Cerebrovascular disease and late-life depression

被引:101
作者
Kales, HC
Maixner, DF
Mellow, AM
机构
[1] Dept Vet Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare Syst, Psychiat Serv 116A, SMITREC, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Sect Geriatr Psychiat, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[3] Dept Vet Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare Syst, Ctr Geriatr Res Educ & Clin, Ann Arbor, MI USA
[4] Univ Michigan, Electroconvuls Therapy Program, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[5] Univ Michigan, Treatment Resistant Depress Clin, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1176/appi.ajgp.13.2.88
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
Depression may occur as a result of vascular disease in a significant subpopulation of elderly persons. Indirect support for vascular disease as an underlying etiology of late-life depression includes the high rate of depression in patients with vascular disease, the frequency of "silent stroke" and white-matter hyperintensities in late-life depression, and the lower frequency of positive family histories of depression in such patients. The authors evaluate the associations of late-life depression with cerebrovascular disease by reviewing the existing pathophysiological, prognosis, and treatment-outcomes studies. Findings are based on review of the current literature systematically searched in electronic databases. Review of such studies indicates a high frequency of depression in older patients with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, and the possibility of a bidirectional relationship between depression and vascular disease. Studies examining patients with vascular depression have found that such patients have different symptom profiles, greater disability, and higher risk for poorer outcomes than those with nonvascular depression. Since the vascular depression hypothesis was proposed as a conceptual framework, evidence has accumulated that patients with vascular depression may have poorer outcomes that may be related in part to executive dysfunction and consequent disability. However, the association of vascular risk factors with geriatric depression has not been consistent in the studies to-date. Although an association between a subset of late-life depression and vascular disease is clear, significant gaps remain in our understanding. Further research is needed to establish the precise linkages and interactions between vascular disease and geriatric depression.
引用
收藏
页码:88 / 98
页数:11
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