Abstract

BackgroundDepressive disorders are frequent in epilepsy and associated with reduced seizure control. Almost 50% of interictal depressive disorders have to be classified as atypical depressions according to DSM-4 criteria. Research has mainly focused on depressive symptoms in defined populations with epilepsy (e.g., patients admitted to tertiary epilepsy centers). We have chosen the opposite approach. We hypothesized that it is possible to define by clinical means a subgroup of psychiatric patients with higher than expected prevalence of epilepsy and seizures. We hypothesized further that these patients present with an Acute Unstable Depressive Syndrome (AUDS) that does not meet DSM-IV criteria of a Major Depressive Episode (MDE). In a previous publication we have documented that AUDS patients indeed have more often a history of epileptic seizures and abnormal EEG recordings than MDE patients (Vaaler et al. 2009). This study aimed to further classify the differences of depressive symptoms at admittance and follow-up of patients with AUDS and MDE.Methods16 AUDS patients and 16 age- and sex-matched MDE patients were assessed using the Symptomatic Organic Mental Disorder Assessment Scale (SOMAS), the Montgomery and Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), and the Mini-Mental State Test (MMST), at day 2, day 4-6, day 14-16 and 3 months after admittance to a psychiatric emergency unit. Life events were assessed with The Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) and The Life Experience Survey (LES). We also screened for medication serum levels and illicit drug metabolites in urine.ResultsAUDS patients had significantly higher SOMAS scores (average score at admission 6.6 ± 0.8), reflecting increased symptom fluctuation and motor agitation, and decreased insight and concern compared to MDE patients (2.9 ± 0.7; p < 0.001). Degree of mood depression, cognition, life events, drug abuse and medication did not differ between the two groups.ConclusionsAUDS patients present with rapidly fluctuating mood symptoms, motor agitation and relative lack of insight and concern. Seizures, epilepsy and EEG abnormalities are overrepresented in AUDS patients compared to MDE patients. We suggest that the study of AUDS patients may offer a new approach to better understanding epilepsy and its association with depressive disorders.Trial registrationNCT00201474

Highlights

  • Depressive disorders are frequent in epilepsy and associated with reduced seizure control

  • At admission and during the first 2 weeks Acute Unstable Depressive Syndrome (AUDS) patients had significantly higher Symptomatic Organic Mental Disorder Assessment Scale (SOMAS) scores for any given item, reflecting increased symptom fluctuation and motor agitation, and decreased insight and concern compared to Major Depressive Episode (MDE) patients (2.9 ± 0.7; p < 0.001)

  • Atypical depressive disorders are frequent in patients in tertiary epilepsy centers [35], but seizures, epilepsy and EEG abnormalities are overrepresented in AUDS patients in psychiatric emergency units

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Summary

Introduction

Depressive disorders are frequent in epilepsy and associated with reduced seizure control. Interictal depressive disorders in patients with epilepsy have unique manifestations that are poorly reflected in the established classification systems ICD-10 and DSMIV [19,20,21,22,23,24]. Symptoms such as suicidal ideation, frustration intolerance, irritability and motor agitation can rapidly alternate with symptom-free periods lasting one to several days. Blumer and co-workers have called this type of depression “an interictal dysphoric disorder with a characteristic intermittent and pleomorphic symptomatology” [23]. To determine when interictal mood disturbance in a given patient is due to sub-clinical epileptic activity and when not, is often impossible

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