Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relationship between borderline personality disorder and primary major depression was studied prospectively using Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Version (SADS-L) interviews and electroencephalographic (EEG) sleep studies. Ten consecutively admitted borderline patients (a prospective sample), defined by Gunderson's Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines (DIB), underwent EEG sleep studies on two consecutive nights and were compared to previously reported samples of nonborderline depressed patients (defined by Research Diagnostic Criteria; RDC), normal controls, and DIB-defined borderline patients who had been referred "to rule out major depression" (a retrospective sample). EEG sleep data were analyzed visually and by automated techniques. Rapid eye movement (REM) latency values were similar in depressed and both borderline groups but significantly different from controls. Eighty-five percent of REM latency values in RDC major depressives were less than or equal to 65 minutes, compared to similar rates of 75% in the prospective sample of borderline patients and 65% in the retrospective sample, versus 35% for controls (chi 2 = 10.7, p less than 0.005). The REM latency in borderline patients did not vary with the severity of depression as measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. In the prospective borderline sample, the major SADS-L diagnoses were chronic intermittent depression (five), current major depression (four) (two unipolar, two bipolar II), and labile personality (one). A convergence of nosologic and EEG sleep data is suggested, and supports the concept of a close relationship between criteria-defined borderline personality disorder and affective illness.
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PMID:Depression in borderline patients: a prospective EEG sleep study. 385 45

The current study was devised to assess the utility of Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) categories used to classify minor mood disorders. Similar categories are to be used in the APA's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 3rd edition. The patient sample consisted of 64 consecutive admissions to a double-blind trial of amitriptyline, perphenazine and the combination as treatment for depression. Patients who met RDC for a current episode of major depressive disorder were given 4 weeks of pharmacotherapy as treatment. Chronic mood disorders were also assessed using RDC criteria. This evaluation revealed that only 34% met criteria for an episode of major depressive disorder alone, while 36% met criteria for intermittent depressive disorder, 14% for cyclothymic personality and 16% for labile personality in addition to being in a current major depressive episode. These 4 diagnostic subgroups were compared on demographic characteristics, childhood history, psychiatric history, presenting patterns of symptoms and social functioning, and response to treatment. Differences were noted in the subgroups in presenting symptom levels and residual impairment. However, there was no differential response to a brief course of antidepressant pharmacotherapy in patients with and without chronic minor mood disorders. Most patients showed an improvement during the brief course of treatment. Thus, the presence of a chronic minor mood disorder does not appear to be contraindication for use of medication in patients who also are currently experiencing a major depressive episode.
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PMID:Chronic mood disorders in depressed outpatient--diagnosis and response to pharmacotherapy. 644 86