| Literature DB >> 11790641 |
Stephen Salloway1, Patricia A Boyle, Stephen Correia, Paul F Malloy, Deborah A Cahn-Weiner, Lon Schneider, K Ranga Rama Krishnan, Raj Nakra.
Abstract
The authors examined differences in antidepressant treatment response in geriatric outpatients with high vs. low levels of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-defined subcortical hyperintensities (SH). Participants included 59 outpatients with mild-to-moderate depression (mean age: 69+/-5.63 years; mean Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression score: 21+/-2.88) who participated in a placebo-controlled trial of sertraline and underwent a standardized brain MRI. Results revealed that the high-SH group was significantly older than the low-SH group but, contrary to the hypothesis, antidepressant treatment response did not differ between the high- and low-SH groups. The association between SH and antidepressant treatment response in depressed geriatric outpatients remains unclear and deserves further investigation.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11790641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry ISSN: 1064-7481 Impact factor: 4.105