Author:
SIMPSON S.,BALDWIN R. C.,JACKSON A.,BURNS A. S.
Abstract
Background. Late-life depression is associated with
increased subcortical white matter hyper-intensities. There is some evidence
that they are associated with a poorer response to acute
treatment. Neurological signs and neuropsychological dysfunction are further
evidence of
abnormalities in the brain, but they have not been studied in relation
to therapy resistance.Methods. A prospective study of 24 normal controls and
75 consecutive elderly (aged 65 to 85)
patients with DSM-III-R major depression entered a naturalistic study
of treatment. Assessment of
response to monotherapy and then lithium augmentation or ECT created three
outcome groups.
Investigations included magnetic resonance brain imaging, neuropsychological
and neurological
examination.Results. Response to monotherapy within 12 weeks was
shown by 42·7%, a further 37·3%
responded to lithium augmentation or ECT within 24 weeks and 20% had responded
poorly to all
treatments at 24 weeks. Subcortical hyperintensities were significantly
increased in the more
resistant patients. These included confluent deep white matter,
multiple (>5) basal ganglia lesions
and pontine reticular formation lesions. Most of the neuropsychological
impairment was restricted
to the resistant groups and was of a subcortico-frontal type.
Extrapyramidal, frontal and pyramidal
neurological signs characterized the resistant groups. The combination
of extrapyramidal signs,
pyramidal tract signs and impairment of motor hand sequencing
strongly predicted resistance to 12
weeks of antidepressant monotherapy with 89% sensitivity and 95% specificity.Conclusion. In late-life depression a poor response to
antidepressant monotherapy can be expected
in those patients with a frontal lobe syndrome, extrapyramidal signs or
if MRI T2-weighted lesions
are present in both the basal ganglia and the pontine reticular formation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
222 articles.
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