Loading...
Please wait, while we are loading the content...
Correlación entre el diagnóstico de depresión y la sintomatología presentada en pacientes de atención primaria
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Blázquez, Bárbara Oliván Aranda, Encarnación Rubio Sanz, Olga García Botaya, Rosa Magallón |
| Copyright Year | 2016 |
| Abstract | espanolLa depresion mayor es una enfermedad cronica con una alta prevalencia que cursa habitualmente de manera episodica, con una duracion media del episodio de 16 semanas. No se han encontrado analisis que evaluen la concordancia entre la aparicion de los mismos y la evolucion del episodio. El objetivo de este estudio es analizar la concordancia entre la evolucion sintomatica (aparicion, mantenimiento, remision de los diversos sintomas) y la evolucion del diagnostico de depresion mayor (aparicion, mantenimiento y remision) en una cohorte de personas con y sin diagnostico de depresion mayor. Se realizo un estudio de cohortes prospectivo a un ano de seguimiento en el que se entrevisto a una muestra aleatoria de 741 sujetos que acudian a consultas de atencion pri- maria, se elaboro el diagnostico de depresion segun criterios del DSM-IV y se analizo la sintomatologia que presentaba. Estos sujetos fueron re-evaluados a los 6 meses y 12 meses. El estado de animo deprimido, la disminucion del interes o anhedonia y los sintomas relacionados con el sueno (insomnio o hipersomnia), la agitacion, el sentimiento de culpa y la fatiga o perdida de energia son concordantes con el diagnostico. El resto de los sintomas muestran una evolucion independiente de la evolucion del diagnostico. En Atencion Primaria, es importante conocer que sintomas son claves en la evolucion del diagnostico con la finalidad de conseguir la remision total de la depresion y evitar mantenimiento de sintomatologia residual que puede dar lugar a prodromos. EnglishDepression is a chronic disease with a high prevalence that normally is episodic and an average episodic duration of 16 weeks. No analyses that evaluate the correlation between the evolution of the episode and its appearance have been found. The aim of this study is to analyze the correlation between symptomatic progression (appearance, maintenance, remission of different symptoms) and the evolution of the diagnosis of depression (onset, maintenance, and remission) in a cohort of patients diagnosed with and without major depression. A prospective cohort study was performed with a one year follow-up in which a random sample of 741 subjects attending primary care was interviewed. Diagnosis of depression was made according to DSM-IV criteria and symptoms presented were analyzed. These subjects were re-evaluated at 6 months and 12 months. Depressed mood state, decreased interest or anhedonia and symptoms related to sleep (insomnia or hypersomnia), agitation, feeling of guilt, fatigue or energy loss, are consistent with the diagnosis. The rest of the symptoms display an evolution independent of the diagnostic trends. In Primary Care, it is important to know which are the key symptoms in the evolution of the diagnosis in order to achieve full remission of depression and avoid maintenance of residual symptoms that can become prodromal. |
| Starting Page | 55 |
| Ending Page | 63 |
| Page Count | 9 |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| Volume Number | 44 |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | https://actaspsiquiatria.es/repositorio/18/100/ESP/18-100-ESP-55-63-220189.pdf |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |