AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on the relationship between sleep patterns, cortisol levels, and the progression of major depressive disorder (MDD) in adolescents.
  • It involved 28 adolescents diagnosed with unipolar MDD and 35 normal controls, with follow-ups conducted around 7 years later for most participants.
  • Findings suggested that variations in sleep and cortisol levels were linked to how depression progressed over time, with some controls showing higher REM density before developing depression and recurrent MDD subjects displaying increased cortisol near sleep onset.

Article Abstract

This study examined the relationship between longitudinal clinical course and sleep and cortisol findings in adolescent unipolar major depressive disorder (MDD). Subjects were 28 adolescents (15.4 +/- 1.3 years) systematically diagnosed with unipolar MDD and 35 group-matched normal controls who participated in EEG sleep and neuroendocrine studies. Follow-up clinical assessments were conducted 7.0 +/- 0.5 years later in 94% of the original cohort. Although initial group comparisons failed to show significant differences in biologic measures, analyses incorporating clinical follow-up reveal that changes in sleep and cortisol measures are associated with differential longitudinal course. Normal controls who would develop depression after the biologic studies had shown significantly higher density of rapid eye movements (REM) and a trend for reduced REM latency compared to controls with no psychiatric disorder at follow-up. Depressed subjects with a recurrent unipolar course showed a trend towards elevated plasma cortisol near sleep onset compared to MDD subjects with no further episodes during the follow-up interval.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0006-3223(95)00481-5DOI Listing

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