Author:
NEBES R. D.,BUTTERS M. A.,MULSANT B. H.,POLLOCK B. G.,ZMUDA M. D.,HOUCK P. R.,REYNOLDS C. F.
Abstract
Background. While neuropsychological dysfunction is common in geriatric depression, not all
aspects of cognition are equally affected. It has been suggested that depressed patients are impaired
only in tasks that make heavy demands on processing resources and that a resource decrement
therefore underlies the neuropsychological decrements seen in geriatric depression. The present
study examined whether processing resources in the form of working memory and information
processing speed are decreased in depression and whether a decrease in these resources actually
mediates neuropsychological impairment.Methods. Measures of processing resources were administered to elderly depressed patients prior to
treatment and to age-matched controls. Patients whose depression remitted were retested as were
the controls. Subjects also received neuropsychological tests of episodic memory and visuospatial
performance.Results. Depressed patients performed significantly worse on measures of both processing speed
and working memory. While performance on these measures improved in patients whose depression
remitted, the amount of improvement was no greater than that seen in the controls with repeat
testing. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that depression explained a significant amount of
variance on the neuropsychological tasks. However, if the variance associated with processing
resources was removed first, depression no longer accounted for a significant amount of
neuropsychological variance.Conclusions. Processing resources are decreased in elderly depressed patients and this decrease in
resources appears to mediate impairments in several areas of neuropsychological functioning
including episodic memory and visuospatial performance. The resource decrement persists after
remission of the depression and thus may be a trait marker of geriatric depression.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
232 articles.
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