The science of depression Flashcards
What are the biological symptoms of depression?
Poor sleep
Poor appetite
Reduced libido
Poor concentration
What are the cognitive symptoms of depression?
Worthlessness (poor self esteem)
Guilt
Hopelessness
Suicidal thoughts
What is the stress vulnerability model?
Different people have different vulnerabilities to stress
Can be genetic or as a result of early/prenatal experience
Early experience sets the neuroendocrinilogical thermostat - epigenetics
How does the HPA axis have a role in depression?
Increased CRH in depression
Enlarged adrenals and pituitary physically
Reduced negative feedback loops
Reduced GR expression in the brain (glucocorticoid resistance)
How does early adversity and parenting affect depression?
History of childhood maltreatment (with or without current clinical depression)
Causes increased ACTH release in response to stress (HPA axis)
What affects HPA axis function in animal studies?
Offspring of high licking lab rats show high GR expression (higher ACTH suppression), even if swapped at birth or brushed by research assistant
social rank in monkeys - subordinate monkeys have increased cortisol in hair, heavier adrenal glands, reduced dexamethasone suppression
How do steroids (according to findings) affect the brain?
Suggest they are neurotoxic
cause neuro-vulnerability
Affect dendrite formation
Reduces neurogenesis
Causes changes to the EEG
Particularly affects the frontal lobes and hippocampus
What is the medial PFC? How does depression affect it?
What is the dorsolateral PFC? How does depression affect it?
Evaluating emotional state, involved in social cognition
Has less volume loss
Involved in working memory and problem solving
Large volume loss
How does depression affect the hippocampus?
Known to be important for memory
Bilateral lesions - complete anterograde memory loss
Reduced size in MDD, up to 20%
Neurogenesis
stress and neurogenesis
how does stress affect dendrited
What is BDNF?
brain derived neurotrophic factor
A neurotrophin, affects neuroplasticity by affecting dendrites
How do stress and BDNF interact?
In animals stress causes decreased BDNF
Reversed with antidepressants
Low BDNF in unmedicated depressives, normal to high in medicated
Lowest levels in post-mortems of suicide victims
Why do antidepressants take so long to work?
They change gene expression
In turn changes function of the cell
In turn changes dendritic spine formation
Changes circuits and way people think