AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined chronic major depressive disorder (MDD) by comparing individuals with chronic MDD, non-chronic MDD, and no mood disorders, focusing on symptoms, family history, cardiovascular risk factors, personality traits, coping styles, and life events.
  • A cohort of 3,618 participants was analyzed, revealing that chronic MDD traits included increased appetite/weight, suicidal thoughts, heightened neuroticism, and decreased extraversion, while showing a lower family history of MDD compared to those with non-chronic MDD.
  • The findings suggest that addressing modifiable risk factors through psychotherapy could potentially improve chronic MDD outcomes.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Previous population-based studies have partially provided inconsistent results regarding the co-variates of chronic depression, which were likely to be attributable to methodological limitations. The present paper that compared people with chronic major depressive disorder (MDD), non-chronic MDD and no mood disorder in the community focused on specific atypical and melancholic depression symptoms and subtypes of MDD, family history (FH) of mood disorders, measured physical cardio-vascular risk factors (CVRF), personality traits, coping style and adverse life-events.

Methods: Data stemmed from a population-based cohort including 3618 participants (female 53%, n=1918; mean age 50.9 years, s.d. 8.8 years). Among them 563 had a lifetime history of chronic MDD, 1060 of non-chronic MDD and 1995 of no mood disorder. Diagnostic and FH information were elicited through semi-structured interviews, CVRF were assessed through physical investigations.

Results: The major findings were that chronic MDD was associated with increase in appetite/weight and suicidal ideation/attempts during the most severe episode, higher exposure to life-events in adulthood, higher levels of neuroticism, lower levels of extraversion and lower levels of informal help-seeking behavior but less frequent FH of MDD compared to non-chronic MDD.

Conclusion: Chronic MDD is associated with a series of potential modifiable risk factors which are accessible via psychotherapeutic approaches that may improve the course of chronic MDD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10366283PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-023-02462-8DOI Listing

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