Author:
Cazzullo C. L.,Sacchetti E.,Smeraldi E.
Abstract
SynopsisN1-Methylnicotinamide urinary output is examined in 38 healthy volunteers, 52 patients with secondary affective disorders (SAD), 55 patients with primary affective disorders (PAD) and 46 healthy first-degree relatives of PAD patients. The results indicate (1) that in PAD patients and their first-degree relatives the frequency of low Nl-MN excretion was significantly higher (p < 0001) than in healthy controls and in patients with secondary affective disorders, and (2) that PAD patients have a consistently low N1-MN output, at all times constant and independent of the clinical phases of the disease. These findings provide evidence that the low N1-MN levels may represent an index of a biological background linked to a high morbidity risk for primary affective disorders. The theoretical implications deriving from these data are briefly discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Reference10 articles.
1. Tryptophan Metabolism in Affective Psychoses
2. The fluorescent condensation product of N1-methylnicotinamide and acetone. II. A sensitive method for the determination of N1-methylnicotinamide in urine;Huff;Journal of Biochemical Chemistry,1947
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