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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Prevalence of depression is high among poor, young, Hispanic inner city women. Depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) is a popular contraceptive choice in this group. DMPA labelling suggests that depression may worsen with use. In order to identify any association of DMPA use with worsening depression, we surveyed an English-speaking subset of DMPA users in a Title-X funded family planning clinic. Eighty women completed the CES-D scale on two occasions: once about four weeks after a DMPA injection when the subject would have been exposed to the highest blood levels, and once immediately prior to an injection when recent blood levels of the drug would be somewhat lower (or absent preceding the first injection). The median CES-D score was 14. The scores were not related to timing of the test (pre- or post-injection). The depression scores were somewhat higher among those women receiving their first DMPA injection during the study period (i.e., unexposed women) and among those women who had received four or more injections. Scores were unrelated to age or parity, but were somewhat higher in women who reported fewer years of education or a recent adverse pregnancy outcome. These data provide little evidence of increasing depression with long-term use of DMPA and no evidence of a short-term effect of dose (within the contraceptive range) on mood. Women at risk of depression should not be denied DMPA as a contraceptive choice.
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PMID:Depression in users of depo-medroxyprogesterone acetate. 755 75

The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of increased thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels (subclinical or undiagnosed hypothyroidism) in a representative sample of a community-living elderly population and to examine the relationships with cognitive functions and depressive symptoms. An epidemiological study was made of a cohort of 2792 subjects over 65 years of age. A blood sample was obtained from 425 volunteers of this cohort and assayed for TSH. Every subject participating in the study was interviewed and given a battery of neuropsychological tests by a psychologist. Three hundred and eighty-one subjects (89.7%) had normal TSH levels; 18 subjects (4.2%) had TSH lower than 0.4 microU/ml, associated in two of them with hyperthyroxinaemia. Twenty-six subjects (6.1%) had increased TSH levels, associated in 18 of them with a normal free thyroxine level and in eight with a low free thyroxine level. Increased TSH levels were significantly linked with female sex and with the presence of symptoms of depression on the CES-D scale but not with impairment of cognitive function.
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PMID:The PAQUID survey and correlates of subclinical hypothyroidism in elderly community residents in the southwest of France. 764 45

Depression in the elderly is frequent but often unknown (in 30 to 50% of the cases) because of difficulties in detecting or diagnosing it. This is due to the clinical features and prognosis of depression in this kind of population but also to the non-existence of specific diagnostic tests. Most of the authors consider that the most useful diagnostic tests are screening assessments. Some are rating scales that have been validated in general population then secondarily in the elderly: Hamilton Rating Depression Scale (HDRS), Montgomery & Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), Zung Self Rating Depression Scale (Zung SDS), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) or Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). They usually involve biases linked to age and more particularly to somatic items; and the educational level required to answer is too high for this population. However, the MADRS is still interesting for measuring change under treatment and the CES-D for detection of depressive elderly. On the other hand, some screening scales are specific of depression in the elderly. The most commonly used is the GDS (Geriatric Depression Scale) with 30 items. Some points have been discussed to increase the achievement of these methods. For example, inventories are better than interviews and should be integrated into semi-standardized interviews which do not last more than 30 minutes. The quotation 'yes' or 'no' is preferable. The instrument have to be short but have to contain specific items for depression in the elderly. Several short forms are already validated or in progress such as GDS with 15 items and, recently, with 4 items, BASDEC, short Zung IDS, BDI with 13 items and DGDS. However, these screening scales loose a part of their validity in the moderate or severe demented elderly. Few instruments can screen depression in a demented population although depression and dementia syndromes are frequently associated. Some of the inventories used are not specific: they evaluate the general psychopathology in the elderly and contains subscales which screen depression or organic brain disease. Thus, GMS-AGECAT Package, CAMDEX, CARPER, BAS are often used by the Anglo-Saxons. At present, only one specific instrument has been validated: the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia. Recently, new screening instruments have been put forward: Dementia Mood Assessment Scale and Canberra Interview for the elderly which seem interesting but need further studies.
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PMID:[Psychometric evaluation of depression in the elderly subject: which instruments? What are the future perspectives?]. 772 Jun 19

The present longitudinal study was designed to determine the prevalence of depression in male and female patients undergoing cardiac surgery, and to examine what factors are associated with depression before and after surgery. One day prior to surgery (T1), and one day prior to discharge from the hospital (T2), 141 patients completed a psychometric test battery including the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), and the Perceived Social Support Scale (PSSS). Data were also collected on 13 physiological measures. Forty-seven per cent of patients were depressed (defined as a score of 16 or above on the CES-D) at T1. Scores on the CES-D significantly increased from T1 (M = 15) to T2 (M = 20), with 61 per cent of patients classified as depressed at T2. Factors associated with depression at T1 were female gender, higher state anxiety, and less social support. Depressed patients at T2 were characterized by higher scores on the STAI at T2 and higher scores on the CES-D at T1. The prevalence of depression in cardiac surgery patients, particularly women, may be underrecognized and warrants increased attention.
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PMID:Depression in male and female patients undergoing cardiac surgery. 775 34

This study examined the temporal stability of the measurement structure of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D; Radloff, 1977) in 813 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis. Participants completed the CES-D (Radloff, 1977) on three occasions 1 year apart. Structural equation models and polyserial correlations were used to address methodological limitations of previous studies. Four competing measurement structures were tested with one factor, three factors, four factors, and a single second-order factor underlying the four-factor model. The four-factor and the second-order-factor models provided the best fit at Time 1. When cross-validated at Times 2 and 3, the four-factor and the second-order-factor models remained invariant. Researchers can now more confidently use the CES-D to examine how distress changes in chronic physical disorders.
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PMID:The measurement structure of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. 776 Feb 58

This prospective, randomized study investigates the effect of two immunosuppressive treatment regimens on quality of life after renal transplantation. At 3 months after transplantation, patients treated with cyclosporine (CsA) and prednisone (Pred) were allocated to either withdrawal of Pred (n = 60) or to conversion of CsA to azathioprine (Aza) (Aza-Pred, n = 60). Quality of life was evaluated just before randomization, and at 6 and 12 months after transplantation using the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP), the Affect Balance Scale (ABS), the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), measures of satisfaction with several domains of life experience, and a population-specific physical symptoms questionnaire. In both groups, the overall SIP score as well as the scores on its physical and psychosocial dimensions improved continuously after transplantation, reaching levels that are comparable to those found in the general population. The occurrence of acute or chronic rejection had a significantly negative effect on SIP and CES-D scores. Intention-to-treat analysis showed no differences between groups for scores on SIP, ABS, CES-D, and satisfaction measures. Exclusion of 41 patients who did not strictly adhere to their originally designated therapy showed a tendency for better psychosocial SIP scores in CsA patients (P = 0.05), which mainly resulted from a difference on the category of social interaction (P = 0.01). This difference occurred despite a similar rejection rate and worse renal function in CsA-treated patients. Shortly after steroid withdrawal, a high proportion of CsA patients complained of stiff or painful muscles (CsA: 74%, Aza-Pred: 36%; P = 0.002). Our data indicate that if successfully completed, CsA monotherapy from 3 months after transplantation may lead to a higher degree of psychosocial well-being as compared with conversion from CsA-Pred to Aza-Pred. It seems likely that this advantage is related to the withdrawal of Pred.
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PMID:The effect of immunosuppressive drugs on quality of life after renal transplantation. 776 59

The measurement properties of the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) were examined in an Australian community study of aged persons in order to contribute to international validation of the measure. Confirmatory analysis of polychoric correlations was conducted using the generally weighted least squares method. The original four-factor solution proposed by Radloff was successfully replicated for Australians, showing similar underlying structures as for Americans, Canadians, and Japanese. Schmid-Leiman parameterization of the second order factor analysis showed that little information was lost in considering full-scale scores rather than the four subscales separately. The behavior of the CES-D in an Australian population aligns with existing North American research and thus confirms the exceptional functioning of the Well-Being scale in Japan. More work on the behavior of the CES-D in non-English speaking societies is needed to separate issues of wording and grammar from genuine cultural variations. The CES-D was confirmed as essentially unidimensional and robust to minor changes; therefore, it is recommended for use in cross-cultural studies of depression in elderly persons.
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PMID:Measurement properties of the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale: an Australian community study of aged persons. 776 2

Relationships between cognitive performance and self-ratings of depression on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (CES-D; L.S. Radloff, 1977) were examined for 1,217 older men. After controlling for demographic variables and both objective and subjective measures of health, significant associations were observed between several CES-D variables and measures of cognitive mental status, memory, and psychomotor speed. The Well-Being factor of the CES-D was the most robust predictor of cognitive scores. Therefore, for older adults with generally favorable health and socioeconomic resources, there may be a link between positive affect and maintenance of cognitive effectiveness.
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PMID:Cognition and depression in a cohort of aging men: results from the Western Collaborative Group Study. 777 14

Response patterns on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) items among Japanese adolescents were compared with those of their U.S. counterparts. The data were obtained from approximately 1,500 junior high school students, aged 12-15 years. Japanese responses to positively worded items markedly differed from those of American adolescents, whereas responses to negatively worded items were comparable in the two groups. This resulted in poor psychometric properties for the CES-D and spurious higher positive subscale and whole scale scores among the Japanese sample. It is possible that Japanese respondents tend to suppress positive affect expression and, thus, the positively worded questioning is presumably inappropriate for Japanese samples.
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PMID:Responses to a self-administered depression scale among younger adolescents in Japan. 787 Aug 48

Physical health and depression are closely related in the elderly. This has been found in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies. In this study the relation between four aspects of physical health and depressive symptom levels were studied in a community-based sample of older inhabitants of a small town in the Netherlands (n = 224). Results indicated that depression as measured with the CES-D is sufficiently different from physical health to be distinguished from it, and that it is sufficiently related to physical health to be relevant for further study. The more subjective measures of physical health used in this study (pain and subjective health) appeared to have a much stronger relation with depression than the more objective health measures (chronic diseases and functional limitations). Physical health and aspects of the social environment such as marital status appeared to have independent effects on mood. In this study these effects were moderated by age and sex. In women and the young-old (55-64) none of the associations between physical health and depression were significant. In men and the old-old (75+) all associations were highly significant.
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PMID:The association of physical health and depressive symptoms in the older population: age and sex differences. 789 16


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