Concussions,
Depression Linked
Excerpt
By Lindsey Tanner, AP
CHICAGO (AP) - Concussions and other head injuries in early adulthood
may significantly raise the risk of depression decades later,
a study of World War II veterans found.
The study has disturbing implications for football and hockey
players, motorcyclists and others who have taken blows to the
head.
Other research has shown that head trauma patients may be prone
to depression shortly after suffering their injuries. But the
new findings suggest that the risk persists even 50 years later.
The study involved 1,718 veterans hospitalized for various ailments
during the war and questioned 50 years later. About 11 percent
who had had head injuries said they currently had major depression,
compared with 8.5 percent of those hospitalized during the war
for other reasons.
Overall, the lifetime prevalence of major depression was 18.5
percent in the head-injury group and 13.4 percent among the other
veterans, Drs. Tracey Holsinger and Brenda Plassman of Duke University
and colleagues reported in January's Archives of General Psychiatry.
The researchers found similar depression rates in veterans who
had received their head injuries in combat and in those whose
injuries occurred elsewhere. Thus it is unlikely that post-traumatic
stress syndrome, which can include symptoms of depression, would
explain the findings, the researchers said.
Plassman said the findings could mean that people who suffer
head injuries today - for example, football players or motorcyclists
- will have a greater risk of depression. A sizable portion of
the veterans who suffered head injuries did so in non-combat situations
such as motor vehicle accidents and sports, she said.
The findings underscore the importance of recognizing the potential
long-term risks of head injuries so that patients can get early
treatment, according to an accompanying editorial.
``The lifelong nature of these disorders argues strongly for
their identification and treatment to improve quality of life,
and perhaps long-term survival,'' Drs. Robert G. Robinson and
Ricardo Jorge of the University of Iowa psychiatry department
wrote.
Men with the most severe head injuries - loss of consciousness
or amnesia for a day or more - faced a higher risk of developing
depression than men with the most mild injuries - those who blacked
out or had amnesia for less than 30 minutes, the study found.
While it is unclear how head injury is related to depression,
Holsinger and colleagues offer some theories. Depression has been
linked with dysfunction in the brain's frontal region, and research
has suggested a strong link between depression and head trauma
resulting in lesions in the frontal region, the researchers said.
In addition, head trauma causes an inflammatory response that
includes increased production of an immune system protein called
interleukin 6, and increased levels of interleukin 6 also have
been found in depression.
The authors said the study is limited by a lack of information
on when depression began. They said it is possible that some of
the men with head injuries had a pre-existing psychiatric disorder
that could make them prone to depression as well as head injury.
But that is unlikely, they said, because that kind of ailment
probably would have kept the men out of the military.
On the Net: Archives: http://archpsyc.ama-assn.org
National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association: http://www.ndmda.org
Reference
Source 102
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