Literature DB >> 19379534

Maladaptive mood repair responses distinguish young adults with early-onset depressive disorders and predict future depression outcomes.

M Kovacs1, J Rottenberg, C George.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinical depression involves persistent dysphoria, implicating impaired affect regulation or mood repair failure. However, there is comparatively little information about the mood repair repertoires of individuals with histories of clinical depression, how their repertories differ from that of never-depressed people, and whether particular types of mood repair responses differentially contribute to depression risk.
METHOD: Adult probands who had childhood-onset depressive disorder (n=215) and controls with no history of major mental disorder (n=122) reported which specific (cognitive, behavioral, interpersonal and somatic-sensory) responses they typically deploy when experiencing sad affect, including responses known to appropriately attenuate dysphoria ('adaptive' responses) and those known to exacerbate dysphoria in the short or long run ('maladaptive' responses). Subjects were longitudinally followed and evaluated.
RESULTS: Remitted probands and probands in depressive episodes both reported a greater number of maladaptive responses and fewer adaptive responses to their own sadness than did controls, although probands did not have an absolute deficiency of adaptive responses. Maladaptive (but not adaptive) mood repair responses predicted future increases in depression symptoms and an increased probability of a recurrent depressive episode among probands (even after controlling for several clinical predictors of course). Post-hoc analyses revealed that maladaptive non-cognitive and maladaptive cognitive mood repair response sets each predicted depression outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with past and present episodes of depressive disorder report an array of cognitive and non-cognitive responses to their own sadness that are likely to exacerbate that affect, and this pattern predicts a worse course of the disorder.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19379534      PMCID: PMC6586228          DOI: 10.1017/S0033291709005789

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  18 in total

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2.  Familiality of mood repair responses among youth with and without histories of depression.

Authors:  Lauren M Bylsma; Ilya Yaroslavsky; Jonathan Rottenberg; Enikő Kiss; Krisztina Kapornai; Kitti Halas; Roberta Dochnal; Eszter Lefkovics; Ildikό Baji; Ágnes Vetrό; Maria Kovacs
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3.  The persistence of hedonically-based mood repair among young offspring at high- and low-risk for depression.

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Review 4.  Developmental Demands of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depression in Children and Adolescents: Cognitive, Social, and Emotional Processes.

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5.  The Development of Mood Repair Response Repertories: I. Age-Related Changes Among 7- to 14-Year-Old Depressed and Control Children and Adolescents.

Authors:  Maria Kovacs; Nestor L Lopez-Duran; Charles George; László Mayer; Ldiko Baji; Enikö Kiss; Ágnes Vetró; Krisztina Kapornai
Journal:  J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol       Date:  2017-12-18

Review 6.  Practitioner review: Dysphoria and its regulation in child and adolescent depression.

Authors:  Maria Kovacs; Ilya Yaroslavsky
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2013-11-21       Impact factor: 8.982

7.  Combinations of resting RSA and RSA reactivity impact maladaptive mood repair and depression symptoms.

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8.  Mood repair via attention refocusing or recall of positive autobiographical memories by adolescents with pediatric-onset major depression.

Authors:  Maria Kovacs; Ilya Yaroslavsky; Jonathan Rottenberg; Charles J George; Ildikó Baji; István Benák; Roberta Dochnal; Kitti Halas; Enikő Kiss; Ágnes Vetró; Krisztina Kapornai
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2015-01-03       Impact factor: 8.982

9.  Parasympathetic nervous system activity predicts mood repair use and its effectiveness among adolescents with and without histories of major depression.

Authors:  Ilya Yaroslavsky; Jonathan Rottenberg; Lauren M Bylsma; J Richard Jennings; Charles George; Ildikó Baji; István Benák; Roberta Dochnal; Kitti Halas; Krisztina Kapornai; Enikő Kiss; Attila Makai; Hedvig Varga; Ágnes Vetró; Maria Kovacs
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2016-03-07

10.  Pupillary reactivity to negative stimuli prospectively predicts recurrence of major depressive disorder in women.

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