Depression

Definition and Clinical Presentation of Depression

Term

Clinical features

Major Depression

  •  At least 2 weeks with > 5 of the following
    •  Anhedonia
    •  Change in appetite or weight
    •  Depressed mood
    •  Insomnia or hypersomnia
    •  Low energy
    •  Poor concentration
    •  Psychomotor retardation or agitation
    •  Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
    •  Thoughts of worthlessness or guilt
  •  At least one of the symptoms has to be depressed mood or anhedonia
  •  Symptoms cause significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning
  •  Episodes are not due to another medical condition or substance use
  •  Episodes do not contain mania or hypomania

Classification by severity

  •  Mild to moderate
    •  Intact judgment such that the patient or others are not at imminent risk of being harmed
    •  Little to no aggressiveness
    •  No obvious functional impairment
    •  No psychotic features (eg, delusions or hallucinations)
    •  No suicidal or homicidal ideation or behavior
  •  Severe
    •  Malignant catatonia
    •  Persistent suicidal ideation with intent
    •  Score ≥20 points on the self-report Patient Health Questionnaire – Nine Item (PHQ-9)
    •  Severe weight loss, malnutrition, or dehydration due to decreased intake

Treatment Subtypes

  •  Response
    •  > 50% improvement in symptoms with treatment
  •  Remission
    •  Significant improvement below cutoffs by assessment tools
  •  Resistant
    •  Inadequate response to at least 2 trials of antidepressant monotherapy
  •  Refractory
    •  Highly resistant to treatment without satisfactory response to many sequential treatment regimens

Clinical assessment

  •  History
    •  Assess for above symptoms, suicide risk, family history, and social history
  •  Physical exam
    •  Mental status exam
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