Hippocampal volume in geriatric depression
Background: There is a growing literature on the importance of hippocampal volume in geriatric depression. Methods: We examined hippocampal volume in a group of elderly depressed patients and a group of elderly control subjects ( N = 66 geriatric depressed patients and 18 elderly nondepressed contro...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biological psychiatry (1969) 2000-08, Vol.48 (4), p.301-309 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: There is a growing literature on the importance of hippocampal volume in geriatric depression.
Methods: We examined hippocampal volume in a group of elderly depressed patients and a group of elderly control subjects (
N = 66 geriatric depressed patients and 18 elderly nondepressed control subjects) recruited through Duke’s Mental Health Clinical Research Center for the Study of Depression in the Elderly. The subjects received a standardized evaluation, including a magnetic resonance imaging scan of the brain. Patients had unipolar major depression and were free of comorbid major psychiatric illness and neurologic illness. Differences were assessed using
t tests and linear regression modeling.
Results: Accounting for the effects of age, gender, and total brain volume, depressed patients tended to have smaller right hippocampal volume (
p = .014) and left hippocampal volume (
p = .073). Among depressed patients, age of onset was negatively but not significantly related to right hippocampal volume (
p = .052) and to left hippocampal volume (
p = .062). We noted that among subjects with either right or left hippocampal volume of 3 mL or less, the vast majority were patients rather than control subjects.
Conclusions: These results support a role for hippocampal dysfunction in depression, particularly in late-age onset depression. Longitudinal studies examining both depressive and cognitive outcomes are needed to clarify the relationships between the hippocampus, depression, and dementia. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3223 1873-2402 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0006-3223(00)00829-5 |