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Recurrent Depression, Resistant Clinician?

Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 1998
Clinical research has established that depression is frequently a recurrent disorder;1-3 50% of persons who have one episode of major depression will have a second, and 80-90% of those with a second will have a third.4 Bolstered by the testimony of leading experts on affective disorders, recent media attention has been aimed at emphasizing depression ...
S J, Fredman, J F, Rosenbaum
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Early Recurrence in Unipolar Depression

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1989
While some advances have occurred in the maintenance treatment of unipolar depression, empirical data on recurrences of illness following the discontinuation of medication are sparse. We examined survival time during the first 18 months after discontinuation of medication in 74 patients with recurrent unipolar depression.
E, Frank, D J, Kupfer, J M, Perel
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Family history in recurrent depression

Journal of Affective Disorders, 1989
The authors report morbid risks found for depression, alcoholism, and bipolar disorder in first-degree relatives of 179 probands with recurrent depression. Comparisons were made for relatives' gender, probands' gender, and probands' age at onset. Results showed overall morbid risks of 20.7% for non-bipolar depression, 15.4% for alcoholism, and 1.1% for
D J, Kupfer   +3 more
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Recurrent brief depression revisited

International Review of Psychiatry, 2005
Recurrent Brief Depressive Disorder (RBD) is a well-defined and prevalent mood disorder with an increased risk of suicidal behavior and significant clinical impairment in the community and general practice. Occurring at least monthly with depressive episodes lasting only a few days defines recurrent Brief Depressive Disorder. The lifetime co-occurrence
Lukas, Pezawas   +2 more
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Mirtazapine in recurrent brief depression

International Clinical Psychopharmacology, 1998
Recurrent brief depression (RBD) has a high prevalence in the general population (approximately 10%). At present, data on the treatment of RBD are sparse. Results of treatment studies with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (fluoxetine, paroxetine) did not demonstrate superiority of the active drug over placebo in RBD. We report about two patients
M, Stamenkovic   +4 more
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The Recurrence Dynamics of Personalized Depression

Proceedings of the Australasian Computer Science Week Multiconference, 2020
The purpose of this study is to explore advanced methods of complex system dynamics to discover latent patterns from nonlinear time series of personalized major depression. The study was performed with methods for analysis of complex system dynamics, including fuzzy recurrence plots, fuzzy joint recurrence plots, fuzzy weighted recurrence networks, and
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PATIENTS' EXPERIENCES OF RECURRENT DEPRESSION

Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 2007
This study explores the lived experiences of individuals who are suffering from recurrent depression. Open interviews were conducted in Sweden with ten participants aged 19-67. Guided by the phenomenological method of Giorgi, data were analyzed within a Reflective Lifeworld Approach.
Maria E Stigsdotter, Nyström   +1 more
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Life Events and the Recurrence of Depression

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1990
In a study of the prevalence of life events in recurrent depression, 40 patients with recurrent episodes were compared to 33 who were experiencing their first depressive illness. Thirty out of 33 (90.9%) first episode cases experienced life events prior to the onset of illness whereas only 20 out of 40 (50%) of the recurrent group gave such as history.
M, Ghaziuddin, N, Ghaziuddin, G S, Stein
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Recurrent Brief Depression. A New Concept of Depression

Pharmacopsychiatry, 1990
In an epidemiological cohort study from age 20 to 28, DSM-III criteria were used for the diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). Many subjects met the criteria A (dysphoric mood or loss of interest or pleasure) and B (presence of at least four out of eight criteria) but the episodes were shorter than the minimum of two weeks. Within this group of
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Recurrent and Nonrecurrent Depression

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1986
The morbidity risks for unipolar depression were determined from all 763 first-degree relatives of 75 probands with unipolar depression who had been followed up for 12 to 18 years after their first lifetime admission. Significant independent differences were found according to the proband's age at onset and whether the proband had had a single episode ...
R C, Bland, S C, Newman, H, Orn
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