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Decreased Urinary Output of Tyramine and its Metabolites in Depression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Susan Bonham Carter
Affiliation:
Bernhard Baron Memorial Research Laboratories and Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Queen Charlotte's Maternity Hospital, London W6 0XG
M. Sandler
Affiliation:
Bernhard Baron Memorial Research Laboratories and Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Queen Charlotte's Maternity Hospital, London W6 0XG
B. L. Goodwin
Affiliation:
Bernhard Baron Memorial Research Laboratories and Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Queen Charlotte's Maternity Hospital, London W6 0XG
P. Sepping
Affiliation:
The Geoffrey Knight Psychosurgical Unit, Brook General Hospital, London SE18 4LW
P. K. Bridges
Affiliation:
The Geoffrey Knight Psychosurgical Unit, Brook General Hospital, London SE18 4LW

Summary

Despite dramatic clinical improvement in about one-third of a group of severely depressed, medication-resistant patients one year after modified leucotomy, their relative decrease in conjugated and free tyramine output after an oral tyramine load remained unchanged and abnormal. Whilst a direct deficit in intestinal tyramine-conjugating ability still needs to be finally ruled out, this appears most compatible with a deficit due to bodily metabolic failure, perhaps a deficit in membrane transport which could be an essential aspect of the depressive illness syndrome. Attention is drawn to a similar defect in migraine. The two illnesses may represent a common predisposition which an appropriate triggering mechanism may transform to the florid disease. Biochemical detection of such vulnerability may have important diagnostic and predictive significance.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1978 

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