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3.4 Affective Disorders Full course summary

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Full course summary of the literature and lectures in the 3.4 Affective Disorders block in the Clinical Psychology track. I got an 8.8 from the exam.

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Uploaded on
January 22, 2025
Number of pages
105
Written in
2023/2024
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1


Problem 1

1.1 What is depression?

Depression and Other Common Mental Disorders Global Health Estimates (by WHO)

●​ common mental disorders: anxiety and depression
●​ depression worldwide: 300 million people affected (4.4% of world population)
●​ prevalence peaks at older adulthood (55-74 years old) & women are affected more




●​ Computing health loss
○​ Years Lived with Disability (YLD)= prevalence of mental disorder in the
population x average level of disability associated with it
■​ depression is the single largest contributor to non-fatal health loss
worldwide




The clinical characterization of the adult patient with depression
aimed at personalization of management (by Maj et al)

, 2


➔​ very heterogeneous disease requiring a personalized treatment plan
◆​ however, many medications and psychotherapies are mistakenly perceived to be
equal & interchangeable, and thus many patients do not respond to treatment
◆​ most treatment guidelines only take into account the severity of depression
◆​ different clinical and biological factors might predict the response to various
treatments
◆​ machine learning tools might be useful in identifying patient profiles that will
respond to certain treatments

➔​ We will review the domains that should be considered when personalizing treatment for
depression
◆​ + biological markers should be researched more, but not included in this paper




1.​ Symptom profile
a.​ depressed mood and/or diminished interest mandatory for diagnosis
b.​ the symptoms hopelessness and diminished drive, not included in the DSM-5
criteria performed as well as the actual symptoms in identifying depression
c.​ sympathetic arousal, anxiety and somatic symptoms are among the most
reported, while not being included in DSM-5
d.​ lack of mood reactivity: not being happy in the face of positive stimuli
e.​ there is no consensus, but the symptoms can be clustered into three categories:
i.​ observed mood: depressed mood & anxiety

, 3


ii.​ cognitive: pessimism, reduced interest
iii.​ neurovegetative: sleep, appetite problems
f.​ or: core emotional symptoms. sleep symptoms, atypical symptoms
(psychomotor agitation/retardation, suicidal ideation, reduced libido)
g.​ Antidepressant medication in general has been found to be more effective in
treating core emotional and sleep symptoms than “atypical” symptoms
h.​ high anxiety & somatic symptoms, low interest, reduced activity, indecisiveness
and lack of enjoyment has been associated with a decreased response to
antidepressant medication

2.​ Clinical subtypes
a.​ traditionally thought to have two subtypes, now mostly discarded:
i.​ melancholic/endogenous/vital/autonomous: thought to arise from
biological imbalances
ii.​ non-melancholic/reactive/neurotic/situational: linked to situational
factors, usually with personality psychopathology
b.​ the melancholic subtype remains in the DSM-5 as a specifier
i.​ loss of pleasure, lack of mood reactivity, weight loss, feelings of guilt,
worsening of symptoms in the morning, waking up early…
ii.​ mixed results about treatment efficacy;
c.​ psychotic depression
i.​ delusions or hallucination during depressive episodes; not persisting
beyond the depressive episode
ii.​ associated with increased suicidality & poorer prognosis
iii.​ best treatment: antidepressants + antipsychotics
iv.​ electroconvulsive therapy also possible
d.​ mixed depression
i.​ presence of at least 3/7 (hypo)manic symptoms during the depressive
episode
ii.​ associated with greater anxiety, suicidality, functional impairment, family
history of BD, poorer treatment response
e.​ depression with anxious distress
i.​ study shows that this subtype doesn't influence the response to CBT or
medication
f.​ seasonal depression
i.​ most common pattern: autumn/winter onset; spring/summer resolution
ii.​ bright light therapy is an effective treatment

, 4


3.​ Severity
a.​ mild/moderate/severe
b.​ functional impairment criteria limited to social and occupational settings
c.​ currently considered important while deciding on treatment— however, not a
stable way to evaluate severity!
d.​ some discourage antidepressants as initial treatment for mild depression
e.​ moderate & severe depression should be treated with antidepressants
f.​ antidepressants are shown to be effective across a range of severity levels
g.​ higher symptom levels don't predict poorer outcomes

4.​ neurocognition
a.​ cognitive deficits is a main symptom & can persist during asymptomatic phases
as well
b.​ link between depression- functional impairment & drop in productivity is
mediated by cognitive impairment
c.​ can be the reason behind diminished response to antidepressants in some
patients
d.​ categories
i.​ executive functions
ii.​ attention/concentration
iii.​ learning/memory
1.​ deficits present esp in this domain
2.​ volume reduction in the hippocampus
iv.​ processing speed
e.​ treatment implications
i.​ drugs that interfere with cognitive functions should be discontinued—
antidepressants with anticholinergic activity, antipsychotics with
antihistamine properties, and benzodiazepines
ii.​ cannabis should be avoided
iii.​ sleep quality should be improved
iv.​ some approaches to improve cognitive functioning has not been
completely supported yet
1.​ exercise
2.​ neurostimulation
3.​ ketamine, psychostimulants and anti-inflammatory medication
might be beneficial

5.​ functioning & quality of life (QOL)

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