Pearlson G D, Ross C A, Lohr W D, Rovner B W, Chase G A, Folstein M F
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Am J Psychiatry. 1990 Apr;147(4):452-6. doi: 10.1176/ajp.147.4.452.
For each of 41 index patients with probable Alzheimer's disease and a first episode of major depression and 71 nondepressed Alzheimer's disease patients, two first-degree relatives were interviewed by a rater blind to presence or absence of depression in the proband. The depressed patients had significantly more first- and second-degree relatives with depression than did control subjects. The lifetime risk for major depression, adjusted for differences in age distribution, was significantly greater in first-degree relatives of index patients, suggesting that depression in Alzheimer's disease is genetically related to primary affective disorder. Alzheimer's disease may be useful for studying aspects of depressive pathophysiology.
对41例可能患有阿尔茨海默病且首次发作重度抑郁症的索引患者以及71例无抑郁症的阿尔茨海默病患者,由一位对先证者是否患有抑郁症不知情的评估者对其两名一级亲属进行访谈。与对照组相比,抑郁症患者的一级和二级亲属中患抑郁症的明显更多。经年龄分布差异调整后,索引患者一级亲属中重度抑郁症的终生风险显著更高,这表明阿尔茨海默病中的抑郁症与原发性情感障碍存在遗传关联。阿尔茨海默病可能有助于研究抑郁病理生理学的各个方面。