| Literature DB >> 28533742 |
Xiaoqin Huang1, Xiaoyun Liu1, Yongqiang Yu2.
Abstract
The occurrence of depression is higher in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) than that in the general population. The mechanism described in previous studies mainly focused on inflammation and stress, which not only exists in CLD, but also emerges in common chronic diseases, leaving the specific mechanism unknown. This review was to summarize the prevalence and risk factors of depression in CLD including chronic hepatitis B, chronic hepatitis, alcoholic liver disease, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and to point out the possible underlying mechanism of this potential link. Clarifying the origins of this common comorbidity (depression and CLD) may provide more information to understand both diseases.Entities:
Keywords: alcoholic liver disease (ALD); chronic liver disease (CLD); depression; hepatitis; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533742 PMCID: PMC5420567 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
The prevalence of depression in patients with CH-B.
| Patients | Methods | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 British HBV carriers | Questionnaire | 34 patients experienced depression | |
| 50 Korean CH-B Healthy HBV carriers | Clinical interview BDI-sf | 23 patients (46%) endorsed depressive symptomatology | |
| 20 CH-B children patients | CDI | No difference between asymptomatic carrier and control group children with respect to depression scores | |
| 43 asymptomatic carriers | BDI-sf Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV GAF Scale | HBV carriers were more likely to have psychiatric disorders than comparison subjects (30.2% vs. 11.6%) Carriers had significantly higher depression scores and lower GAF scores than comparison subjects | |
| 30 CH-B patients | BDI-sf | 20% of CH-B patients were suffering from severe depression, 13.3% in HBsAg carriers, and 3.3% in healthy controls | |
| 190 CH-B patients | Self-report Examine history of prescription medication | 3.7% CH-B patients had a diagnosis of depression | |
| 81 Iran CH-B patients | HAMD-17 | Inactive HBsAg carriers and CH-B patients-excluding inactive HBsAg carriers-differed significantly in their prevalence of depression (10.0% vs. 29.3%) |
The prevalence of depression in patients with CH-C.
| Patients | Methods | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 CH-C patients | Structured psychiatric interview DSM IV BDI-sf21 | 14 (28%) of patients had current depressive disorders | |
| 22341 CH-C veteran patients | ICD-9 CM | CH-C patients were more likely to have depressive disorders than healthy controls (49.5% vs. 39.1%) | |
| 90 CH-C patients | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders | There was a 28% 1-month prevalence of depressive disorders, 72% of whom were previously undiagnosed. | |
| 135 CH-C patients, | DSM-IV | A significantly higher number of lifetime diagnoses of MDD among patients with CHC compared to controls (32.6% vs 12.8%), independent of IFN-α treatment. | |
| 162 CH-C at baseline and treatment with IFN | 20-item SDS | Compared with baseline, mean SDS index scores were significantly increased by week 4 and remained elevated throughout the study. 39% of patients experienced moderate to severe depressive symptoms at some point during the therapy. | |
| 325 CH-C patients | MDI/DSM-IV criteria | 19 patients (6%) had major depression at baseline and an additional 114 (37%) developed depression while on HCV combination therapy. Only 36 (32%) of the 114 patients developed major depression. |
Potential risk factors of depression in patients with CH-C.
| Social factors | Sociodemographic factors | Clinical factors | Genetic factors (Polymorphisms) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cultural differences Stigmatization Long time stress | Age | A previous history of depression | 5-HTTLPR (the s allele of the short/long polymorphism) 5-HTR1A (C-1019G) |