Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry
February 2003
There is increasing evidence suggesting that depression is associated with a certain degree of cognitive dysfunction. However, there is still debate on whether this dysfunction is only substantially associated with the most severe forms of depression, on whether or not it decreases in parallel with clinical response, and on the role played in these changes by psychotropic medications. In order to clarify these questions, we analyzed the performance in several cognitive tasks that involved attention and working memory of 40 untreated subjects with a diagnosis of dysthymia or major depressive disorder without melancholia.
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