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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the acute response and outcome in 1-year follow-up of 51 elderly depressive inpatients with major depressive disorder treated with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) (n = 30) and/or antidepressant therapy (n = 21). The patients were assessed at admission, at discharge, and after 1 year according to the Montgomery and Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale, the Beck
Depression
Inventory, and the Clinical Global Impression Scale. The acute response was good. Montgomery and Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale total scores diminished significantly during index hospitalization within both groups (from 31.6 +/- 8.5, to 8.1 +/- 6.0 in the ECT group and from 28.5 +/- 5.4 to 13.4 +/- 10.6 in the antidepressant group). The 1-year rehospitalization rate for the entire group, however, was 21 of 51 patients (41%), 13 of 30 patients (43%) in the ECT group, and 8 of 21 (38%) in the antidepressant group. Six of 13 patients in the ECT group and 1 of 8 patients in the antidepressant group were rehospitalized during the first month after discharge. The results suggest a good acute therapeutic response to both ECT and antidepressive therapy in elderly patients with
MDD
. The major finding in this study was the relatively high rehospitalization rate, which emphasizes the need for careful follow-up of the elderly patients who have recovered from a depressive episode.
...
PMID:One-year outcome of elderly inpatients with major depressive disorder treated with ECT and antidepressants. 1534 3
Depressive patients with psychotic features demonstrate distinct biological abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA), dopaminergic activity, electroencephalogram sleep profiles and measures of serotonergic function when compared to nonpsychotic depressive patients. However, very few functional neuroimaging studies were specifically designed for studying the effects of psychotic features on neuroimaging findings in depressed patients. The objective of the present study was to compare brain Single Photon Emission Tomography (SPECT) images in a group of unmedicated depressive patients with and without psychotic features. Twenty-eight patients who fully met DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder (
MDD
, 12 had psychotic features) were included in the study. They were compared with 16 control subjects matched for age, gender and education. Both psychotic and nonpsychotic depressed patients showed significantly lower regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) values in the left and right superior frontal cortex, and left anterior cingulate cortex compared to those of controls. In comparison with depressive patients without psychotic features (DwoPF), depressive patients with psychotic features (DwPF) showed significantly lower rCBF perfusion ratios in left parietal cortex, left cerebellum but had higher rCBF perfusion ratio in the left inferior frontal cortex and caudate nucleus. The present study showed that DwPF have a different rCBF pattern compared to patients without psychotic features. Abnormalities involving inferior frontal cortex, striatum and cerebellum may play an important role in the generation of psychotic symptoms in
depression
.
...
PMID:The regional cerebral blood flow changes in major depressive disorder with and without psychotic features. 1538 Aug 62
This is the first study to examine the prevalence and effects of major depression (
MDD
) in a sample of adolescent smokers (N = 211) undergoing treatment for nicotine dependence. We assessed
MDD
at baseline and end of treatment with the mood disorders portion of the Structured Clinical Interview for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV). Eleven percent of participants reported a history of
MDD
(6% of males and 21% of females). Study variables did not distinguish those with and without a history of
MDD
. End of treatment abstinence rates and relapse rates were similar in both groups. Two participants (1%), both female, experienced onset of
MDD
during the treatment. The findings provide further evidence that
MDD
is a comparatively common disorder among children and adolescents and that clinicians should monitor and be prepared to respond to
depression
that may emerge during the treatment of nicotine-dependent adolescents.
...
PMID:Major depression among adolescent smokers undergoing treatment for nicotine dependence. 1545 Nov 21
During the past decade the Montgomery-Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale (MADRS) has been used with increasing frequency to measure outcome in antidepressant efficacy trials (AETs). In characterizing treatment outcome in AETs it is common to define treatment remission as a score below a predetermined cutoff score on the scale. Various cutoffs have been used to define remission on the MADRS. The goal of the present paper is to determine the cutoff on the MADRS that most closely corresponds to the cutoff most frequently used on the Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
to define remission. Three hundred and three psychiatric outpatients who were being treated for a DSM-IV major depressive episode were rated on the HRSD and the MADRS. A linear regression equation was computed to estimate MADRS scores from HRSD scores. After deriving the regression equation, we computed the MADRS score corresponding to an HRSD score of 7. We also examined the sensitivity, specificity and overall classification rate of the MADRS for identifying remission on the HRSD. Based on the equation from a linear regression analysis for the entire sample, a MADRS score of </=11 would correspond to a score of </=7 on the HRSD. We repeated the analysis after excluding the more severely depressed patients who currently met criteria for
MDD
, and based on the equation from this regression analysis a MADRS score of </=10 would correspond to a score of </=7 on the HRSD. In a complementary analysis, we examined the sensitivity, specificity and overall classification rate of the MADRS at different cutoff points for identifying remission, and found that a cutoff of </=10 maximized the level of agreement with the HRSD definition of remission. In conclusion, the regression equation relating HRSD and MADRS scores is dependent, in part, on the range and severity of scores in the sample. To facilitate comparisons of studies using the HRSD and MADRS our results suggest that a cutoff of 10 on the MADRS is equivalent to the HRSD cutoff of 7.
...
PMID:Derivation of a definition of remission on the Montgomery-Asberg depression rating scale corresponding to the definition of remission on the Hamilton rating scale for depression. 1545 53
This study evaluated and compared the performance of three self-report measures: (1) 30-item Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self-Report (IDS-SR30); (2) 16-item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self-Report (QIDS-SR16); and (3) Patient Global Impression-Improvement (PGI-I) in assessing clinical outcomes in depressed patients during a 12-week, acute phase, randomized, controlled trial comparing nefazodone, cognitive-behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy (CBASP), and the combination in the treatment of chronic
depression
. The IDS-SR30, QIDS-SR16, PGI-I, and the 24-item Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale (HDRS24) ratings were collected at baseline and at weeks 1-4, 6, 8, 10, and 12. Response was defined a priori as a > or =50% reduction in baseline total score for the IDS-SR30 or for the QIDS-SR16 or as a PGI-I score of 1 or 2 at exit. Overall response rates (LOCF) to nefazodone were 41% (IDS-SR30), 45% (QIDS-SR16), 53% (PCI-I), and 47% (HDRS17). For CBASP, response rates were 41% (IDS-SR30), 45% (QIDS-SR16), 48% (PGI-I), and 46% (HDRS17). For the combination, response rates were 68% (IDS-SR30 and QIDS-SR16), 73% (PGI-I), and 76% (HDRS17). Similarly, remission rates were comparable for nefazodone (IDS-SR30=32%, QIDS-SR16=28%, PGI-I=22%, HDRS17=30%), for CBASP (IDS-SR30=32%, QIDS-SR16=30%, PGI-I=21%, HDRS17=32%), and for the combination (IDS-SR30=52%, QIDS-SR16=50%, PGI-I=25%, HDRS17=49%). Both the IDS-SR30 and QIDS-SR16 closely mirrored and confirmed findings based on the HDRS24. These findings raise the possibility that these two self-reports could provide cost- and time-efficient substitutes for clinician ratings in treatment trials of outpatients with nonpsychotic
MDD
without cognitive impairment. Global patient ratings such as the PGI-I, as opposed to specific item-based ratings, provide less valid findings.
...
PMID:Self-reported depressive symptom measures: sensitivity to detecting change in a randomized, controlled trial of chronically depressed, nonpsychotic outpatients. 1557 8
Data collected from 26 therapists who were treating patients when they died by suicide were used to identify intense affective states in such patients preceding the suicide. Eleven therapists provided comparable data on 26 patients they had treated who were seriously depressed but not suicidal. Although the two groups had similar numbers diagnosed with
MDD
, the suicide patients showed a significantly higher total number of intense affects in addition to
depression
. The acute affective state most associated with a suicide crisis was desperation. Hopelessness, rage, abandonment, self-hatred, and anxiety were also significantly more frequently evidenced in the suicide patients.
...
PMID:Desperation and other affective states in suicidal patients. 1558 60
The goal of this study was to examine some of the mechanisms underlying emotion regulation in childhood affective disorders by examining the impact of distracting emotional information during performance on a working memory task ("Emotional n-back" or E-n-back). The sample included 75 children (38 girls and 37 boys) between 8 and 16 years of age meeting criteria for: Anxiety disorder (ANX, n = 17), Major depressive disorder (
MDD
, n = 16), Comorbid anxiety and
depression
(CAD, n = 24), or Low-risk normal control (LRNC, n = 18). Results showed that the
MDD
and CAD groups had significantly longer reaction times on negative emotional backgrounds compared to neutral backgrounds, whereas the LRNC group had significantly longer reaction times on positive backgrounds. These results suggest altered processing of emotional information particularly associated with
depression
. Because the E-n-back task engages higher-order cognitive processes, these results suggest that these alterations in processing emotional information also interfere with the cognitive processes that govern how attentional resources are allocated. Further, research is needed to replicate this study and delineate underlying neural mechanisms.
...
PMID:Altered emotional processing in pediatric anxiety, depression, and comorbid anxiety-depression. 1583 95
This study tests the hypothesis that maternal
depression
(major depressive disorder;
MDD
) decreases rates of the intergenerational transmission of religiosity from mother to offspring and attenuates the beneficial qualities of religiosity in offspring.
Depression
was assessed using semistructured clinical interviews; religiosity was assessed based upon the personal importance of religion, frequency of attendance at religious services, and religious denomination. Results suggest that (1) maternal
depression
attenuates the intergenerational transmission of religion; (2) in the presence of maternal
depression
, offspring were more likely to have
MDD
at 10-year follow-up when mother-offspring were concordant on religious importance; and (3) in the absence of maternal
depression
, offspring were less likely to have
MDD
at 10-year follow-up when mother-offspring were concordant on attendance. Thus, in the presence of maternal
depression
, transmission of religious attendance is no longer associated with decreased likelihood of offspring
MDD
, whereas transmission of religious importance is associated with increased likelihood of offspring
depression
.
...
PMID:Maternal depression and the intergenerational transmission of religion. 1587 Jun 18
The purpose of this meta-analysis is to examine the association between
depression
and cortisol responses to psychological stressors. A total of seven studies comparing plasma or cortisol responses to psychological stressors in clinically depressed (
MDD
) and non-depressed (ND) individuals (N = 196: 98
MDD
, 98 ND; 83 men, 113 women; mean age = 40 years) were included. Sample size-adjusted effect sizes (Cohen's d statistic) were calculated and averaged across baseline (before stressor onset), stress (stressor onset up to 25 min after stressor offset), and recovery (more than 25 min after stressor offset) periods. Overall,
MDD
and ND individuals exhibited similar baseline and stress cortisol levels, but
MDD
patients had much higher cortisol levels during the recovery period than their ND counterparts. There was also a significant time of day effect in which afternoon studies were more likely to reveal higher baseline cortisol levels, blunted stress reactivity, and impaired recovery in
MDD
patients. This blunted reactivity-impaired recovery pattern observed among the afternoon studies was most pronounced in studies with older and more severely depressed patients.
...
PMID:Depression and cortisol responses to psychological stress: a meta-analysis. 1596 Dec 50
The aim of this study was to examine the longitudinal response for overall and individual symptoms during the treatment of major depressive disorder. Data were pooled from two 9-week trials, which compared duloxetine 60-mg QD (n=251) with placebo (n=261) in the treatment of
MDD
. Changes from baseline in the 17-item Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale (HAMD17) and in the Visual Analog Scales for pain were analyzed. Compared to placebo-treated patients, duloxetine-treated patients experienced greater improvement (P<.05) in the HAMD17 total score at Week 2. The individual symptoms showing the most rapid improvements (Week 1) were depressed mood, guilt, suicidal ideation, work/activities, and psychic anxiety as well as VAS back pain and shoulder pain. At subsequent visits, significant improvements were observed in retardation (Week 2); hypochondriasis (Week 3); general somatic symptoms (Week 5); middle and late insomnia (Week 7); and gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, genital symptoms (level of sexual interest or ease of sexual arousal), insight, and early insomnia (Week 9). Significant advantages for duloxetine were not achieved at any visit for agitation, somatic anxiety, or weight loss. At Weeks 1 and 2, placebo-treated patients had significantly lower GI symptoms and reported less weight loss compared with duloxetine-treated patients; however, differences were not significant at subsequent visits. Furthermore, duloxetine was superior to placebo on GI symptoms at endpoint compared to placebo-treated patients; duloxetine-treated patients had a significantly higher response rate at Week 2 and a higher remission rate at Week 5. These results may help clinicians establish more accurate expectations regarding treatment with duloxetine.
...
PMID:Time course of depression-symptom improvement during treatment with duloxetine. 1603 56
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