Sections
Changes in Conceptualization of Depressive Disorders | Epidemiology | Definition of Depressive Illness | Neurobiology of Depression | Evaluation of Depression | Treatment Options | Treatment Approaches | Conclusion | References
Excerpt
The past 20 years have seen a shift in the way psychiatrists conceptualize
depressive disorders. This evolution in our thinking has been stimulated
by the results of epidemiological studies and of long-term clinical
follow-up studies, investigations of spectrum disorders, advances
in biological psychiatry, and results of large clinically focused national
trials. In the past, major depressive disorder was viewed as episodic
and self-limited. However, longitudinal observations of patients
treated for major depressive disorder show that after recovery from
an index episode of major depression, patients remain symptomatic
about 60% of the remainder of their lives with another
episode of major depression, minor depressive disorder, or subsyndromal
symptoms of depression (Judd et al. 1998a). Data from
the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Collaborative Depression
Study demonstrated that the recurrence rates of major depressive
disorder are extraordinarily high over time: 60% at 5 years
of follow-up, 75% at 10 years, and 87% at 15 years
(Keller et al. 1982, 1984, 1992; Kupfer 1991).