Int Clin Psychopharmacol
February 2024
The effect of light or moderate alcohol intake on the outcome of patients with major depression taking antidepressants is a question that remains unanswered. The main objective of this study was to assess the association between light or moderate alcohol consumption and the acute response (efficacy and tolerability) to pharmacological treatment in unipolar major depression. Efficacy and tolerability analyses compared 8-week outcomes between three subgroups, abstainers, light drinkers and moderate drinkers, of patients with major depression using a prospective naturalistic single-blind design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose/background: According to available international clinical guides, tricyclic antidepressants are our first- or second-line treatment of choice for severe unipolar major depression. However, the therapeutic option after an unsuccessful response to a tricyclic antidepressant drug in unipolar major depression is still unclear.
Methods/procedures: This 10-week randomized open-label study assessed the effectiveness of add-on lithium (adjusted to plasma levels) compared with add-on citalopram (30 mg/d) in 104 severe unipolar major depressive patients after a 10-week unsuccessful imipramine (adjusted to plasma level).
Purpose/background: Newer-generation antidepressants used in monotherapy or in combination with other newer-generation antidepressants or other psychotropic drugs are usually preferred as first- or second-step treatment options in resistant depression. According to our clinical experience, tricyclic antidepressants still are one of our preferred first choices in treatment-resistant moderate to severe unipolar major depressive episodes.
Methods: This 10-week open-design randomized study assessed the effectiveness of switching to imipramine (adjusted to plasma levels) compared with add-on mirtazapine (30 mg/d) for treatment of moderate to severe unipolar major depressive episodes after a 10-week unsuccessful venlafaxine regimen (225-300 mg/d).
Background: The main aim of this study was to propose a standardized acute and maintenance/continuation treatment protocol for acute antidepressant treatment-associated hypomania (AAH) in major unipolar depression. The second objective was to describe outcomes at three-year follow-up in a cohort of patients with AAH who had been included in this standardized therapeutic protocol.
Methods: The study consisted of two distinct prospective phases: a 1-year follow-up first phase in which all consecutive patients with a diagnosis of moderate/severe unipolar depressive disorder received acute and continuation/maintenance antidepressant treatment; and a second phase, in which patients who had suffered AAH during the first phase were admitted to a 3-year follow-up with the authors-designed standardized acute and continuation/maintenance treatment protocol.
Background: To evaluate, in patients affected by an acute major depressive episode, what predictive value certain baseline psychopathological characteristics have with regard to expected therapeutic remission following biological antidepressant treatment (pharmacological/electroconvulsive; non-psychological).
Methods: Six predefined psychopathological characteristics in acute major depressive episode were evaluated using a logistic regression model through a protocolised antidepressant treatment to assess their predictive value with regard to expected remission rate.
Results: The final study sample consisted of 129 subjects affected by an acute major depressive episode.
While the role of impaired cognition in accounting for functional outcome in schizophrenia is generally established, the relationship between cognitive and functional change in the context of treatments is far from clear. The current paper tries to identify which cognitive changes lead to improvements in daily functioning among persons with chronic schizophrenia who had current negative symptoms and evidenced neuropsychological impairments. In a previous work, Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CRT) was compared with a control therapy, involving similar length of therapist contact but different targets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The identification of effective continuation and maintenance strategies for elderly patients with psychotic depression is a critical issue that has not been fully explored. The aim of this study was to assess the tolerability and efficacy of continuation/maintenance electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in elderly patients with psychotic depression after acute ECT remission.
Methods: The authors used a longitudinal, randomized, single-blind design to compare by survival analysis the 2-year outcome of two subgroups of elderly patients with psychotic unipolar depression who were ECT (plus nortriptyline) remitters.
Int J Geriatr Psychiatry
October 2008
Objective: The aims of the study are twofold: (1) to compare semantic fluency, clustering and switching performance among subjects with memory complaints, patients with Alzheimer Disease (AD), and healthy controls; and (2) to examine the clinical utility of the clustering/switching scoring system in the prediction of incident AD in subjects with memory complaints.
Methods: A semantic fluency task was used to compare thirty eight subjects with memory complaints, forty two AD patients and twenty five healthy controls on the total number of words generated, clustering and switching performance. Subjects with memory complaints were followed-up for a maximum period of two years and re-evaluated.
Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CRT) is a novel rehabilitation approach designed to improve neurocognitive abilities such as attention, memory and executive functioning. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the effect of CRT on neurocognition, and secondarily on symptomatology and psychosocial functioning. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) was used as a control condition because it aims to improve emotional problems and positive symptoms, focusing on modification of maladaptive beliefs and schemas, but neurocognition is not targeted.
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