Mental Depression
Major Depressive Disorder (Unipolar Depression)
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is the DSM-IV term for serious depression
that is accompanied by neurovegetative symptoms. Lifetime risk of developing
major depression is estimated to be one in four for women and one in eight
for men. Dysphoric mood typically dominates the clinical picture and is
persistent. Major depression is characterized by a change in functioning
that last for at least 2 weeks and at least one of the symptoms is either
depressed mood or anhedonia, and the presence of four or more of the following
symptoms is required:
depressed mood
anhedonia
significant
change in appetite and weight
insomnia or hypersomnia
psychomotor agitation or retardation nearly every day
fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day
feelings of worthlessness or excessive and/or inappropriate
guilt
trouble concentrating
recurrent thoughts of death or suicide ideation
The onset of the illness is variable. Symptoms usually develop over weeks
to months, but they may develop suddenly. Situational factors surrounding
the onset of the illness have no bearing on the diagnosis. Historically,
distinctions were made between endogenous and reactive depression,
but an identifiable precipitant is no longer considered pertinent with respect
to diagnosis. At least half of all patients have recurrent episodes. A family
history of a major affective disorder (major depression or bipolar disorder)
is common. The relationship between alcoholism and depression remains controversial.
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