To assess the function of the autonomic nervous system in major depression, a series of cardiovascular tests, together with the recording of sympathetic skin response, were performed in 18 depressed patients (melancholic type, DSM-III-R criteria) and in 18 healthy control subjects. Depressed patients showed significantly poorer performance in Valsalva's, deep breathing, and lying to standing manoeuvres than controls, indicating an impairment of parasympathetic function. Depressed patients developed a significantly larger sympathetic skin response than controls during the lying to standing and hand grip manoeuvres, whereas cardiovascular sympathetic performance (as assessed by the responses to hand grip, cold, mental arithmetic, explosive sound, or hyperventilation) was similar in both groups. The results are compatible with the view that a diminished parasympathetic reactivity, and presumably an increased sympathetic reactivity, occur in patients with major depression. (7 Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1995;58:299-302)
SIs on the LASSI-L related to PSI and frPSI uniquely differentiated Amy+ and Amy- participants with aMCI and likely reflect deficits with inhibition and source memory in preclinical AD not captured by traditional cognitive measures. This may represent a specific, noninvasive test successful at distinguishing cases with true AD from those with SNAP.
Patients with anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa often have signs of autonomic dysfunction potentially deleterious to the heart. The aim of this study was to ascertain the nonlinear properties of heart rate variability in patients with eating disorders. A group of 33 women with eating disorders (14 anorexia, 19 bulimia) and 19 healthy controls were included in the study. Conventional time- and frequency-domain heart rate variability measurements, along with nonlinear heart rate variability measurements including the short-term fractal scaling exponent alpha and approximate entropy (ApEn) were calculated. Anorexia nervosa patients exhibited decreased values of alpha, while bulimia nervosa patients had decreased values of ApEn. Low-frequency heart rate variability was decreased in patients with anorexia. In conclusion, these results are compatible with the view that a more severe alteration of cardiac autonomic function is present in anorexia than in bulimia.
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