Goodnick P J, Henry J H, Buki V M
Department of Psychiatry, University of Miami, FL 33136, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 1995 Apr;56(4):128-36.
Depression occurs frequently in patients with diabetes mellitus. Little has been published on the epidemiology, biochemistry, and treatment of depression in diabetic patients.
We searched MEDLINE for literature from January 1966 to July 1993 and cross-referenced the terms diabetes, glucose, hyperglycemia, or hypoglycemia, with each of the following: antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, tricyclic antidepressants, fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, and bupropion. The results reviewed were 20 papers on epidemiology, 15 papers on neurochemicals and glucose control, and 28 papers on antidepressants and factors of importance to diabetics. Additional papers were selected from the reference lists of the retrieved articles.
The prevalence of depression in diabetics varies from 8.5% to 27.3%. Severity of depression correlates strongly with many symptoms of diabetes mellitus. The hydrazine monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), e.g., phenelzine, potentiate animal models of hypoglycemia due to direct influence on gluconeogenesis secondary to the hydrazine structure, not to MAOI considerations. Dopamine and norepinephrine influences in these models appear to be hyperglycemic. Serotonergic influences, in the presence of MAOIs, which decrease serotonin metabolism, are in contrast hypoglycemic. Clinically, MAOI use is limited by the possible severity of the induced hypoglycemia, induced weight gain, and required diets. The tricyclic antidepressants may lead to hyperglycemia, to an increase in carbohydrate craving (from 86% to 200%), and impaired memory. Serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be hypoglycemic (causing as much as a 30% decrease in fasting plasma glucose) and anorectic (causing an approximately 2-lb decrease), while possibly improving alertness.
Depression is frequent among diabetic patients and impairs diabetic management. To maximize response of both depression and diabetic disorder, one should consider the SSRIs in preference over the TCAs.
抑郁症在糖尿病患者中频繁发生。关于糖尿病患者抑郁症的流行病学、生物化学及治疗方面的文献报道较少。
我们检索了1966年1月至1993年7月期间MEDLINE中的文献,并将糖尿病、葡萄糖、高血糖或低血糖等术语与以下各项进行交叉引用:抗抑郁药、单胺氧化酶抑制剂、三环类抗抑郁药、氟西汀、帕罗西汀、舍曲林和安非他酮。所综述的结果包括20篇关于流行病学的论文、15篇关于神经化学物质与血糖控制的论文以及28篇关于抗抑郁药和对糖尿病患者重要因素的论文。另外还从检索到的文章的参考文献列表中选取了一些论文。
糖尿病患者中抑郁症的患病率在8.5%至27.3%之间。抑郁症的严重程度与糖尿病的许多症状密切相关。肼类单胺氧化酶抑制剂(MAOIs),如苯乙肼,由于肼结构对糖异生的直接影响,而非MAOI相关因素,增强了低血糖的动物模型。在这些模型中,多巴胺和去甲肾上腺素的影响似乎是导致高血糖。而在MAOIs存在的情况下,5-羟色胺能的影响会降低5-羟色胺代谢,反而导致低血糖。临床上,MAOI的使用受到诱发低血糖的可能严重程度、诱发体重增加以及所需饮食的限制。三环类抗抑郁药可能导致高血糖、碳水化合物渴望增加(从86%增至200%)以及记忆力受损。5-羟色胺选择性再摄取抑制剂(SSRIs)可能导致低血糖(使空腹血糖水平降低多达30%)和食欲减退(导致体重减轻约2磅),同时可能改善警觉性。
抑郁症在糖尿病患者中很常见,并且会损害糖尿病的管理。为了使抑郁症和糖尿病紊乱都能获得最佳疗效,应优先考虑使用SSRIs而非三环类抗抑郁药。