Multiple sclerosis and depression.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of mindfulness therapy in treating depression among patients with multiple sclerosis.
Results Summary
The study found that mindfulness therapy, alongside antidepressant medication and cognitive behavior therapy, is effective in treating depression in neurological settings, though depression in such contexts is often overlooked and undertreated.
Population
Patients with multiple sclerosis experiencing clinically significant depression.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | increase | clinically significant depression | patients with multiple sclerosis over the course of their lifetime | 50% | can affect up to | #1 |
clinically significant depression | increase | morbidity and mortality | - | - | is associated with an increased | #2 |
antidepressant medication | decrease | depression is treatable | - | - | reveal | #3 |
cognitive behavior therapy | decrease | depression is treatable | - | - | reveal | #4 |
mindfulness therapy | decrease | depression is treatable | - | - | reveal | #5 |
Clinically significant depression can affect up to 50% of patients with multiple sclerosis over the course of their lifetime. It is associated with an increased morbidity and mortality and is regarded by patients as one of the main determinants of their quality of life. This review summarizes current perspectives relating to diagnosis, the utility of self report screening questionnaires, warning signs of suicidal intent and the biological and psychosocial variables implicated in mood change. In particular, the association between depression and structural brain abnormalities, including those derived from diffusion tensor imaging, is highlighted. Depression is treatable, as the results from randomized controlled trials of antidepressant medication, cognitive behavior therapy and mindfulness therapy, reveal. These positive findings are offset by data showing that depression in a neurological setting is often overlooked and under treated.