| Literature DB >> 27806704 |
Howard J Aizenstein1, Andrius Baskys2, Maura Boldrini3,4, Meryl A Butters5, Breno S Diniz6, Manoj Kumar Jaiswal3,7, Kurt A Jellinger8, Lev S Kruglov9, Ivan A Meshandin10, Milija D Mijajlovic11, Guenter Niklewski12, Sarah Pospos2, Keerthy Raju13, Kneginja Richter12,14, David C Steffens15, Warren D Taylor16,17, Oren Tene18,19.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vascular depression is regarded as a subtype of late-life depression characterized by a distinct clinical presentation and an association with cerebrovascular damage. Although the term is commonly used in research settings, widely accepted diagnostic criteria are lacking and vascular depression is absent from formal psychiatric manuals such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition - a fact that limits its use in clinical settings. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques, showing a variety of cerebrovascular lesions, including extensive white matter hyperintensities, subcortical microvascular lesions, lacunes, and microinfarcts, in patients with late life depression, led to the introduction of the term "MRI-defined vascular depression". DISCUSSION: This diagnosis, based on clinical and MRI findings, suggests that vascular lesions lead to depression by disruption of frontal-subcortical-limbic networks involved in mood regulation. However, despite multiple MRI approaches to shed light on the spatiotemporal structural changes associated with late life depression, the causal relationship between brain changes, related lesions, and late life depression remains controversial. While postmortem studies of elderly persons who died from suicide revealed lacunes, small vessel, and Alzheimer-related pathologies, recent autopsy data challenged the role of these lesions in the pathogenesis of vascular depression. Current data propose that the vascular depression connotation should be reserved for depressed older patients with vascular pathology and evident cerebral involvement. Based on current knowledge, the correlations between intra vitam neuroimaging findings and their postmortem validity as well as the role of peripheral markers of vascular disease in late life depression are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebrovascular lesions; Clinicopathological correlations; Late-life depression; Neuropathology; Peripheral markers; Structural neuroimaging; Vascular depression; White matter lesions
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27806704 PMCID: PMC5093970 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0720-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Flow chart of possible mechanism of vascular depression (adapted from [233])
Clinical features of vascular depression (VaDep) and non-VaDep
| Clinical features of VaDep | Clinical features of non-VaDep |
|---|---|
| Depression occurring at age 65 years or later | Depression occurring at age 50 to 60 years |
| Absence of family history | Occasional family history |
| Executive dysfunctions, loss of energy, subjective feeling of sadness, anhedonia, psychomotor retardation, motivational problems, reduced processing speed and visuospatial skills, deficits in self-initiation, lack of insight; depressive symptomatology may not meet criteria for any mood disorder requested in DSM-V | Sadness, depression according to DSM-V diagnostic criteria, increased suicidality, reduced verbal fluency |
| Higher cardiac illness burden, increased rates of vascular risk factors (hypertension, etc.) | Lower or same cardiac illness burden and rates of vascular risk factors (hypertension, etc.) |
| Higher risk for cognitive decline and progression to dementia | Lower or similar risk for cognitive decline and progression to dementia |
| Fluctuating course of cognitive impairment due to progression of white matter hyperintensities | |
| Greater treatment resistance and poorer outcome | Lower or same treatment resistance and outcome(?) |
| Associated with increased mortality |
Negative neuropathology findings in late-life depression
| Findings | Reference |
|---|---|
| No association with microvascular disease | [ |
| Cerebrovascular pathology (hemorrhages, infarcts, microinfarcts, lacunes) not more severe than in non-depressed aged | [ |
| No increased white matter change | [ |
| No increased Alzheimer’s disease pathology | [ |
| No increased cerebral amyloid angiopathy (but association between plaque and tangle pathology and life time depression preceding Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis) | [ |
| No hippocampal sclerosis | [ |