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A comparison of neurocognitive impairment in younger and older adults with major depression

Authors

Thomas, A. J., Gallagher, P., Robinson, L. J., Porter, R. J., Young, A. H., Ferrier, I. N., O'Brien, J. T.

Journal

Psychological Medicine, Volume: 39, No.: 5, Pages.: 725-733

Year of Publication

2009

Abstract

Background: Neurocognitive impairment is a well-recognized feature of depression that has been reported in younger and older adults. Similar deficits occur with ageing and it is unclear whether the greater deficits in late-life depression are an ageing-related phenomenon or due to a difference in the nature of late-life depression itself. We hypothesized that ageing alone would not fully explain the increased neurocognitive impairment in late-life depression but that differences in the illness explain the greater decrements in memory and executive function.; Method: Comparison of the neuropsychological performance of younger (<60 years) and older (60 years) adults with major depressive disorder (MDD) and healthy comparison subjects. Scores for each depression group were normalized against their respective age-matched control group and the primary comparisons were on four neurocognitive domains: (i) attention and executive function; (ii) verbal learning and memory; (iii) visuospatial learning and memory; and (iv) motor speed.; Results: We recruited 75 subjects with MDD [<60 years (n=44), 60 years (n=31)] and 82 psychiatrically healthy comparison subjects [<60 years (n=42), 60 years (n=40)]. The late-life depression group had greater impairment in verbal learning and memory and motor speed but not in executive function. The two depressed groups did not differ in depression severity, global cognitive function, intelligence or education.; Conclusions: Late-life depression is associated with more severe impairment in verbal learning and memory and motor speed than depression in earlier adult life and this is not due to ageing alone.;

Bibtex Citation

@article{Thomas_2008, doi = {10.1017/s0033291708004042}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033291708004042}, year = 2008, month = {jul}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press ({CUP})}, volume = {39}, number = {05}, pages = {725}, author = {A. J. Thomas and P. Gallagher and L. J. Robinson and R. J. Porter and A. H. Young and I. N. Ferrier and J. T. O{textquotesingle}Brien}, title = {A comparison of neurocognitive impairment in younger and older adults with major depression}, journal = {Psychological Medicine} }

Keywords

adult, aged, aged, 80 and over, alzheimer disease, child, cognition disorders, depression, depressive disorder major, diagnosis, diagnosis, differential, female, humans, middle aged, neuropsychological tests, older, people, personality inventory, psychology, psychometrics, reference values, statistics & numerical data, with

Countries of Study

UK

Types of Dementia

Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)

Types of Study

Cohort Study

Type of Outcomes

Cognition

Type of Interventions

Risk Factor Modification

Risk Factor Modifications

At risk population