“I have of late--but wherefore I know not--lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises, and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory.” Hamlet, Act II, Sc. 2.

 

 

 

 

LECTURE 6

 

MOOD DISORDERS

           

Dale L. Johnson

 

            Rachmaninoff was depressed and unable to compose music. He went to a psychologist who told him to repeat over and over all day, "I will write a great symphony." His depression lifted, but he did not write a great symphony; he wrote his great Piano Concerto Number 2.

            The list of famous people who have had an affective disorder is long. It includes Ernest Hemingway, Kate Millett, Rod Steiger, Patty Duke, Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, Calvin Coolidge, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Gustav Mahler, Clinton’s health advisor, Robert Boorstein, Clinton's counsel, Vince Foster, William James, O. Hobart Mowrer, Kay Jamison, William Styron, Vincent Van Gogh, Silvia Plath, and all of the writers of Saturday Night Live (or so I was told).

            Affective disorders have come to be recognized as a major disability by public health researchers. The World Health Organization report by C. Murray and A. Lopez, The global burden of disease, 1996, ranks major causes of disability world-wide. Using as their measure, the Disability Adjusted Life Year (DALY) they found major depressive disorder was number one, followed by iron-deficiency anemia, falls, alcohol use, heart disease, bipolar disorder, congenital anomalies, osteoarthritis, schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Thus, affective disorders disable hundreds of thousands of people everywhere in the world. Major depressive disorder is the most disabling condition in both developed and developing nations.

 

More Information About Mood Disorders

URLs

Bipolar Disorder

www.ndmda,org.                               A consumer's organization.

www.aafp.org/afp/20000915/1343.html

www.guidelines.com/bp2000gl.pdf     An introduction to treatment.

www.psychiatrist.com/bauer/cpgindex_b.htm

www.bpkids.org/printing/004.htm      Information about children.

 

Mood Disorders

www.vh.org/Providers/ClinRef/FPHandbook/Chapter15/01-15.html

 

Depression

www.ama.assn.org/insight/spec_con/depressn/depressn.htm

www.depression.com

www.depression.fallout.com

depression.mentalhelp.net

www.depression-info.com/cgi-bin/welcome.pl

www.healingwell.com/depression

 

 

Self-Help Books

Burns, D. D. (1980). Feeling good: The new mood therapy. New York: Signet. This is excellent. Anyone who is depressed or thinks she or he may be depressed should read it and follow the suggestions.

 

 

General Characteristics of Depression and Mania

            Although the DSM-IV has some mention of 11 types of affective disorder we will be concerned here with only a few. The two most common ones are major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder.

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DSM-IV Criteria for  MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER

A.   One or more distinct periods with dysphoric mood or pervasive loss of interest or pleasure.

B.   Four or more of the following:        

            1.  Increase or decrease in appetite or weight.

            2.  Excessive or insufficient sleep          

            3.  Low energy, fatiguability tiredness

            4.  Psychomotor agitation or retardation

            5.  Loss of interest or pleasure in usual activities

            6.  Feelings of self-reproach, guilt

            7.  Decreased ability to think or concentrate

            8.  Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide

C.   Duration of dysphoric features for at least 2 weeks.

D.   No other major diagnosis (e.g., schizophrenia, organic mental disorder)

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DSM-IV Criteria for Manic Episode

A. A distinct period of abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive, or irritable mood.

B. During the period of mood disturbance, at least three of the following symptoms have persisted (four if the mood is only irritable) and have been present to a significant degree:

            (1) Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity.

            (2) Decreased need for sleep.

            (3) More talkative than usual or pressure to keep talking.

            (4) Flight of ideas.

            (5) Distractibility, attention easily drawn to unimportant or irrelevant external stimuli.

            (6) Increase in goal-directed activity (either socially, at work or school, or sexually) or psychomotor agitation.

            (7) Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities which have a high potential for painful consequences. 

C. Mood disturbance sufficiently severe to cause marked impairment in occupational functioning or in usual social activities or relationships with others.

D. At no time during the disturbance have there been delusions or hallucinations for as long as two weeks in the absence of prominent mood symptoms.

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            Either of the two forms of disorder described above may occur alone. It is common for major depressive disorder to occur by itself, but mania is usually accompanied by depression. In addition there are several other variations on the two major themes.

            Dysthymia is a milder form of depression, but it is long-lasting and has insidious effects on the persons occupational and social relations.

            There are several formal diagnostic listings:

            Major depression, single episode

            Major depression, recurrent

                        2 or more episodes, at least 2 months apart. If one recurrence, odds of a third are very high, 80%.

            Double depression. Depressive episodes and dysthymia occurring together.

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Statistics and Course of Depressive Disorders

            Onset: 27 years.

            [see prevalence table below based on Kessler, Archives of General Psychiatry, 1994]

            Is depression increasing worldwide? The best answer is that no one knows because data are lacking over long time periods. As you can see in textbook Figure 7.3. People born more recently report more life-time depression, but this could be a memory effect. Older people may have had depressive episodes but forget about some of the episodes or tend to minimize their significance in retrospect.

            The course of affective disorders is episodic. People usually recover spontaneously from depressive episodes, but  dysthymia is persistent.

 

            Bipolar Disorder

            There is a milder form than that shown in the criteria above called cyclothymic disorder. It is less severe and more chronic, but otherwise has some of the same features.

            In a sub-type, bipolar II, major depressive episodes alternate with hypomanic episodes rather than full manic episodes. In bipolar I, the person has full manic episodes.

            Kindling is a term that is used to describe some bipolar episodes. In this there is rapid cycling. It is a particularly severe form and does not respond well to drug treatment. Antidepressant medications may provoke a cycle. This happens to about 20% of bipolar patients.

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Prevalence of Mood Disorders

 

                                                Lifetime               12 Months

                                             Male   Female       Male   Female

 

Major Depression                12.7        21.3          7.7          12.9

 

Manic                                    1.6          1.7          1.4           1.3

 

Dysthymia                             4.8          8.0          2.1            3.0

 

Any                                     14.7        23.9          8.5          14.1

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            Onset: The average age is 18 years for bipolar I, and 22 for bipolar II.

            The course is chronic.

 

            Note that more females are depressed than males. This is a consistent finding at all ages after puberty. Why should this be so? Any answer must be complex, but a few things are known:

            1) Girls worry more about their bodies during adolescence and are more likely to be dissatisfied with them (Merten, B., & Lewinsohn, P. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1990).

            2) Premenstral tension is associated with depressed mood. Depending on when the prevalence survey is done some women will be at a pre-menstral tension phase and will report feeling tense and often depressed.

            3) Girls and women have stronger social network ties and a stronger interest in maintaining these ties. If social networks are not functioning the person is likely to be depressed.

            4) An expressive style used more commonly by women may lead to greater reporting of what are taken as depressive symptoms.

            5) A greater sense of "helplessness" in the face of troubles.

            6) A tendency to amplify depressive moods. Women are more likely to ruminate about sad feelings and to allow them to feed on themselves. Depression begets depression (Nolen-Hoeksema, Psychological Bulletin, 1987, vol. 101).

            7) The findings may be an artifact of American culture. In Amish society, where men do not drink or use drugs, rates of depression are the same for men and women.

            Also, do not forget: boys and men do get depressed. It is not only a problem for girls and women.

 

Additional Defining Criteria for Mood Disorders

            Specifiers

            These are additional characteristics of some cases of mood disorder. They include psychotic symptoms such as hallucinations and/or delusions. Psychotic depressive episodes are typically treated with antidepressant and anti-psychotic medications.

            Melancholic features such as early morning waking, loss of libido, loss of appetite, loss of pleasure may be present. These may respond better to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).

            One so-called atypical form is the presence of anxiety. Actually, this is not so atypical. Depression and anxiety are often found together.

            Postpartum onset of depression.  The four week period following childbirth is a time for greater risk for depression. Undoubtedly important in this is physical exhaustion. Post-partum blues are fairly common in the United States, but are unheard of in some other cultures.  When I asked Navajo women if they knew of any women who became depressed after having a baby they were incredulous. They said, "Why would a woman be depressed after having a baby?"

           

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SADs)

            In the most common form of this disorder, depression begins in late fall and continues to spring. It affects about 5% of population.  In winter depression there is a tendency to sleep more and to have increased appetite and weight gain, as in atypical depression.

            This form of depression may be related to the production and circulation of melatonin which is secreted by the pineal gland. There is a higher prevalence in the northern latitudes. However, here is the puzzler: a recent study found no evidence of seasonal affective disorder in Iceland where the sun does not appear for a long time in the winter. Why don't Icelanders have SADs? Are Icelanders immune for genetic reasons?

            Treatment includes exposure to very bright light immediately upon awakening in the morning. Morning light seems especially efficacious. With this the patient should see an improved mood in 3-4 days. It is important the person not expose self to bright lights in the evening.

 

Grief

            When a loved one dies there is a high likelihood of depression (62%), but in most cases this is transitory.

            The best treatment seems to be to confront the death and work it through. That is,  to explore the meaning of the loss and to express the full range of emotions including anger. Exploring usually means talking about the death with intimate confidants, good friends.

            Funeral rituals are designed to help survivors cope with grief. These are formalized activities involving a social group. There is support and understanding, and the ritual marks an end point. This is it. The loved one is dead. We all die. Now the living get on with their lives.

 

Additional Statistics and Course for Mood Disorders

            11% of adults with depression are unemployed.

            44% absenteeism, decreased productivity

            Many lose jobs because of depression-related performance in adequacies. Chief among these are loss of interest and motivation and, quite often, development of a critical or negativistic interpersonal style. It has been said that it is difficult to live with a depressed person.

 

Mood Disorders in Children and Adolescents.

            It is a relatively recent discovery that children can be depressed, although teachers and parents knew it long ago. The problem was in the dominance of psychoanalytic theory which held that depression required a superego, and children did not have a fully formed superego.

            To age three depression is revealed in facial or body expression, eating, sleeping and play. In older children depression is known because the person says something about it. In this the older child is more like an adults

            There is a rise in incidence of depression with age and it becomes especially high in adolescence.

            Depression and Aggression.

            Some children tend to become aggressive when depressed. It is a statement by the child that “The world is no good.” Much of this is the angry behavior that is is commonly diagnosed as conduct disorder. When I was a consultant for Head Start at Allen Parkway Village (now gone) in Houston, I was asked to come immediately to examine a 4-year-old boy. He was extremely aggressive. He threw heavy objects at other children and teachers. He kicked smaller children as they sat on the floor playing. I observed his behavior and found he did not hit children larger than himself, but otherwise was indiscriminate in his aggression. I asked one large teacher to station herself near him and if he seemed ready to throw something, she was to enfold him with her arms and hold him for 30 seconds. This put a stop to the aggressive behavior, but now he spent the day under a table. I made a home visit and discovered that the boy's father had left home after a big argument with the boy's mother. Then, when the mother was at work, having left the children in the care of an 8-year-old, a fire broke out in the apartment and the family's infant burned to death. I had the head teacher engage the boy in play with fire engines and he revealed that he felt he should have saved the baby. His mood began to improve. Then, his father came home and all was well. His symptoms disappeared.

 

Depression in Mothers and Effects on Children

            The textbook does not discuss the very important topic of the effects of depression in parents on their children. There is a vast literature on this topic, but it is not on parents, it is on mothers. Somehow, depression in fathers has been neglected, but it is not likely that their having depression would not have an effect on their children. It may make sense, however, to focus on mothers as they still, despite their numbers in the workforce, have greatest responsibility for child care and all studies show, spend more time with children.

            When mothers have persistent depression their babies sleep less well and are fussier. Their preschoolers have more sleep problems, more conduct disorders, and more depression. Problems continue through the childhood and adolescent years (see, for example, Gelfand, D. M. & Teti, D. M. (1990). The effects of maternal depression on children. Clinical psychology review, 10, 329-353.

            The reasons for the problems are many. Certainly, one is that the child may have inherited a disposition for depression and related disorders such as anxiety. There are environmental possibilities as well. People with depression show more aggravation with and negativity toward others, and they are more critical. In two studies in Houston with our Parent-Child Development Center, with Mexican American families, we found the single best predictor of child behavior problems was the mother's frequent use of criticism of her child. It occurred rarely, but when it did, it was related to behavior problems.

            There are other things, but they can be inferred from understanding other characteristics of affective disorders.

            Although the textbook does not discuss this problem directly, it does discuss other characteristics of depression including effects on social interaction that are relevant.

 

Elderly

            20% of residents of nursing homes have depressive episodes by some estimates. While the text emphasizes that the prevalence of mood disorders is high among the elderly, we should also note that most elderly people are doing well; they are not depressed and are not ill.

 

Mood Disorders Across Cultures

            Each culture defines depression in its own way. For example, my wife and I found that the Lakota Sioux of North and South Dakota spoke of  "tawatl yi sni," or "totally discouraged" and emphasized that people who had this disorder were obsessed with wanting to leave the earth and to go to the spirit world with their ancestors.

            Some cultures such as the Mexican culture may place relatively more emphasis on physical aspects of depression. Even though there are cultural differences in definition it is possible to use the same survey instruments, when language translation is adequate, to gather information on affective disorders everywhere. Furthermore, it appears that the response to cognitive behavioral and interpersonal therapies is similar world-wide.

 

Anxiety and Depression

            Almost everyone who is depressed is also anxious. One likely reason for this is that there is genetic co-occurrence. Another possibility is that our psychiatric classification system is just wrong. There may not be two disorders, just one.

 

Causes of Mood Disorders

           

Genetic Data

            Family Studies

                        These have long shown that heredity has something to do with depressive predisposition.           The genetic contribution to the development of bipolar disorder is especially high.

           

            Twin Studies

                        [See textbook Figure 7.3]

            The evidence is strong for a genetic involvement, especially for bipolar disorder.

            Adoption Studies

            Mixed results.

            Linkage Studies

            There are no confirmed reports of which genes are involved in major depression. There are almost certainly several genes involved in the development of bipolar disorder, but results to date are inconsistent and difficult to interpret.

 

Biochemistry and Affective Disorders

            Neurotransmitter Systems

            Although it is clear that the neurotransmitter system is involved in the development of affective disorders and how they change over time, the specific mechanisms for this are unclear.

            Catecholamine Hypothesis

            Is depression associated with low levels of norepinephrine (this is a catecholamine)? The idea came from the observation that people who took reserpine for schizophrenia sometimes became very depressed. The drug reduced norepinephrine levels.

            Idolamine Hypothesis

            Low levels of serotonin are associated with or cause depression. Successful treatment of depression reduces norepinephrine.

            Permissive Hypothesis

            This assumes that low levels of serotonin cause of depression, but sees this as a matter of interacting with other neurotransmitter systems, including norepinephrine and dopamine.

            Endrocrine System

            Diseases affecting this system such as hypothyroidism sometimes become depressed.

            Sleep and Circadian Rhythms are altered with changes in the endocrine system and sleep is disturbed in mood disorders. Depressed people begin REM sleep quicker after falling asleep.

            Insomnia triggers manic episodes.

            All of this suggests that sleep and depression are linked, perhaps with common pathways.

                                   

Psychological Dimensions

            Context and Meaning of Stressful Life Events

            Rates of depression are higher for people who experience a great deal of stress.

            Psychoanalytic Theory

            The crux of this theory is that depression occurs because anger is turned inward. When I worked as a psychiatric aide at Menninger's in Topeka years ago, a very psychoanalytic institution, we were directed to work with some patients in such a way that they would get mad at us. Thus, the anger would be directed outward and the depression would lift. I never saw it happen.

            Behavioral Theories

            The listing that follows is only to show that a great many clever people have tried to understand depression. And, to some extent, all have contributed to the understanding we have today.   

            Ferster

                        1.  Reduced positive reinforcement for adaptive behavior results from loss of major reinforcers.

                        2.  Social skills deficits impair ability to recover from reduced positive reinforcement.

            Lazarus

                        1. Loss of reinforcer which was a discriminative stimulus leads to disruption of chain of behavior.

                        2. Receive positive reinforcement for depressed behavior from others.

                        3. Undertake tasks they fail to complete.

            Lewinsohn

                        1. Low rate of non-contingent positive reinforcement.

                        2. Social skills deficit (less frequent and more non-contingent reinforcement of others)

                        3. Participate in fewer rewarding activities.

                        4. More sensitive to negative interpersonal interactions.

            Cognitive Theories

            Beck

            Beck's theory is especially important because it is the basis of cognitive-behavioral therapy. This therapy has yielded better results for a wide variety of disorders than any other therapy.

            A.  Cognitions

            1)  Consist of thoughts and images.

            2)  Reflect unrealistically negative view of

                        Self

                        World

                        Future

            3)  Based on schemas and are reinforced by current interpretation of events.

            4)  Expains symptoms of a depressive sysndrome.

            5)  Co-varies with the severity of symptoms

            6)  Logical errors occur in conditions that are negatively distorted (arbitrary inference, magnification, selective abstraction, personalization)

B.  Schemas

            1)  Consist of unspoken, inflexible assumptions or beliefs.

            2)  Result from past (early) experience

            3)  Form basis for screening discriminating weighing and coding stimuli

            4)  Form basis for categorizing, evaluating experiences and making judgments and distorting reality situations

            5)  Determine content of cognitions formed in situations and the affective response to them

            6)  Increase vulnerability to depressions or relapse

 

            Cognitive Behavior Theories

            Bandura

                        1. Decreased self-reinforceing activities (overt and covert).

            Costello

                        1. Loss of reinforcer effectiveness results in generalized disruption of chains of behavior.

            Seligman

                        1. Learned helplessness results from belief in one's inability to effectively control positive reinforcers.

                        2. Results from previous experience of non-contingent positive or negative reinforcement schedules

            Rehm (Professor at UH)

                        1. Selective monitoring of negative events; of immediate versus delayed consequences of behavior.

                        2. Stringent self-evaluation criteria.

                        3. Insufficient self-reward and excessive self-punishment.

                        4. Inaccurate attributions of responsibility.

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HOW TO GET DEPRESSED

            The major psychosocial causes of depression can be summarized in the advice below. Of course, the point is that to avoid depression one should do the opposite.

 

1) Pick your parents: inherit a disposition to depression.

2) Lose a parent early in life and have poor caretaking experiences following the loss 

3) Learn to be critical of self

4) Learn to expect little from others

5) Learn to expect that things will usually turn out badly

6) Learn to demand perfection from self

7) Have many negative life events

            Lose spouse

            Lose job

            Lose cat

8) Have few social supports

            Do not form close relationships

            Avoid having friends

9) Take care not to do things that will provide positive reinforcements for your efforts--             live by the motto: nothing ventured is good enough.

10) Give up active exercise

11) Try not to laugh

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Does Loss of Parent During Childhood Cause Depression?

            There is a general belief, part of the conventional wisdom, that losing a parent early in life predisposes a person to depression. There is a great deal of research on this matter and some of the problems are summarized below.

            The idea stems from Freud's paper, "Mourning and melancholia," in which he suggests that parental loss is an important antecedent to depression.

            When this idea is tested, some research says, "yes" and some says, "no." Why the discrepancy?

            There are a number of research considerations:

            Child's age at time of loss

            Sex of parent

            Sex of child

            Relationship with parent

            Availability of the extended family

            Reason for the loss

                        Parent left family--desertion

                        Death

                                    Cause of parent's death

                                    Suicide

                                    Brief illness

                                    Long illness

                                    Accident

            Is loss a stressorr of a genetic disposition to depression?

            The British psychiatrist, Michael Rutter, has concluded that "Early parental loss predisposes to depression only if it leads to inadequate care of the children and to lack of emotional stability in the family." Clearly, if loss of parent is assumed to be an explanation of later depression in the offspring, the explanation by itself is too simple.

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Assessment

            Obtaining an accurate diagnosis of depression is not easy and too often it is done in a simplistic way. The "gold standard" for obtaining a diagnosis is the structured interview which leads one though a series of questions and observations. These interviews are often used in research, but are rarely used in clinical practice. For this, and for much of research, professionals turn to other procedures. The tests used traditionally in psychology, the Rorschach Inkblots and TAT are poor diagnostic instruments for depression. Another widely used instrument, the MMPI, is good. However, most researchers adopt specially developed instruments such as the Beck Depression Instrument (see Burns book, Feeling Good, for a copy of the questionnaire with scoring procedures) which is used in psychotherapy research, the Hamilton which is more often used in drug research, or one of about 10 other measures. They tend to have many of the same items, but vary in whether they ask for a response in terms of how intense the depressive feelings are or how often they have occurred in a specified period of time. Some are self-report and others require that the professional go through them item by item. There are special instruments for use with people who have schizophrenia, or are elderly. Others are for children and adolescents. Given this abundance of different measuring instruments one is inclined to think that the experts really are not very clear on what depression is. Certainly there are serious questions. Is the depression that is associated with the loss of a loved on the same as the depression that simply appears without special stress or trauma?

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Treatment of Major Depression

           

Medical Treatment

            The textbook has an excellent review of this treatment and I will not repeat it here. I will only add a few things. Anti-depressant medication is extremely popular in American society. A few years ago, Prozac was on of the top-selling drugs of all. It was ahead of medications for heart disease, asthma, etc. The newer anti-depressants, such as Prozac, Paxil and Effexor, have been touted as revolutionary. However, as you can see in textbook Table 7.7 they are not more effective than the tricyclics they were intended to replace and which are much less expensive. Then it was said that they have fewer side effects and are more tolerable. This is also not true; they are about the same. There is another problem: most of the anti-depressive medications are only marginally better than placebo (an inert substance that looks like a medicine). Still another problem: relapse rates are high when people stop taking the medications. They are also high for psychotherapy.

            Some forms of depression, those that include psychotic symptoms such as hearing he voice of the devil telling one that one is sinful, are resistant to conventional treatment. A recent discovery (New York Times, 10/22/02) may be helpful on this. Preliminary results show that Mifeprex (mifipristone), also known as RU-486, eases severe depression. The drug was developed to end pregnancies and does this blocking the action of progesterone. Taking the drug in much larger doses has an effect on cortisol and cortisol may be directly associated with delusions and hallucinations. More research using double-blind methods and larger samples is necessary.

            St Johns Wort (hypericum) is mentioned in the text as a remarkable drug in that it is a natural herb, and not the product of a pharmaceutical manufacturer. Does it treat depression effectively? In the USA we have the results of only one clinical trial and its results were inconclusive given that neither hypericum nor a standard anti-depressant drug were better than placebo (JAMA, 2002, 287, 1807-1813). However, the trials have been conducted many times in Germany and the results are consistent. In a major study (Philipps,1999, British Medical Journal, 319, 1534-1538) hypericum and imipramine were both significantly better than placebo, but hypericum was a little better than imipramine.  The herb does alleviate depression about as well as the standard anti-depressant drugs. Of course, it must be taken consistently as described on the package wrapper. It remains to be seen whether the apparent absence of side effects is really true. There may be effects from continued taking of the drug that have not appeared as yet. Do not consider my remarks as a recommendation or prescription for hypericum. I am a psychologist and not a physician and I do not prescribe medication. If I were depressed and short of money I would consider taking hypericum and following the advice offered in Burns' book, Feeling Good.

            Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective treatment, but is quite expensive, may cause lasting memory problems and may not have long-lasting effects. ECT has a bad reputation owing to the apparently (I say apparently because as a psychiatric aide who assisted in the administration of ECT I know we tried to be as humane and careful as we could) cruel form of administration in past years. Grand mal seizures were part of the process. Now there is a possible alternative. Transcranial magnetic stimulation(TMS)  is being used to treat severe depression. It does not cause a seizure and patients who are treated with TMS are able to drive home from the doctor's office, or go on to work. It does not work for all patients and the question of relapse is unresolved.

 

Psychosocial Treatments

            As these are also very well reviewed in the textbook only a few comments are needed. In the treatment of depression, the psychological treatments are as good as or better than the medical treatments. They have longer lasting effects.

            The psychodynamic therapies continue to be in question. There is some evidence that brief psychodynamic therapy, which is not very different from interpersonal therapy, may be effective. It is clear that traditional psychoanalysis is not to be used.

 

            Therapy for Bipolar Disorder

            Until about 50 years ago, the only effective treatment of bipolar disorder was electroconvulsive therapy. Patients tended to dislike it, and often claimed that it had impaired their memory. Actually, memory is impaired, but only briefly. Many studies have shown that the effects are not permanent. 50 years ago lithium was found to have mood stabilizing qualities. It was not adopted at first, mainly because it is a simple salt (there is much in El Paso water) and pharmaceutical companies could not make money on it. It is highly effective and most patients with bipolar disorder take it. However, it is toxic if lithium blood levels are elevated and so blood tests must be taken from time to time. No one knows why it is effective, but it may act on the neurotransmitter glutamate. Too little glutamate is associated with depression, and too much is associated with mania.

            Somatic Therapies

                        Lithium is commonly used.

                        Anti-convulsants

            Several drugs that were developed to quiet seizure activity have been found to be effective for some people who have bipolar disorder. These are typically used after trying lithium.

                        Tegratol

                        Depanoate

            New Anti-convulsants

                        Topiramate

                        Lamotrigine

                        Gabapentin

 

                        Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)

           

            In addition, in the psychotic phase of mania, anti-psychotic medications such as Haldol or Melleril, or the newer drugs, risperidone, olanzapine, or ziprazadone are used.

 

            Psychological Therapies

            Bipolar disorder has been neglected by the research community and there is not much in the literature about effective psychosocial therapies. The neglect is, in part, due to the difficulty of working with bipolar patients. They tend to drop out of treatment. They break appointments. They say they don't need help, they feel great. This insistence on their well-being is actually a part of the disorder. Insight into the illness is impaired. They have lost touch with the point of view of others and cannot see themselves as others see them. Despite these problems, there is enough in the research literature to go on, and the message is clear: psychosocial treatment is important, but for bipolar disorder it is secondary to medical treatment. Its main contribution may be that it improves compliance with medical treatment.

                        Cognitive Behavioral

            There is some evidence that individual therapy is effective in reducing relapse for bipolar patients. It is also effective in improving adherence to prescribed medication, and it helps the patient deal with guilt associated with misbehavior during manic episodes.

            It should be understood that when the textbook says, on page 227, that family therapy was added to a drug regime, and that better results were obtained, that the family therapy was cognitive behavioral. Often when the term "family therapy" is used it refers to systemic or strategic therapy, and they are quite different from CBT, and also are ineffective with bipolar patients. Behavioral family therapy, also called, family psychoeducation, emphasizes having a family resource group, assessment by the family, and training in communication and problem-solving skills.

 

Bibliotherapy

            Bad health insurance, or none at all?  No money for psychotherapy? Consider bibliotherapy. That is, doing it by the book. Jamison and Scogin (1995) found with 80 people who had mild to moderate depression that following the exercises described in a book by David Burns, Feeling good, 1980, available in paperback, that bibliotherapy was more effective than a no-treatment control group. The reading group went from depressed to not depressed and the control group did not change.

 

Support Groups

            There are two major support groups for people with affective disorders. One is NAMI, and you have the local chapters of these. The website for the national office is www.nami.org. The other is the National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association (NDMDA). There are many chapters in Houston. See the website at www.ndmda.org.

 

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN BIPOLAR AND UNIPOLAR DISORDERS

Bipolar                                     Unipolar

 

Manic episodes present             No manic episodes

Strong genetic                          Weaker genetic  predisposition               

Earlier onset                             Later onset

No sex difference                      More common in women

Sleep more                               May be sleep impaired

Medications:

            lithium                          Anti-depressants

            anticonvulsants

Prevalence low                         Prevalence high

 

Suicide

 

            There are a number of myths about suicide:

                        1.  People who discuss suicide will not commit the act.

                        2. Suicide is committed without warning.

                        3. Only people of a certain class commit suicide.

                        4. Membership in a particular religious group is a good predictor that a person will not commit suicide.

                        5. The motives for suicide are easily established.

                        6. All who commit suicide are depressed.

                        7. A person with a terminal illness is unlikely to commit suicide.

                        8. To commit suicide is insane.

                        9. A tendency to commit suicide is inherited.

                        10. Suicide is influenced by the seasons, latitude, weather fronts, barometric pressure, humidity, precipitation, cloudiness, wind speed, temperature, and days of the week.

                        11. Suicide is influenced by cosmic factors such as sunspots and phases of the moon.

                        12. Improvement in emotional state means lessened risk of suicide.

                        13. Suicide is a lonely event.

                        14. Suicidal people clearly want to die.

 

            It seems odd that so many false beliefs have developed about suicide. Perhaps it is because the topic remains essentially taboo.

 

            Prediction from Psychological Tests

                        There has been some success in using measures of rigidity of thinking as a predictor of suicide , but that is about all. The results of psychological tests do not predict who will commit suicide.

 

            Suicide Prevention

                        There is little evidence of successful prevention of suicide. Researchers are now looking for settings where suicide attempts are relatively high. One such place is in jails. Although there are standards for screening and identifying prisoners who are at risk for suicide, and when these are followed, suicide attempts are low, many jailers do no follow the guidelines.

            High schools are also being studied as potential prevention sites. Youngsters would be screened with depression screening tests and those with high scores would receive counseling.

 

 

____________________________________________________________

Effective Treatments of Depression

 

Classic Studies of Psychotherapy for Depression

 

1st Study

 

RUSH, BECK, KOJACK, HOLLON (1977)

 

 

PATIENTS:                            RANDOMLY ASSIGNED

15 MALE                                   11 THERAPISTS

26 FEMALE

18-65 YEARS OLD

 

41 DEPRESSED PATIENTS

 

COGNITIVE          PHARMACOTHERAPY

 

11 WEEKS TREATMENT--AVERAGE

OUTCOME

 

1.  BOTH TREATMENTS REDUCED DEPRESSION

2.  79% IN COGNITIVE THERAPY SHOWED MARKED IMPROVEMENT

3.  23% IN PHARMACOTHERAPY SHOWED MARKED IMPROVEMENT

4.  COGNITIVE THERAPY HAD A LOWER DROP OUT RATE

             

 

2nd Study

 

MACLEAN AND HAKSTIAN (1979)

 

14 THERAPISTS

BECK SCORE >23                              

20-60 YEARS OLD

72% FEMALE

 

196 DEPRESSED PATIENTS

 

 

BEHAVIOR          PSYCHOTHERAPY     PHARMACOTHERAPY   ATTENTION

THERAPY                                                                                              PLACEBO

                                                                 

                                      

SOCIAL SKILLS        INSIGHT                    AMITRIPTYLINE        RELAXATION

ASSERTIVENESS     CATHARSIS

DECISION MAKING SUPPORT

 

TREATMENT:

8-18 OUTPATIENT SESSIONS

WEEKLY

SPOUSES INVITED

 

OUTCOME

 

NORMAL BECK SCORE

  

        50%                            25%                              25%                             0%

       

DROPOUT

 

        5%                             30%                             36%                            26%

      

SOCIAL FUNCTIONING

 

       BEST                                                                                              WORST

 

MOOD

 

       BEST                                                                                               WORST

 

OVERALL RANK

 

        1                                 3                                    2                                   4

 

            These two studies clearly demonstrated that cognitive therapy was effective in the treatment of depression. Since then there have been many more, and they have also shown effectiveness of psychotherapy.

 

 

Study 3

                                                Rosello and Bernal

                                                             1999

 

Patients: 71 Puerto Rican Adolescents

Therapists: Advanced graduate students

 

                                                            Conditions

                        Cognitive               Interpersonal               Wait List 

                                    Behavior                 Therapy                     Control

                                   Therapy

Sessions                          12                           12                                0

End of

Treatment

Depression

 Symptoms                 Medium                    Low                              High

Follow-up

 Symptoms                   Low                      Medium                     Not Available

Drop-out                     16%                         17%                               22%

 

            This study does indicate that therapies developed in the States with Euro-American and African-American clients, work as well with Hispanic clients. It is interesting that interpersonal therapy was best in the short-term, but that CBT did better over the longer-term.