Strauss Maria, Mergl Roland, Schindler Stefanie, Sander Christian, Schönknecht Peter, Hegerl Ulrich
STRAUSS, MERGL, SCHINDLER, SANDER, SCHÖNKNECHT, and HEGERL: Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
J Psychiatr Pract. 2015 Jul;21(4):275-80. doi: 10.1097/PRA.0000000000000081.
In patients with affective disorders, the full-blown symptomatology of a depressive episode can develop very fast (e.g., within 1 d) or slowly over weeks or months. These differences in the speed of onset of depression are likely to reflect stable intraindividual differences in neurobiological pathomechanisms. This article presents available data on this issue from published studies and from a recently unpublished study and discusses the relevance of these data for diagnostic, therapeutic, and research purposes.
On the basis a database search, we reviewed the literature on speed of onset of depressive episodes. Results of a study for which only some of the data have previously been published involving 205 patients with unipolar or bipolar depression were also considered.
Five older studies produced data concerning the speed of onset of depressive episodes. In addition, our research group has conducted 2 other more recent studies that used the Onset of Depression Inventory to assess the speed of onset of depressive episodes. The major findings of the studies we examined were that depression developed within 1 week in 50% to 58% of patients with a bipolar disorder, whereas only in 7.4% to 21.4% of those with unipolar depression. Different depressive episodes appeared to develop at a similar speed within individual subjects (correlation coefficients: 0.46 to 0.66).
Consistent evidence from 2 studies that used the Onset of Depression Inventory revealed that rapid onset of a depressive episode is more common in patients with bipolar disorder than in those with unipolar major depressive disorder and may be an indication of a latent, not yet expressed, bipolar disorder. The neurobiology of the speed of onset of depressive episodes is a topic for future research.
在情感障碍患者中,抑郁发作的全面症状可能迅速出现(例如,在1天内),也可能在数周或数月内缓慢发展。抑郁发作速度的这些差异可能反映了神经生物学发病机制中个体内部稳定的差异。本文介绍了已发表研究和一项最近未发表研究中关于此问题的现有数据,并讨论了这些数据在诊断、治疗和研究目的方面的相关性。
基于数据库搜索,我们回顾了关于抑郁发作速度的文献。还考虑了一项仅部分数据先前已发表的研究结果,该研究涉及205例单相或双相抑郁症患者。
五项较早的研究得出了关于抑郁发作速度的数据。此外,我们的研究小组还进行了另外两项较新的研究,这些研究使用抑郁发作量表来评估抑郁发作的速度。我们审查的研究的主要发现是,50%至58%的双相情感障碍患者在1周内出现抑郁,而单相抑郁症患者中只有7.4%至21.4%在1周内出现抑郁。在个体受试者中,不同的抑郁发作似乎以相似的速度发展(相关系数:0.46至0.66)。
两项使用抑郁发作量表的研究的一致证据表明,抑郁发作的快速起病在双相情感障碍患者中比在单相重度抑郁症患者中更常见,并且可能是潜在的、尚未表现出来的双相情感障碍的一个指标。抑郁发作速度的神经生物学是未来研究的一个课题。