Depression Flashcards

1
Q

How do we classify depression?

A
  • Has to have impact on life
  • low mood
  • loss of interest and enjoyment you would usually find enjoyable (anhedonia)
  • reduced energy
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2
Q

Name 5 biological symptoms of depression

A
  • early morning waking
  • Loss of appetite
  • reduced concentration and attention
  • loss of libido
  • diurnal variation in mood
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3
Q

Give 5 cognitive symptoms of depression

A
  • reduced confidence/low self-esteem
  • worthlessness and guilt
  • helplessness
  • pessimistic views of the future
  • ideas of self-harm/suicide
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4
Q

How do we define the severity of depression?

A
  • mild = 2 core symptoms and 2 others - none to an intense degree, some difficulty in continuing normal activities
  • moderate = 2 core symptoms and 3/4 others - considerable difficulty in continuing normal activities
  • severe = core and 4 others with some of severe intensity - unlikely to be able to continue to do normal activities
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5
Q

What other less obvious symptoms can depression present as?

A
  • headache
  • other pain disorders (chest,lower back, facial)
  • fatigue
  • weight loss
  • poor memory
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6
Q

Bipolar vs Unipolar depression

A
  • Lifetime Prevalence: Much higher for Uni vs bi
  • 6-12 month prevalence: bi is more likely to stay forever, uni can come and go
  • onset age: bi (17-21), uni (27)
  • Gender: bi (equal), uni (female 2x more)
  • Comorbidity: both substance misuse and anxiety disorder
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7
Q

What are some risk factors for depression?

A
  • internalising (things that happen that affect what you do) such as genetics, low self-esteem, early-onset anxiety disorder, neuroticism
  • Externalising factors (things that you do that affects other things) such as genetics, substance misuse, conduct disorder
  • adversity - trauma, stressful life events, bereavement, low social support/education
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8
Q

What is the monoamine hypothesis of depression?

A
  • MAOIs and TCAs treat depression
  • reduced concs of serotonin precursors in depressed patients/post-mortem
  • drugs that deplete NA induce depressive symptoms
  • decreased dopamine metabolites in CSF
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9
Q

What NTs are linked with depression?

A
  • Serotonin
  • NA
  • DA
  • GABA/glutamate
  • BDNF - antidepressants/ECT increase this
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10
Q

What neuroendocrine factors are there?

A
  • 50% Cushing’s sufferers have depression - cortisol hypersecretion
  • BDNF decreased by cortisol
  • CRH may act as NT in limbic system (increased in CSF)
  • Free T3 decreased - 25% depressed patients have reduced TSH response to TRH
  • Thyroxine treatment works for resistant depression
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11
Q

What Psychological factors are there?

A
  • negative thoughts about the self, the world and the future (Beck’s cognitive triad)
  • Ignore successes, think everything is all or nothing, overgeneralise from the bad things that happen
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12
Q

What social factors are there?

A
  • personality - perfectionism, controlling, self-blame

- early environment - parental separation, parental style, recalled childhood abuse

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