Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Brain Behav Immun. 2018 Jan;67:374-397. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2017.09.011. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Several theories of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) have previously been proposed, focusing largely on either a psychological (i.e., cognitive/affective), biological, or neural/computational level of description. These theories appeal to somewhat distinct bodies of work that have each highlighted separate factors as being of considerable potential importance to the maintenance of MDD. Such factors include a range of cognitive/attentional information-processing biases, a range of structural and functional brain abnormalities, and also dysregulation within the autonomic, endocrine, and immune systems. However, to date there have been limited efforts to integrate these complimentary perspectives into a single multi-level framework. Here we review previous work in each of these MDD research domains and illustrate how they can be synthesized into a more comprehensive model of how a depressive episode is maintained. In particular, we emphasize how plausible (but insufficiently studied) interactions between the various MDD-related factors listed above can lead to a series of nested positive feedback loops, which are each capable of maintaining an individual in a depressive episode. We also describe how these different feedback loops could be active to different degrees in different individual cases, potentially accounting for heterogeneity in both depressive symptoms and treatment response. We conclude by discussing how this integrative model might extend understanding of current treatment mechanisms, and also potentially guide the search for markers to inform treatment selection in individual cases.
几种重度抑郁症(MDD)理论之前已被提出,主要集中在心理(即认知/情感)、生物学或神经/计算的描述水平上。这些理论涉及到不同的研究领域,分别强调了不同的因素对 MDD 的维持具有相当大的潜在重要性。这些因素包括一系列认知/注意力信息处理偏差、一系列结构和功能大脑异常,以及自主神经系统、内分泌系统和免疫系统的失调。然而,迄今为止,将这些互补的观点整合到一个单一的多层次框架中的努力有限。在这里,我们回顾了这些 MDD 研究领域中的先前工作,并说明了如何将它们综合到一个更全面的模型中,以说明如何维持抑郁发作。特别是,我们强调了上述各种与 MDD 相关的因素之间可能存在的合理(但研究不足)相互作用如何导致一系列嵌套的正反馈循环,每个循环都能够使个体维持在抑郁发作中。我们还描述了这些不同的反馈循环在不同个体病例中可能以不同的程度活跃,这可能解释了抑郁症状和治疗反应的异质性。最后,我们讨论了这种综合模型如何扩展对当前治疗机制的理解,并可能指导寻找标志物以指导个体病例的治疗选择。