Author:
LAUER C. J.,BRONISCH T.,KAINZ M.,SCHREIBER W.,HOLSBOER F.,KRIEG J.-C.
Abstract
Background. Recent observations indicate that a
certain pre-morbid personality profile (‘autonomic
lability’, i.e. elevated neuroticism, frequent somatic
complaints and increased inter-personal sensitivity) appears to be a
valid antecedent of major depression. However, most of these
prospective studies used samples drawn from the general population,
which limits the power of any observed differences between subjects
who developed a depressive disorder during the follow-up period and
those who did not.Methods. We investigated the psychometric profile of 54
high-risk probands (aged between 18 years and 45 years) without a
current or lifetime diagnosis of any psychiatric disorder, but who had
first-degree relatives with an affective disorder according to
DSM-III-R criteria. Twenty-two control probands, matched for age and
gender and without any personal or family history of psychiatric
disorders, served as the reference group.Results. As a group, the high-risk probands scored higher
than the controls on scales that assessed neuroticism, rigidity,
depressive cognitions, vegetative lability and stress. With an
individual-orientated approach (cluster analysis), 30 high-risk
probands were identified as conspicuous, characterized by elevated
rigidity and increased ‘autonomic lability’. The remaining
24 high-risk probands showed a psychometric profile very similar to
that of the controls.Conclusions. The present findings in 54 probands at high
risk for affective disorders not only strongly underline the
assumption that the personality trait ‘autonomic lability’
is a valid antecedent of at least major depression, but also add the
personality trait ‘rigidity’ as a further and potential
candidate for a true vulnerability marker for affective
disorders.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
64 articles.
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