Basic concepts of depression

This paper reviews concepts of depression, including history and classification. The original broad concept of melancholia included all forms of quiet insanity. The term depression began to appear in the nineteenth century as did the modern concept of affective disorders, with the core disturbance now viewed as one of mood. The 1930s saw the introduction of defined criteria into official diagnostic schemes. The modern separation into unipolar and bipolar disorder was introduced following empirical research by Angst and Perris in the 1960s. The partially overlapping distinctions between psychotic and neurotic depression, and between endogenous and reactive depression, started to generate debate in the 1920s, with considerable multivariate research in the 1960s. The symptom element in endogenous depression currently survives in melancholia or somatic syndrome. Life stress is common in various depressive pictures. Dysthymia, a valuable diagnosis, represents a form of what was regarded earlier as neurotic depression. Other subtypes are also discussed.

[1]  E. Paykel Manic–Depressive Illness: Bipolar Disorders and Recurrent Depression (2nd edn) , 2008, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[2]  Raymond W Lam,et al.  Seasonal affective disorder: a clinical update. , 2007, Annals of clinical psychiatry : official journal of the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

[3]  R. McIntyre,et al.  Differentiating bipolar disorders from major depressive disorders: treatment implications. , 2007, Annals of clinical psychiatry : official journal of the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

[4]  S. Zisook,et al.  Is bereavement-related depression different than non-bereavement-related depression? , 2007, Psychological Medicine.

[5]  G. Andrews,et al.  Empirical Investigation of Two Assumptions in the Diagnosis of DSM-IV Major Depressive Episode , 2007, The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.

[6]  P. Lewinsohn,et al.  A taxometric investigation of unipolar depression in a large community sample , 2006, Psychological Medicine.

[7]  A. Nierenberg,et al.  Clinical features of bipolar depression versus major depressive disorder in large multicenter trials. , 2006, The American journal of psychiatry.

[8]  Eugene S. Paykel,et al.  Size and burden of depressive disorders in Europe , 2005, European Neuropsychopharmacology.

[9]  G. Parker,et al.  Depression in the Chinese: the impact of acculturation , 2005, Psychological Medicine.

[10]  C. Bowden,et al.  A different depression: clinical distinctions between bipolar and unipolar depression. , 2005, Journal of affective disorders.

[11]  S. Kasper,et al.  Recurrent brief depression revisited , 2005, International review of psychiatry.

[12]  K. Kendler,et al.  DSM criteria for major depression: evaluating symptom patterns using latent-trait item response models , 2004, Psychological Medicine.

[13]  G. Andrews,et al.  Latent structure of depression in a community sample: a taxometric analysis , 2004, Psychological Medicine.

[14]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Randomized, placebo-controlled trial of fluoxetine for acute treatment of minor depressive disorder. , 2004, The American journal of psychiatry.

[15]  P. Cuijpers,et al.  Minor depression: risk profiles, functional disability, health care use and risk of developing major depression. , 2004, Journal of affective disorders.

[16]  E. Paykel,et al.  Life events and affective disorders , 2003, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica. Supplementum.

[17]  M. Serby Psychiatric resident conceptualizations of mood and affect within the mental status examination. , 2003, The American journal of psychiatry.

[18]  E. Paykel,et al.  Remission and recurrence of depression in the maintenance era: long-term outcome in a Cambridge cohort , 2003, Psychological Medicine.

[19]  E. Paykel Mood Disorders: Review of Current Diagnostic Systems , 2002, Psychopathology.

[20]  Vikram Patel,et al.  Depression in developing countries: lessons from Zimbabwe , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[21]  S. Wessely,et al.  The efficacy of drug treatments for dysthymia: a systematic review and meta-analysis , 1999, Psychological Medicine.

[22]  K. Kendler,et al.  Boundaries of major depression: an evaluation of DSM-IV criteria. , 1998, The American journal of psychiatry.

[23]  H. Middleton History of Mental Symptoms , 1997 .

[24]  K. Wells,et al.  Socioeconomic burden of subsyndromal depressive symptoms and major depression in a sample of the general population. , 1996, The American journal of psychiatry.

[25]  G. Berríos,et al.  The History of Mental Symptoms: Descriptive Psychopathology since the Nineteenth Century , 1996 .

[26]  R Ramana,et al.  Residual symptoms after partial remission: an important outcome in depression , 1995, Psychological Medicine.

[27]  E. Paykel,et al.  Clinical efficacy of reversible and selective inhibitors of monoamine oxidase A in major depression , 1995, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica. Supplementum.

[28]  H. Akiskal,et al.  Dysthymia in Clinical Practice , 1995, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[29]  G. Brown,et al.  Life events and endogenous depression. A puzzle reexamined. , 1994, Archives of general psychiatry.

[30]  J. Lau,et al.  The Shatin community mental health survey in Hong Kong. II. Major findings. , 1993, Archives of general psychiatry.

[31]  T. Crow,et al.  Who Benefits from Electroconvulsive Therapy? , 1992, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[32]  R. Porter The anatomy of melancholy , 1990, Medical History.

[33]  IN Teens,et al.  MANIC-DEPRESSIVE ILLNESS , 1986, The Lancet.

[34]  R. R. Parker,et al.  Nosology of atypical depression , 1983, Psychological Medicine.

[35]  E. Paykel Have Multivariate Statistics Contributed to Classification? , 1981, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[36]  E. Robins,et al.  Research diagnostic criteria: rationale and reliability. , 1978, Archives of general psychiatry.

[37]  R. Kendell,et al.  The influence of childbirth on psychiatric morbidity , 1976, Psychological Medicine.

[38]  D. Klein Endogenomorphic depression. A conceptual and terminological revision. , 1974, Archives of general psychiatry.

[39]  T. Fahy,et al.  Classification of Depressed Patients: A Cluster-Analysis-Derived Grouping , 1971, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[40]  W. Heinemann,et al.  Classification of Depressive Illness , 1969, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[41]  Samuel R. Friedman,et al.  Depression: Clinical, Experimental, and Theoretical Aspects , 1968 .

[42]  K. Leonhard Cycloid psychoses--endogenous psychoses which are neither schizophrenic nor manic-depressive. , 1961, The Journal of mental science.

[43]  M. Barclay,et al.  Manic-Depressive Insanity and Paranoia , 1921, The Indian Medical Gazette.

[44]  M. Fink,et al.  Restoring melancholia in the classification of mood disorders. , 2008, Journal of affective disorders.

[45]  D. Bhugra,et al.  Textbook of cultural psychiatry , 2007 .

[46]  E. Paykel,et al.  Predictors of therapeutic benefit from amitriptyline in mild depression: a general practice placebo-controlled trial. , 1988, Journal of affective disorders.

[47]  G. Klerman The scientific status of neurotic depression. , 1985, Psychopathology.

[48]  J. Angst Zur Ätiologie und Nosologie endogener depressiver Psychosen : eine genetische, soziologische und klinische Studie , 1966 .

[49]  C. van Valkenburg [Melancholia and depression]. , 1955, Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde.