Major depressive disorder Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) – ≥2 weeks of pervasive low mood or loss of pleasure, plus ≥4 other symptoms (e.g., sleep change, appetite change, guilt).
Core symptoms: depressed mood or anhedonia.
Epidemiology: 2 % of world population; peak onset in the 20s; women ≈3 × more likely than men.
Subtypes/Specifiers (DSM‑5): melancholic, atypical, catatonic, anxious distress, peripartum, seasonal affective disorder.
Pathophysiology: monoamine deficits (serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine), HPA‑axis dysregulation, reduced hippocampal volume, inflammatory markers (CRP, IL‑6).
Course: single episode → recurrent episodes (≈80 % will have ≥1 additional episode); severe/psychotic → 90 % recurrence.
Treatment hierarchy: psychotherapy + antidepressant (first‑line); somatic options (ECT, rTMS, ketamine) for treatment‑resistant or severe cases.
Recovery & relapse prevention: continue medication ≥6 months after remission; maintenance CBT/MBCT further lowers relapse.
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📌 Must Remember
DSM‑5/ICD‑11 requirement: 5 / 9 symptoms, ≥1 core, 2 weeks, functional impairment.
Severity specifiers: mild (≤2 symptoms beyond core), moderate (3–4), severe (≥5 or psychotic features).
First‑line meds: SSRIs (e.g., sertraline, escitalopram) – best tolerated.
Continuation therapy: ≥6 months (reduces relapse 70 %).
Recurrence risk: 30 % within 1 yr; 50 % within 2 yr; 90 % for psychotic depression.
Screening: USPSTF – screen all ≥12 yr when follow‑up resources exist (use PHQ‑9, BDI, HAM‑D).
Suicide risk: ↑ in males (higher completion) and in adolescents/young adults on antidepressants (black‑box warning).
Key lab exclusions: TSH, electrolytes, CBC, vitamin D, testosterone (men).
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🔄 Key Processes
Diagnostic Work‑up
Clinical interview → mental‑state exam → rule‑out medical mimics (labs, imaging).
Apply DSM‑5 criteria → assign severity/specifier.
Use rating scales (PHQ‑9, HAM‑D) for baseline severity.
Pharmacotherapy Initiation
Choose SSRI → start low dose, titrate over 4‑6 weeks.
Assess response at 6‑8 weeks; if <50 % improvement → switch or augment.
For non‑response: switch to another SSRI/SNRI or add bupropion/lithium.
Psychotherapy Integration
Offer CBT or IPT alongside meds for moderate–severe MDD.
For children/adolescents → psychotherapy first; meds only if inadequate response.
Escalation to Somatic Treatments
Treatment‑resistant (≥2 adequate trials) → consider rTMS, ketamine, or ECT.
ECT protocol: 2–3 sessions/week × 6–12 treatments; maintain meds afterwards.
Maintenance & Relapse Prevention
Continue med ≥6 months after remission; consider 12 months for high‑risk patients.
Add maintenance CBT/MBCT for recurrent depression.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
SSRIs vs. Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs)
Efficacy: comparable for moderate‑severe MDD.
Side‑effects: SSRIs = milder; TCAs = anticholinergic, cardiac toxicity.
Melancholic vs. Atypical Depression
Mood reactivity: absent in melancholia, present in atypical.
Sleep: early‑morning awakening (melancholia) vs. hypersomnia (atypical).
Weight: loss (melancholia) vs. gain (atypical).
ECT vs. rTMS
Indication: ECT – severe/psychotic or rapid response needed; rTMS – treatment‑resistant, less invasive.
Side‑effects: ECT – transient memory loss; rTMS – scalp discomfort, rare seizures.
Pharmacotherapy alone vs. Combined with Psychotherapy
Outcome: combined yields higher remission rates and lower relapse.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Depression = sadness” – MDD can present with irritability, somatic complaints, or no obvious sadness.
“Antidepressants work instantly” – therapeutic effect usually appears after 4–6 weeks.
“Only severe cases need medication” – mild‑moderate depression also benefits, especially with functional impairment.
“All patients need lifelong meds” – many can discontinue after 6–12 months if fully remitted and low risk of recurrence.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“5‑of‑9 rule” – picture a checklist of nine symptoms; any 5 (including a core) = MDD.
“Stress‑vulnerability cascade” – genetics (30‑40 %) + life stress → HPA‑axis overload → neuroplastic changes (hippocampal shrinkage) → depressive episode.
“Treatment ladder” – start low (psychotherapy + SSRI), step up (switch/augment), jump to somatic (rTMS/ECT) if stuck.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Post‑partum depression – onset during pregnancy or ≤1 month postpartum; hormonal trigger.
Seasonal Affective Disorder – requires ≥2 depressive episodes in winter/spring with remission in opposite season, lasting ≥2 years.
Atypical depression – mood reactivity preserved; may respond better to MAOIs (historically) or SSRIs with added bupropion.
Children/adolescents – higher suicide risk with SSRIs; psychotherapy preferred first.
Elderly – more somatic symptoms, higher hyponatremia risk with SSRIs; choose agents with minimal anticholinergic load.
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📍 When to Use Which
Mild, recent onset, good support → psychotherapy alone or lifestyle (exercise).
Moderate‑severe, functional impairment → SSRI + psychotherapy.
Psychotic features, urgent response needed → ECT (with informed consent).
Treatment‑resistant after ≥2 meds → rTMS → ketamine/esketamine → ECT.
Seasonal pattern → light therapy ± antidepressant.
Comorbid chronic pain → consider SNRIs (e.g., venlafaxine) or add duloxetine.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
Diurnal variation – early‑morning awakening → melancholic subtype.
Mood reactivity + weight gain + hypersomnia → atypical depression.
Psychomotor agitation/retardation + non‑reactive mood → melancholia.
Suicidal ideation + psychotic delusions → psychotic depression (requires urgent ECT/meds).
Somatic complaints + normal affect in collectivist cultures → possible depression masquerading as physical illness.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
“Any two‑week low mood qualifies as MDD.” – must have ≥5 symptoms and functional impairment.
“SSRIs are always first‑line for every patient.” – contraindicated in certain populations (e.g., children with high suicide risk, severe hepatic disease).
“Atypical depression never responds to SSRIs.” – many patients improve; MAOIs are not the only option.
“Normal grief = MDD.” – bereavement lacks pervasive guilt, self‑devaluation, and usually resolves within 2 months.
“Hyponatremia is only a concern with TCAs.” – SSRIs have a higher incidence of SIADH‑related hyponatremia, especially in older adults.
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