衰老、昼夜节律和抑郁症:综述。

Inês Campos Costa, Hugo Nogueira Carvalho, Lia Fernandes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言:衰老通常与行为模式的损害有关,而这些行为模式经常被不恰当地视为正常。越来越多的人认为,昼夜节律变化和抑郁症是老年人发生的两种主要重叠和相互渗透的变化。本研究旨在综述该主题的流行病学,病理生理机制,临床发现和相关性以及可用的治疗方案的最新进展。材料和方法:对1995年至2012年12月期间发表的所有使用“昼夜节律”、“情绪障碍”、“抑郁”、“年龄”、“衰老”、“老年”和“睡眠”等术语的英文PubMed文章进行非系统回顾。讨论和结论:睡眠障碍(主要是失眠)和抑郁症已被证明是老年人中高度共同流行和相互促进的疾病。关于年龄导致昼夜节律中断的病理生理机制有广泛的研究,褪黑激素系统的破坏是主要变化之一。然而,明确和明确地将昼夜节律紊乱与情绪障碍联系起来的研究仍然缺乏。尽管如此,共有基因上的分子变化和一些将抑郁和睡眠中断联系起来的病理生理模型得到了一致的描述,临床研究也表明这些病理之间存在双向关系。尽管存在这种关系,但对老年患者的这些情况的临床评估始终显示出相当复杂,因为它们经常共存,其中一些已被证明会改变睡眠和情绪模式。这就是中风、阿尔茨海默氏症和帕金森氏症等形式的痴呆症、几种神经退行性疾病等的情况。虽然目前还没有具体的治疗指南,但可用的治疗方案通常基于这样一个前提,即抑郁症和睡眠障碍具有双向关系,因此,采取具体措施解决其中一种情况将使另一种情况受益。治疗方案包括认知行为疗法、时间疗法、光疗法,以及褪黑激素/褪黑激素激动剂、抗抑郁药和镇静剂等药物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Aging, circadian rhythms and depressive disorders: a review.

Introduction: Aging is typically associated with impairing behavioral patterns that are frequently and inappropriately seen as normal. Circadian rhythm changes and depressive disorders have been increasingly proposed as the two main overlapping and interpenetrating changes that take place in older age. This study aims to review the state of the art on the subject concerning epidemiology, pathophysiological mechanism, clinical findings and relevance, as well as available treatment options.

Materials and methods: A nonsystematic review of all English language PubMed articles published between 1995 and December 2012 using the terms "circadian rhythms", "mood disorders", "depression", "age", "aging", "elderly" and "sleep".

Discussion and conclusion: Sleep disorders, mainly insomnia, and depression have been demonstrated to be highly co-prevalent and mutually precipitating conditions in the elderly population. There is extensive research on the pathophysiological mechanisms through which age conditions circadian disruption, being the disruption of the Melatonin system one of the main changes. However, research linking clearly and unequivocally circadian disruption and mood disorders is still lacking. Nonetheless, there are consistently described molecular changes on shared genes and also several proposed pathophysiological models linking depression and sleep disruption, with clinical studies also suggesting a bi-directional relationship between these pathologies. In spite of this suggested relation, clinical evaluation of these conditions in elderly patients consistently reveals itself rather complicated due to the frequently co-existing co-morbidities, some of them having been demonstrated to alter sleep and mood patters. This is the case of strokes, forms of dementia such as Alzheimer and Parkinson, several neurodegenerative disorders, among others. Although there are to the present no specific treatment guidelines, available treatment options generally base themselves on the premise that depression and sleep disturbances share a bidirectional relationship and so, the adoption of measures that address specifically one of the conditions will reciprocally benefit the other. Treatment options range from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Chronotherapy, and Light therapy, to drugs such as Melatonin/Melatonin agonists, antidepressants and sedatives.

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