TY - JOUR
T1 - Cerebrovascular risk factors and later-life major depression
T2 - Testing a small-vessel brain disease model
AU - Lyness, Jeffrey M.
AU - Caine, Eric D.
AU - Cox, Christopher
AU - King, Deborah A.
AU - Conwell, Yeates
AU - Olivares, Telva
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - The topic of vascular depression has received increasing prominence as a putative etiology of depression in later life. The authors examined one aspect of this model by comparing the burden of systemic cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRFs) in 130 psychiatric inpatients with major depression and 64 normal control (NC) subjects, all age ≤50 years. Depressed subjects did not differ statistically from NCs on cumulative CVRF scores. Diabetes mellitus and atrial fibrillation were both associated with depression, but only atrial fibrillation retained an independent association after medical disability was statistically controlled. Among the depressed subjects, CVRF scores were not significantly associated with overall symptom severity, psychiatric disability, age at onset of depression, melancholic subtype, or psychotic depression. These data did not support the notion that a linear model of small-vessel disease might apply to the great majority of older inpatients with major depression.
AB - The topic of vascular depression has received increasing prominence as a putative etiology of depression in later life. The authors examined one aspect of this model by comparing the burden of systemic cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRFs) in 130 psychiatric inpatients with major depression and 64 normal control (NC) subjects, all age ≤50 years. Depressed subjects did not differ statistically from NCs on cumulative CVRF scores. Diabetes mellitus and atrial fibrillation were both associated with depression, but only atrial fibrillation retained an independent association after medical disability was statistically controlled. Among the depressed subjects, CVRF scores were not significantly associated with overall symptom severity, psychiatric disability, age at onset of depression, melancholic subtype, or psychotic depression. These data did not support the notion that a linear model of small-vessel disease might apply to the great majority of older inpatients with major depression.
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U2 - 10.1097/00019442-199802000-00002
DO - 10.1097/00019442-199802000-00002
M3 - Article
C2 - 9469209
AN - SCOPUS:0031985743
SN - 1064-7481
VL - 6
SP - 5
EP - 13
JO - American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
JF - American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
IS - 1
ER -