Literature DB >> 18023876

A final common pathway for depression? Progress toward a general conceptual framework.

Eric A Stone1, Yan Lin, David Quartermain.   

Abstract

Functional neuroimaging studies of depressed patients have converged with functional brain mapping studies of depressed animals in showing that depression is accompanied by a hypoactivity of brain regions involved in positively motivated behavior together with a hyperactivity in regions involved in stress responses. Both sets of changes are reversed by diverse antidepressant treatments. It has been proposed that this neural pattern underlies the symptoms common to most forms of the depression, which are the loss of positively motivated behavior and increased stress. The paper discusses how this framework can organize diverse findings ranging from effects of monoamine neurotransmitters, cytokines, corticosteroids and neurotrophins on depression. The hypothesis leads to new insights concerning the relationship between the prolonged inactivity of the positive motivational network during a depressive episode and the loss of neurotrophic support, the potential antidepressant action of corticosteroid treatment, and to the key question of whether antidepressants act by inhibiting the activity of the stress network or by enhancing the activity of the positive motivational system.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18023876      PMCID: PMC2265074          DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2007.08.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev        ISSN: 0149-7634            Impact factor:   8.989


  230 in total

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  23 in total

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7.  Evaluation of the repeated open-space swim model of depression in the mouse.

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8.  Postsynaptic alpha-2 adrenergic receptors are critical for the antidepressant-like effects of desipramine on behavior.

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9.  Knockout of the norepinephrine transporter and pharmacologically diverse antidepressants prevent behavioral and brain neurotrophin alterations in two chronic stress models of depression.

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