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Phenomenology of Major Depression

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Title: Phenomenology of Major Depression


1
Phenomenology of Major Depression
  • C. Robert Cloninger, MD
  • Washington University in St. Louis

2
Outline
  • Basic Questions
  • How do we recognize that a person has Major
    Depressive Disorder?
  • What does it mean to say a person has MDD?
  • What are the criteria for diagnosing MDD?
  • What other conditions resemble MDD and need to be
    distinguished?
  • Are there more specific subtypes of MDD?
  • What is the range of features and functions of
    depressive disorders?
  • What are the observable vulnerability factors
    underlying MDD?
  • Are there ways to recognize the causes of
    depression rather than just categorizing or
    quantifying its symptoms?

3
How is Major Depression recognized?
  • Set of observable phenomena summarized as
    diagnostic criteria for MDD
  • May also be recognized as a felt experience of
    inter-subjectivity
  • May be inferred as masked or latent
    depression to explain suicidal and other
    depression-related behaviors even when denied
    (e.g., alcoholic men may be etiologically
    comparable to depressive women in some disease
    spectrum models)

4
Types of Phenomenological Models
  • Categorical Models diseases with subtypes or
    disease spectra
  • Dimensional Models configurations of traits or
    factors
  • Functional Models psychodynamic processes,
    complex adaptive systems

5
Categorical Model - DSM-IV Inclusion criteria of
MDD
  • Presence of one or more Major Depressive Episodes
  • Two or more weeks with FIVE or more symptoms
    including depressed mood or loss of interest or
    pleasure
  • Depressed mood
  • Loss of interest or pleasure in most activities
  • Loss or gain in weight or appetite
  • Insomnia or hypersomnia
  • Psychomotor agitation or retardation
  • Fatigue or loss of energy
  • Worthlessness or guilt
  • Poor concentration or indecision
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicidal ideation
  • Significant distress or impairment in social,
    occupational or other important areas of
    functioning

6
Exclusion Criteria for DSM-IV MDD
  • Not better accounted for by Schizoaffective
    Disorder and not superimposed on Schizophrenia,
    Schizophreniform Disorder, Delusional Disorder,
    or Psychotic disorder NOS
  • Never had a manic episode, mixed episode, or a
    hypomanic episode
  • Not due to direct physiological effects of a
    substance (medication or drugs of abuse) or a
    general medical condition (e.g., hypothyroidism)
  • Not better accounted for by Bereavement (i.e.,
    persist more than two months after death or
    characterized by major impairment or
    worthlessness, suicidal ideation, psychotic
    symptoms, or psychomotor retardation)

7
Specifiers for subtyping DSM-IV MDD
  • Can specify status and/or features as
  • Mild, moderate, severe with or without psychotic
    features
  • Chronic (2 or more years)
  • With Catatonic Features (stupor or stereotypy)
  • With Melancholic Features (anhedonia worse in
    am, guilt, agitation/retarded)
  • With Atypical Features (reactive weight gain,
    hypersomnia, reject sensitive)
  • With Postpartum Onset
  • With or without inter-episode recovery
  • With Seasonal Pattern (e.g. fall onset, spring
    remission)

8
Examples of Masked Depressive Disorders
  • Studies of individuals and families reveal that
    MDD is often comorbid with other mental disorders
    including personality disorders, substance abuse,
    anxiety disorders, and eating disorders in
    particular
  • Individuals with only primary major depression
    by definition have no antecedent psychiatric
    disorder and they have a DEFICIT of personality
    disorders and other psychopathology in their
    relatives (Maser Cloninger , 1990)
  • Depressive Spectrum Disorder is characterized by
    major depression in women and by alcoholism and
    antisocial personality disorder in male relatives
    (Winokur)
  • Men with alcoholism and antisocial PD have
    increased risk of suicide and suicide attempts so
    recognition of this depressive behavior
    requires screening for substance dependence and
    personality maturity, even though the men may
    have a gender-role or sociocultural bias against
    disclosure of subjective depressive symptoms

9
Dimensional Models of Mood State
  • Dimensional analysis shows that positive and
    negative emotions are distinct traits with
    dissociable causes and consequences (Tellegan,
    Watson See Positive and Negative Affect Scale)
  • Positive Emotions include feeling happy, joyful,
    optimistic, enthusiastic
  • Negative Emotions include feeling sad, anxious,
    pessimistic, discouraged
  • Major Depressive Criteria confound the presence
    of negative emotions and the absence of positive
    emotions whereas these are distinct processes
    genetically, biologically, and cognitively
  • Double Depression Dysthymia (mild chronic
    depression) plus MDD can also be described in
    terms of personality traits high Harm Avoidance
    and/or low Self-directedness plus major
    depression under stress)
  • How do the categorical and dimensional models
    account for episodic course? They both try to
    exclude external causes from environment or
    internal physiology. They deal with symptoms, not
    causes.

10
Identifying causes -- Personality in depressives,
sibs of depressives, controls (Farmer et al.,
2002)
11
The Psychobiological Model of Personality
(Cloninger 1993)
12
The Temperament Cube (Cloninger 1987)
13
The Character Cube (Cloninger 1993)
14
(1) Definition of Mental Health WHO 2001
  • A state of well-being in which the person
  • Realizes and uses his or her own abilities
  • Can cope with the normal stresses of life
  • Can work productively and fruitfully
  • Is able to contribute to his or her community
  • Indivisible from physical health
  • More than the absence of disease

WHO (2001)Herrman H et al (2005)
15
How is Well-Being measured?
  • Emotions presence of positive emotions and
    absence of negative emotions, as in the Watsons
    PANAS
  • Personality maturity and integration of
    character traits, as in the Temperament and
    Character Inventory (TCI), Antonofskys measures
    of coherence, or Ryffs measures of eudaimonic
    well-being
  • Life Satisfaction reliable subjective rating, as
    in Dieners SWBS or WHOs measures of Quality of
    Life
  • Virtues prototypical character traits like
    courage, justice, moderation, honor, wisdom,
    patience, love, hope, and faith, as in Peterson
    and Seligmans Character Strengths and Virtues
    inventory

16
Higher Cognitive Functions Mental Self-Government
  • Executive Functions (Self-directedness)
  • responsible, purposeful, resourceful
  • Legislative Functions (Cooperativeness)
  • flexible, helpful, compassionate
  • Judicial Functions (Self-transcendence)
  • judicious, insightful, intuitive

17
Happiness and Sadness depend on all 3 TCI
character dimensions
Facts - Character and Hedonic Well-Being
Cloninger, Feeling Good The Science of
Well-Being, 2004
18
Emotional, Physical, and Social Well-being depend
on Character Profiles
Zohar Cloninger, 2009
19
Summary
  • Major Depressive Disorders can be understood
    phenomenologically from several perspectives with
    fundamentally different assumptions
  • Major Depressive Disorders are a combination of
    the presence of negative emotions (depression,
    anxiety, guilt, worthlessness), absence of
    positive emotions (diminished interest,
    happiness, joy, hope), disturbance of appetite,
    energy, concentration, and dysfunctional
    attitudes/perceptions
  • Vulnerability factors are present in relatives
    and prior to onset
  • Onset of illness is related to bio-psycho-social
    sources of stress, representing lack of
    resilience or ability to adapt to loss,
    non-support, blows to self-image and hope
  • Focus on depression as a discrete disease is
    inadequate generally but provides a way to focus
    on a moderately distinct group of people
  • The variability in phenomenological features
    corresponds to variability in etiological
    features offering hope for functional and causal
    understanding of MDD as a complex adaptive system
    that is more realistic than categorical or
    dimensional models

20
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