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Dexamethasone suppression tests in antidepressant treatment of melancholia. The process of normalization and test-retest reproducibility.

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TLDR
The results extend the construct validity of the DST as a state-related marker in nonsuppressors and suggest future clinical applications.
Abstract
• Pilot studies suggest that changes in response to the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) in melancholic patients receiving antidepressants might represent a laboratory marker of clinical progress. We performed weekly DSTs in 31 hospitalized patients with major depressive disorder, primary and endogenous subtypes, during drug-free and subsequent treatment periods. Most nonsuppressors had progressive normalization of DST responses in conjunction with clinical improvement, DST normalization usually preceded or coincided with good clinical response, and failure to normalize was often associated with poorer clinical outcome. Occasional patients with baseline dexamethasone suppression become nonsuppressive after withdrawal from medication, but the DST has no apparent value as a serial marker in patients with welldocumented normal DST findings. Our results extend the construct validity of the DST as a state-related marker in nonsuppressors and suggest future clinical applications.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The corticosteroid receptor hypothesis of depression.

TL;DR: Mouse genetics, allowing for selective inactivation of genes relevant for HPA regulation and molecular pharmacology, dissecting the intracellular cascade of CR signaling, are the most promising future research fields, suited for identifying genes predisposing to depression.
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Elevated concentrations of CSF corticotropin-releasing factor-like immunoreactivity in depressed patients

TL;DR: Findings are concordant with the hypothesis that CRF hypersecretion is, at least in part, responsible for the hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis characteristic of major depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurogenesis-Dependent and -Independent Effects of Fluoxetine in an Animal Model of Anxiety/Depression

TL;DR: A mouse model of an anxiety/depressive-like state induced by chronic corticosterone treatment is described, and mice deficient in one of these genes, beta-arrestin 2, displayed a reduced response to fluoxetine in multiple tasks, suggesting that beta-Arrestin signaling is necessary for the antidepressant effects of fluoxettine.
Journal ArticleDOI

When not enough is too much: the role of insufficient glucocorticoid signaling in the pathophysiology of stress-related disorders

TL;DR: Neuroendocrine data provide evidence of insufficient glucocorticoid signaling in stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders, including alterations in behavior, insulin sensitivity, bone metabolism, and acquired immune responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antidepressants and Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenocortical Regulation

TL;DR: It is shown that antidepressants interfere not only with the production and release of catecholamines and indolamines but also with the signal transduction of those neurotransmitters that have long been implicated in the pathogenesis and treatment of depression.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A rating scale for depression

TL;DR: The present scale has been devised for use only on patients already diagnosed as suffering from affective disorder of depressive type, used for quantifying the results of an interview, and its value depends entirely on the skill of the interviewer in eliciting the necessary information.
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Some Studies of the Protein-Binding of Steroids and Their Application to the Routine Micro and Ultramicro Measurement of Various Steroids in Body Fluids by Competitive Protein-Binding Radioassay

TL;DR: A 100-fold increase in sensitivity has now been achieved by using tritiated steroids in place of 14C-labeled steroids, by utilizing the CBG's of species other than man, and by using adsorption in Place of dialysis or gel filtration.
Journal ArticleDOI

A specific laboratory test for the diagnosis of melancholia. Standardization, validation, and clinical utility.

TL;DR: Abnormal DST results were found with similar frequency among outpatients and inpatients with melancholia; but they were not related to age, sex, recent use of psychotropic drugs, or severity of depressive symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroendocrine Regulation in Depression: I. Limbic System-Adrenocortical Dysfunction

TL;DR: The regulation of hypothalamopituitary-adrenal (HPA) function in depressed patients was studied by a midnight dexamethasone suppression test and disinhibition of HPA activity suggests that there is an abnormal limbic system drive on the HPA axis in primary depressive illness.
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