| Literature DB >> 26396586 |
Xenia Gonda1, Maurizio Pompili2, Gianluca Serafini3, Andre F Carvalho4, Zoltan Rihmer5, Peter Dome5.
Abstract
The disability and burden associated with major depression comes only in part from its affective symptoms; cognitive dysfunctions associated with depression also play a crucial role. Furthermore, these cognitive impairments during depression are manifold and multilevel affecting elementary and more complex cognitive processes equally. Several models from different directions tried to evaluate, conceptualize and understand the depth and magnitude of cognitive dysfunctions in depression and their bidirectional interactions with other types of depressive symptomatology including mood symptoms. In the current review, we briefly overview different types of cognitive symptoms and deficits related to major depression including hot and cold as well as trait- and state-like cognitive alterations and we also describe current knowledge related to the impact of cognitive impairments on the course and outcomes of depression including remission, residual symptoms, function, and response to treatment. We also emphasize shortcomings of currently available treatments for depression in sufficiently improving cognitive dysfunctions and point out the need for newer pharmacological approaches especially in cooperation with psychotherapeutic interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive dysfunction; Depression; Functioning; Hot and cold cognitions
Year: 2015 PMID: 26396586 PMCID: PMC4578787 DOI: 10.1186/s12991-015-0068-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Gen Psychiatry ISSN: 1744-859X Impact factor: 3.455
Symptoms reflecting cognitive dysfunctions reported by patients in everyday clinical practice
| Cognitive function/domain | Complaint | Impact on everyday life | Report of patient | Exploratory questions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attention | Loses track of thoughts | Cannot absorb information during conversation, watching a movie, or reading | “I can’t concentrate” | Is it difficult for you to read a magazine or to work with data at your workplace, or pay attention to tv or in a conversation? |
| Memory | No short term memory | Does not remember everyday tasks | “I forget everything” | Does it happen that you can not find your keys, you do not remember names, or what you need to buy, or you lose track of tasks to do at home or work? |
| Executive functions | Procrastination and delaying | Not enough self-confidence for decisions | “I can’t decide in anything” | Is it difficult for you to make decisions at home or at work? |
| Psychomotor speed | Brain is foggy | No energy | “My brain feels blocked” | Do you feel your thinking is significantly slowed down? |
Disorders of information processing in depression: frequent cognitive distortions [36]
| Cognitive distortions and logical fallacies | |
|---|---|
| Dichotomous/all or nothing thinking | Absolute and black-and white thinking, refusing anything which includes any minor imperfections |
| Overgeneralisation | Generalization based on a single experience of failure, perceiving a single negative event as an endless series of failures |
| Negative filter/selective abstraction | Designating the whole situation as negative based on a single negative detail, disproportionate attention to negative details and ignorance for positives |
| Discounting positives | Successes, accomplishments and positive characteristics do not count |
| Jumping to conclusions | Negative conclusions in the absence of evidence; supposing without any basis that others will react in a negative way, the person continuously expects things to end badly |
| Magnification/minimization | Arbitrary and disproportionate maximization of own faults and negative events, arbitrary and disproportionate minimization of good characteristics or events |
| Emotional reasoning/logic | Reasoning based on emotions, treating negative emotions as facts, and drawing conclusions based on them |
| “Should” statements | Formulating expectations as primary motives, criticizing self and others with should and must not statements |
| Labeling | Identifying self with own mistakes, applying these labels instead of admitting and acknowledging own mistakes |
| Personalisation and blame | Holding self responsible for something the person has no control over or something the person is not responsible for, or blaming others ignoring own role |