Skin conductance: A potentially sensitive test for depression

The mean resting skin conductance level (SCL) in 31 inpatients with major unipolar depression was 2.63 mumho/cm2 +/- SD 1.41 compared to 7.81 mumho/cm2 +/- SD 3.0 in the control group. The best criterion below which an SCL could be considered abnormal was 4.3 mumho/cm2 with a resulting sensitivity of 87% and specificity of 89%. There was a significant difference in SCL between males and females but none between drug-free and medicated patients. SCL was abnormal in all depression subtypes. The SCL may represent a biological final common pathway in depression and may prove to be a very effective diagnostic test for depression.

[1]  P. Venables,et al.  Publication recommendations for electrodermal measurements. , 1981 .

[2]  D. Lykken,et al.  Electrodermal activity in euthymic unipolar and bipolar affective disorders. A possible marker for depression. , 1983, Archives of general psychiatry.

[3]  T. Zahn,et al.  Changes in mood and autonomic functioning during the menstrual cycle. , 1974, Psychophysiology.

[4]  H. Akiskal,et al.  Overview of recent research in depression. Integration of ten conceptual models into a comprehensive clinical frame. , 1975, Archives of general psychiatry.

[5]  P. Venables,et al.  Direct measurement of skin conductance: a proposal for standardization. , 1971, Psychophysiology.

[6]  P. Venables,et al.  Bilateral skin conductance and skin potential in schizophrenic and normal subjects: the identification of the fast habituator group of schizophrenics. , 1978, Psychophysiology.

[7]  Electrodermal reactivity: an analysis by age and sex. , 1980, Journal of human stress.

[8]  D. Byrne A Psychophysiological Distinction between Types of Depressive States* , 1975, The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.

[9]  M. Hamilton A RATING SCALE FOR DEPRESSION , 1960, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[10]  J. Feighner,et al.  Diagnostic criteria for use in psychiatric research. , 1972, Archives of general psychiatry.

[11]  B. Toone,et al.  Electrodermal activity in the affective disorders and schizophrenia , 1981, Psychological Medicine.

[12]  M. Lader,et al.  The symptomatic correlates of the skin conductance changes in depression. , 1971, Journal of psychiatric research.

[13]  A. S. Bernstein RACE AND EXAMINER AS SIGNIFICANT INFLUENCES ON BASAL SKIN IMPEDANCE. , 1965 .

[14]  J. Nurnberger,et al.  Faster cholinergic REM sleep induction in euthymic patients with primary affective illness. , 1980, Science.

[15]  M. Weissman,et al.  Affective disorders in a US urban community: the use of research diagnostic criteria in an epidemiological survey. , 1978, Archives of general psychiatry.

[16]  Skin Conductance Characteristics of Depressed Subjects Before and After Therapeutic Intervention , 1981, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[17]  M. Dawson,et al.  Autonomic correlates of depression and clinical improvement following electroconvulsive shock therapy. , 1977, Psychophysiology.

[18]  B. Carroll,et al.  A specific laboratory test for the diagnosis of melancholia. Standardization, validation, and clinical utility. , 1981, Archives of general psychiatry.

[19]  THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL RESPONSIVITY: DEPRESSION AND GALVANIC SKIN RESPONSE , 1963, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[20]  L C Johnson,et al.  Eccrine sweat gland activity and racial differences in resting skin conductance. , 1965, Psychophysiology.

[21]  A. Coppen,et al.  Electrodermal Activity in Depression: Clinical and Biochemical Correlates , 1980, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[22]  P. Venables,et al.  Bimodality and lateral asymmetry of skin conductance orienting activity in schizophrenics: replication and evidence of lateral asymmetry in patients with depression and disorders of personality. , 1974, Biological psychiatry.

[23]  A. Beck,et al.  An inventory for measuring depression. , 1961, Archives of general psychiatry.

[24]  L. Wing,et al.  Physiological measures in agitated and retarded depressed patients. , 1969, Journal of psychiatric research.