at screening.
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