Depression has a strong relationship to alterations in the immune, endocrine ad neural system
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Accepted version
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2500007Utgivelsesdato
2009Metadata
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Originalversjon
Current Psychiatry Reviews. 2009, 5 287-297.Sammendrag
Epidemiological findings indicate a connection between depressive symptoms and changes in status of the immune
system in depressed patients. This raises the possibility of causative connections. Theories on mechanisms for interactions
between immune and affective systems – directly and via endocrine system – are evolving. Such hypothesized
causative connections are supported by several findings. First, in depressed patients changes in the status of the immune
system in vivo and ex vivo are seen. Also, depressive symptoms are seen in patients with altered immune status (physiologically,
pathologically or chemically induced). Knowledge in this field may have implications regarding psychiatric follow
up of physically ill people suffering from diseases caused by an altered immune system (long lasting infections, autoimmune
diseases, hypersensitivity disorders) as well as disorders for which treatment and prognoses depends on the immune
system (infections, cancer). Similarly, medical treatment of depressed patients may be adjusted by more specific
knowledge about the interaction between neuroimmunology and depression. Important findings and the present knowledge
and theories are reviewed.