Depressive Disorders - 1
Depressive Disorders - 1
Depressive Disorders - 1
1. Gender
Depressed mood
• Patients may say that they feel blue, hopeless, in the
dumps, or worthless, Emptiness ,Unhappiness and Distress
Retardation
Includes
• grandiose themes of exaggerated power,
knowledge, and worth.
Judgment, Insight and Reliability
• Depressed patients hyperbolic; they overemphasize their
symptoms, their disorder & their life problems.
• It is difficult to convince such pts. that improvement is
possible.
• overemphasize the bad and minimize the good.
Orientation
• Most depressed pts. are oriented to PPT although
some may not have sufficient energy or interest to
answer questions about these subjects during an
interview.
32
Cognitive disturbance
• Difficulty in concentrating
• negative thoughts
• low self-esteem and self confidence,
• hopelessness
• sense of worthlessness and sinfulness,
• negative outlook on the world
• suicidal thoughts.
Memory – have memory loss and disturbance.
MSE cont……….
Impulse Control
• About 10-15 % of all depressed patients commit suicide,
and about two-thirds have suicidal ideation.
– neurotransmitters
– Neuroendocrine abnormalities
– structural & functional brain abnormalities
Psychosocial factors ;
– Social support
– Cognitive theories
Genetic Factors
Family Studies
• Family data indicate that if one parent has a mood disorder,
a child will have a risk of b/n 10-25% for mood disorder.
• If both parents are affected, this risk roughly doubles.
• The more members of the family affected & more severe
illness in the family and the greater the risk is to a child.
• The risk is greater if the affected family members are first-
degree relatives.
36
Etiology cont………….
Twin Studies
remainder
37
Etiology cont………….
inherited.
-35%.
• This is the most compelling data for the role of genetic factors
in mood disorders.
38
Etiology cont………….
Adoption Studies.
• Twofold increase in unipolar disorder in the biological relatives
of bipolar probands.
• Similarly, in a Danish sample, a threefold increase in the rate
of unipolar disorder and a six fold increase in the rate of
completed suicide in the biological relatives of affectively ill
probands were reported.
dopamine
of depression.
Biogenic amines
increased in mania
symptoms of depression.
depression
symptoms in depression
hippocampus.
antidepressant effects.
Immunological Disturbance.
60
Etiology cont……..
62
• Reduced cerebral blood flow or metabolism, or both, in
the dopaminergically innervated tracts of the
mesocortical & mesolimbic systems in depression.
• Antidepressants at least partially normalize these
changes.
• Increased glucose metabolism has been observed in several
limbic regions, particularly among patient with relatively severe
recurrent depression & a family history of mood disorder.
• . 63
Etiology cont……..
Neuroanatomical Considerations
– Anterior cingulate
– Hippocampus
– Amygdala
64
Etiology cont……..
PFC
65
Etiology cont……..
PFC function.
ACC
67
Etiology cont……..
Hippocampus
• Most clearly involved in various forms of learning &
memory, including fear conditioning, as well as
inhibitory regulation of the HPA axis activity.
• Emotional or contextual learning appears to involve
a direct connection between the hippocampus and the
amygdala.
68
Etiology cont……..
Amygdala
• Crucial way station for processing novel stimuli of
emotional significance and coordinating or organizing
cortical responses.
• Located just above the hippocampi bilaterally, the
amygdala has long been viewed as the heart of the limbic
system.
• Most research has focused on the role of the amygdala in
responding to fearful or painful stimuli. 69
2 theories
Neurogenesis Hypotheses-
• brain abnormalities leading to depression are the
result of abnormalities in development such that there
is a deficit in the number of newborn neurons in the
brain.
• Stress can cause increased activity in the HPA axis,
which results in increased glucocorticoid production.
Glucocorticoids are known to decrease neurogenesis.
Neuroplasticity Hypotheses.
• atrophy of already developed neurons causes
depression.
• chronic stress can increase glucocorticoid levels,
which can cause atrophy. It can also decrease the
expression of brain-derived neurotrophic growth
factor (BDNF), which is essential for the survival,
growth, and differentiation of neurons in the brain.
Etiology cont……..
Psychosocial Factors
Life Events and Environmental Stress.
72
Etiology cont……..
• The most compelling data indicate that the life event most often
associated with development of depression is losing a parent before
age 11 years.
Personality Factors.
• All humans, of whatever personality pattern, can and do become
76
Etiology cont……..
78
Etiology cont……..
Cognitive Theory
79
Etiology cont……..
82
Hopelessness theory
83
Etiology cont……..
Evolutionary Theory
• depression is an adaptive response to perceived threats in the
environment, and the tendency for depressed persons to withdraw
from the environment in the face of possible threats could be
protective.
• The depressive response in which one decreases
94
Specifiers for Depressive Disorders cont….
“severe.”
95
Dysthymic Disorder
• Dysthymic disorder (also called dysthymia) is
the presence of depressive symptoms that are
less severe than those of major depressive
disorder.
depression.
disorder
104
MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER WITH PERIPARTUM ONSET (POSTPARTUM
DEPRESSION)
106
postpartum depression cont……
psychosocial factors: stressful life events,
:unemployment,
:marital conflict,
:lack of social support,
:unwanted pregnancy,
:colicky or sick infant
107
Prognosis
• impact on child development: increased risk
of cognitive delay, insecure attachment,
behavioral disorders .
• Treatment of mother improves outcome for
child at 8 month through increased mother-child
interaction.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
109
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
• Heritability range between 30% and 80%, with the most stable
heritable.
110
Depressive disorder due to another
medical condition
depressive symptoms; these need not meet criteria for any of the
conditions above .
111
112
Substance/medication- induced depressive
disorder
115
Depression in Children and Adolescents
• Substance abuse
• Antisocial behavior
• Sexual promiscuity
• Truancy
adolescents 116
Depression in the Elderly
117
Good prognostic factor for MDD
• Mild episodes
• The absence of psychotic symptoms
• Short hospital stay and no more than one previous
hospitalization for major depressive disorder
• Solid friendships during adolescence,
• Stable family functioning, and generally sound social
functioning for the 5 years preceding the illness
• Absence of a comorbid psychiatric disorder and of a
personality disorder
• An advanced age of onset
Poor prognostic factor for MDD
• Motive
• Circumstances of attempt
• Psychiatric disorder
• Precipitating and maintaining problems
• Coping skills and support
• Risk
High risk indicators for suicide
• Male
• Age > 40 years
• Family history of suicide
• Unemployed
• Socially isolated
• Suicide note
• Continued desire to die
• Hopelessness, sees no future
• Misuse of drugs or alcohol
• Psychiatric illness (especially depression, but also
• schizophrenia, personality disorder)
1. Kaplan & sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry 10th
edition
2. kaplan and sadok’s synopsis of psychiatry , 12th edition
3. DSM-5th edition
4. Mario_Maj,_Norman_Sartorius_Depressive_DisordersBook
Thank you