Temperament and hypercortisolemia in depression.
暂无分享,去创建一个
OBJECTIVE
The authors examined the relationships among depression severity, melancholia, and cortisol level and the relationship between temperament, as measured with the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire, and cortisol level.
METHOD
Morning and afternoon cortisol levels of 40 healthy comparison subjects and 96 patients with major depression were measured. The depressed patients were rated for depression severity and melancholia, and they completed the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire.
RESULTS
Temperament, especially dependence and extravagance, but not depressive symptoms, was the major determinant of the hypercortisolemia observed in the depressed patients.
CONCLUSIONS
For research in biological psychiatry to advance, more attention needs to be paid to the individual differences in biology that underlie any state-dependent biologic dysfunction.