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Clinical features of patients with dysthymia in a large cohort of Han Chinese women with recurrent major depression.

Authors :
Wenqing Wu
Zhoubing Wang
Yan Wei
Guanghua Zhang
Shenxun Shi
Jingfang Gao
Youhui Li
Ming Tao
Kerang Zhang
Xumei Wang
Chengge Gao
Lijun Yang
Kan Li
Jianguo Shi
Gang Wang
Lanfen Liu
Jinbei Zhang
Bo Du
Guoqing Jiang
Jianhua Shen
Ying Liu
Wei Liang
Jing Sun
Jian Hu
Tiebang Liu
Xueyi Wang
Guodong Miao
Huaqing Meng
Yi Li
Chunmei Hu
Guoping Huang
Gongying Li
Baowei Ha
Hong Deng
Qiyi Mei
Hui Zhong
Shugui Gao
Hong Sang
Yutang Zhang
Xiang Fang
Fengyu Yu
Donglin Yang
Tieqiao Liu
Yunchun Chen
Xiaohong Hong
Wenyuan Wu
Guibing Chen
Min Cai
Yan Song
Jiyang Pan
Jicheng Dong
Runde Pan
Wei Zhang
Zhenming Shen
Zhengrong Liu
Danhua Gu
Xiaoping Wang
Xiaojuan Liu
Qiwen Zhang
Yihan Li
Yiping Chen
Kenneth S Kendler
Jonathan Flint
Zhen Zhang
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 12, p e83490 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2013.

Abstract

Dysthymia is a form of chronic mild depression that has a complex relationship with major depressive disorder (MDD). Here we investigate the role of environmental risk factors, including stressful life events and parenting style, in patients with both MDD and dysthymia. We ask whether these risk factors act in the same way in MDD with and without dysthymia.We examined the clinical features in 5,950 Han Chinese women with MDD between 30-60 years of age across China. We confirmed earlier results by replicating prior analyses in 3,950 new MDD cases. There were no significant differences between the two data sets. We identified sixteen stressful life events that significantly increase the risk of dysthymia, given the presence of MDD. Low parental warmth, from either mother or father, increases the risk of dysthymia. Highly threatening but short-lived threats (such as rape) are more specific for MDD than dysthymia. While for MDD more severe life events show the largest odds ratio versus controls, this was not seen for cases of MDD with or without dysthymia.There are increased rates of stressful life events in MDD with dysthymia, but the impact of life events on susceptibility to dysthymia with MDD differs from that seen for MDD alone. The pattern does not fit a simple dose-response relationship, suggesting that there are moderating factors involved in the relationship between environmental precipitants and the onset of dysthymia. It is possible that severe life events in childhood events index a general susceptibility to chronic depression, rather than acting specifically as risk factors for dysthymia.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
8
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3ab35dd2e4214f2999bb8686b8e62408
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083490