Sociotropy, autonomy, stress, and depression in Cushing syndrome

Cognitive theory ascribes nonendogenous depression to latent dysfunctional beliefs activated by stressors impinging upon core values (e.g., rejection for a sociotropic person). To address ambiguities in past tests of the theory, this study measured personality (Sociotropy-Autonomy Scale) and recent...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of nervous and mental disease 1996-06, Vol.184 (6), p.362-367
Hauptverfasser: BURGESS, E, DORN, L. D, HAAGA, D. A. F, CHROUSOS, G
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cognitive theory ascribes nonendogenous depression to latent dysfunctional beliefs activated by stressors impinging upon core values (e.g., rejection for a sociotropic person). To address ambiguities in past tests of the theory, this study measured personality (Sociotropy-Autonomy Scale) and recent stressors (Life Experience Survey and Hassles Scale) among 14 Cushing syndrome patients and 12 controls. Patients scored nonsignificantly higher in sociotropy, and sociotropy correlated positively with depression among patients. Because depression in Cushing syndrome presumably results from biological dysfunction rather than from the interaction of personality and relevant stressors, these results imply that sociotropy may be a consequence of depression as opposed to a contributory cause. There was no congruence between personality and types of stressors reported, which suggest that mood-dependent recall does not account for past evidence of congruence.
ISSN:0022-3018
1539-736X
DOI:10.1097/00005053-199606000-00006