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

According to the Resource Allocation Model, it is logical to think that emotional mood states modulate the allocation of capacity, most cognitive tasks require some allocation of capacity, and in many instances there is a positive correlation between effort and memory. In cognitive science, the experimental paradigm of lexical decision task is used to investigate visual words recognition and lexical access. According to the Resource Allocation Model, we postulated that depressed patients take more time to recognize items from an affective loaded list. In order to compare their behavior in lexical decision task in this study, depressed patients and healthy controls were studied. We hoped to find an interaction between the mood state of subjects and the categories (affective or neutral) of words. This kind of interaction is expected to figure among the cognitive markers of depression. Two groups of right-handed adults served as subjects in our experiment. The subjects were living in the north west region of Quebec. The first group consisted of 11 depressed patients (mean age: 40.2; SD: 6.8). All of them met the DSM III criteria for major depressive disorder and the RDC. Patients were rated using the 24-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS). All depressed patients were without medications. The control group was composed with 24 subjects (mean age: 32.7; SD: 7.9). We built a depressive word-list (Mood-list) and a neutral word-list (Neutral-list) and used a computer for the lexical-decision task. We noted a significant interaction [F(1.33) = 10,035, p < 0.001] between the subjects group (depression vs control) and the words category (Moodlist vs Neutral-list).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Neuropsychologic function of the depressive patient. A lexical decision investigation in major depression]. 134 Aug 6

The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) and the depressive attributional style questionnaire (ASQ) were administered to 105 depressed patients prior to participation in a double-blind outpatient study and to 29 normal controls. The depressed patients were classified into three groups (1) met criteria for both research diagnostic criteria for definite endogenous depression and DSM III melancholia; (2) met criteria for neither, and (3) met criteria for one but not both. The group that met criteria for both RDC endogenous depression and DSM-III melancholia had a statistically greater frequency of abnormal DST versus the group that met neither criteria and the normal controls. With regard to ASQ, patients who met both criteria had statistically higher bad event internality scores but statistically lower bad event stability and globality scores as opposed to the group that met neither criteria. In general, normal controls had significantly lower bad event ASQ scores than the three depressive groups. There was no correlation between ASQ and DST, as both DST suppressors and nonsuppressors had similar ASQ scores and there was no correlation between ASQ bad event attributions and initial severity of depression.
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PMID:Depressive attributional style and the dexamethasone suppression test: relationship to the endogenous/melancholic distinction and to each other. 149 40

Expressed emotion (EE) in the partners of 25 pregnant women with a history of psychosis or severe depression and in 13 pregnant control subjects without any previous psychiatric disorder was assessed in the ninth month of pregnancy. At this time, no patient presented as a case according to RDC. Eleven subjects with a history of psychiatric disorder experienced a further episode of illness in the six months following delivery. Partners of women who became ill had made fewer critical and positive comments about their wives during the pregnancy than the partners of women who remained well. Poor self-rated social adjustment in the partners was also predictive of recurrence of illness after delivery.
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PMID:Women whose mental illnesses recur after childbirth and partners' levels of expressed emotion during late pregnancy. 152 Nov 4

Physical anhedonia, evaluated by the score on the physical anhedonia scale (PAS) of Chapman et al. [J. Abnorm. Psychol. 4 374-382 (1976)] was studied in 61 patients, who met RDC criteria for major depressive disorder and in 61 normal subjects. The depressed patients scored significantly higher than the normal group and presented a continuous distribution. Physical anhedonia of depressed patients seems related to the severity of the depression and does not appear to identify a qualitatively distinct subgroup.
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PMID:Physical anhedonia in major depressive disorder. 164 89

We review research literature on psychotic (delusional) depression, including demographic, illness pattern, clinical, biological marker and treatment issues. Secondly, we report a study of a consecutive sample of 137 patients meeting criteria for DSM-III melancholia, RDC definite endogenous depression and our "clinical" criteria for endogenous depression, of whom there were 35 "psychotic depressives" (PDs). The PDs were contrasted with the remaining 76 depressives (EDs) and with an age and sex-matched subset (MEDs). The PDs were distinctly older than the EDs at assessment and at initial onset of any affective disorder. Compared to the MEDs, they tended to have longer illnesses, were more likely to be hospitalised (and to have longer stays), to receive (in the past and for the current episode) combination antipsychotic/antidepressant medication and/or ECT, and to have a poorer course over the following year. They were no more likely to have a bipolar pattern, a family history of depressive disorder, schizophrenia or alcoholism, or vegetative depressive features. Developmental psychosocial stressors and antecedent life event stressors were not over-represented. Most of the PDs had delusions, one-fifth reported hallucinations and psychomotor disturbance was marked. Other differential clinical findings were sustained mood disturbance, constipation, and the absence of a diurnal variation in mood and energy.
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PMID:Psychotic depression: a review and clinical experience. 167 37

The comparative validity of six operational diagnoses of major depression was evaluated in 600 psychiatric inpatients using the independently assessed clinical ICD-9 diagnoses as a yardstick. Agreement with, and positive predictive value for the ICD-9 categories of pure (endogenous and psychogenic) depression served as validation criteria; sensitivity of major depression diagnoses for detecting ICD-9 bipolar depressions was additionally used for examining the adequacy of width, time and exclusion criteria of the competing operational definitions. Three essential results were found. First, the "old" diagnostic definitions of RDC and FDC are superior to all newer definitions because they define the time criteria and the schizophrenic exclusion criteria more adequately than, for example, both DSM-III and DSM-III-R definition. Secondly, the current ICD-10 definition of 1989 ("mild", "moderate" or "severe" depression) comes closer to the concurrent validity of RDC and FDC than DSM-III, DSM-III-R and the previous ICD-10 definition of 1987. Thirdly, using the criterion of identifying a high proportion of ICD-9 bipolar depressions, all six competing diagnostic systems are too restrictive. Evaluations of predictive and criterion-related validity will be needed to substantiate these findings.
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PMID:The concept of major depression. III. Concurrent validity of six competing operational definitions for the clinical ICD-9 diagnosis. 182 2

This is a preliminary report from a prospective study of the influence of psychosocial stressors on post-natal relapse in women at high risk of psychiatric disorder after childbirth. Forty-three index subjects with a previous history of psychosis or severe depression were compared with 45 pregnant control subjects without any previous psychiatric disorder. After delivery 51% of index subjects relapsed (RDC diagnoses): 28% were categorised as psychotic and 23% non-psychotic. All psychotic relapses were in women with a previous history of bipolar or schizoaffective disorder (46% of this subgroup). Only the non-psychotic post-partum relapses (mostly depressions) were associated with an increased likelihood of a severe life event in the 12 months preceding illness onset.
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PMID:Life stress and post-partum psychosis: a preliminary report. 184 Jul 44

"To isolate and quantify possible determinants of any increased prevalence of depressive disorders in women we studied a select group of men and women, initially similar in terms of a number of putative social determinants of depression, and reviewed the sample five years later when social role diversity was anticipated. We used the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) to generate DSM-III and RDC diagnoses to estimate lifetime depressive disorders, and established (via corroborative reports) the likely accuracy of those data. Despite lifetime depression being a relatively common experience, no significant sex differences in depressive episodes were demonstrated, suggesting the possible irrelevance of biological factors in determining any sex difference. As there was not major social role divergence over the five year study, we interpret the lack of a sex difference as a consequence, and suggest that findings support the view that social factors are of key relevance in determining any female preponderance in depression described in general population studies."
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PMID:Is sex necessarily a risk factor to depression? 186 24

The EEG sleep of 75 subjects aged 16-25 years was studied. Thirty-eight were in an episode of RDC major depression, and 37 were normal controls. Only one sleep continuity measure differed between the two groups: sleep latency was significantly longer in the depressive group. REM period latencies and other sleep variables did not differ between the groups. Subgroup analyses, within the depressed group with respect to inpatient status, revealed significantly higher REM density (P less than 0.03) and a marginally shortened REM period latency (P less than 0.07) among the inpatient depressives. Subgroup analysis across suicidal ratings revealed a significantly higher REM density (P less than 0.04) among suicidal depressives. Severity estimates of depression did not correlate with sleep findings. These results parallel another recent report on adolescent depressed subjects, suggesting that inpatient and/or suicidal status is an important variable in the expression of EEG sleep abnormalities in the adolescent/young adult age group.
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PMID:EEG sleep of young adults with major depression: a controlled study. 188 Mar 13

To examine the necessary and sufficient status of delusions and hallucinations as clinical features of psychotic (delusional) depression, we studied a consecutive sample of 137 patients meeting DSM-III, RDC and our clinical criteria for endogenous depression/melancholia, of whom 35 had delusions and/or hallucinations, and represented our putative 'psychotic depressives' (PDs). The PDs were contrasted with the remaining 'endogenous depressives' (the EDs), and an age- and sex-matched subsample of the latter, the MEDs. Univariate and multivariate analyses of clinical features established that, in addition to the presence of delusions and/or hallucinations, the PDs could be distinguished in particular by severe psychomotor disturbance, as well as by sustained and unvarying depressive content, the absence of any diurnal mood variation and by constipation. Latent class analyses suggested that overt psychotic features (such as delusions and hallucinations) were sufficient but not necessary for a subject to be assigned to the 'psychotic' latent class, and a subsequent chart review suggested that, in some PDs actual psychotic features may not be able to be elicited because of severe psychomotor change, suggesting that clinical reliance on eliciting delusions or hallucinations may result in a number of 'masked psychotic depressives' escaping valid diagnosis.
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PMID:Distinguishing psychotic and non-psychotic melancholia. 191 57


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