The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Alves, Lucas Primo de Carvalho
Data de Publicação: 2017
Outros Autores: Fleck, Marcelo Pio de Almeida, Boni, Aline, Rocha, Neusa Sica da
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/180310
Resumo: Objectives Melancholic features of depression (MFD) seem to be a unidimensional group of signs and symptoms. However, little importance has been given to the evaluation of what features are related to a more severe disorder. That is, what are the MFD that appear only in the most depressed patients. We aim to demonstrate how each MFD is related to the severity of the major depressive disorder. Methods We evaluated both the Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS-17) and its 6-item melancholic subscale (HAM-D6) in 291 depressed inpatients using Rasch analysis, which computes the severity of each MFD. Overall measures of model fit were mean (±SD) of items and persons residual = 0 (±1); low χ2 value; p>0.01. Results For the HDRS-17 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.35 (±1.4); mean (±SD) of person residuals = -0.15 (±1.09); χ2 = 309.74; p<0.00001. For the HAM-D6 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.5 (±0.86); mean (±SD) of person residuals = 0.15 (±0.91); χ2 = 56.13; p = 0.196. MFD ordered by crescent severity were depressed mood, work and activities, somatic symptoms, psychic anxiety, guilt feelings, and psychomotor retardation. Conclusions Depressed mood is less severe, while guilt feelings and psychomotor retardation are more severe MFD in a psychiatric hospitalization. Understanding depression as a continuum of symptoms can improve the understanding of the disorder and may improve its perspective of treatment.
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spelling Alves, Lucas Primo de CarvalhoFleck, Marcelo Pio de AlmeidaBoni, AlineRocha, Neusa Sica da2018-07-10T02:33:20Z20171932-6203http://hdl.handle.net/10183/180310001067376Objectives Melancholic features of depression (MFD) seem to be a unidimensional group of signs and symptoms. However, little importance has been given to the evaluation of what features are related to a more severe disorder. That is, what are the MFD that appear only in the most depressed patients. We aim to demonstrate how each MFD is related to the severity of the major depressive disorder. Methods We evaluated both the Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS-17) and its 6-item melancholic subscale (HAM-D6) in 291 depressed inpatients using Rasch analysis, which computes the severity of each MFD. Overall measures of model fit were mean (±SD) of items and persons residual = 0 (±1); low χ2 value; p>0.01. Results For the HDRS-17 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.35 (±1.4); mean (±SD) of person residuals = -0.15 (±1.09); χ2 = 309.74; p<0.00001. For the HAM-D6 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.5 (±0.86); mean (±SD) of person residuals = 0.15 (±0.91); χ2 = 56.13; p = 0.196. MFD ordered by crescent severity were depressed mood, work and activities, somatic symptoms, psychic anxiety, guilt feelings, and psychomotor retardation. Conclusions Depressed mood is less severe, while guilt feelings and psychomotor retardation are more severe MFD in a psychiatric hospitalization. Understanding depression as a continuum of symptoms can improve the understanding of the disorder and may improve its perspective of treatment.application/pdfengPLoS ONE. San Francisco. Vol. 12, no. 1 (Jan. 2017), e0170000, 13 p.Escalas de graduação psiquiátricaTranstorno depressivo maiorMeia-idadeEstudos transversaisThe major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndromeEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSORIGINAL001067376.pdf001067376.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf800150http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/180310/1/001067376.pdfd1d2372408887c0e72fe378d32634661MD51TEXT001067376.pdf.txt001067376.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain47866http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/180310/2/001067376.pdf.txtdb2929e8a1202959b2a810dcb9daad2eMD5210183/1803102023-09-24 03:39:12.996907oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/180310Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2023-09-24T06:39:12Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
title The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
spellingShingle The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
Alves, Lucas Primo de Carvalho
Escalas de graduação psiquiátrica
Transtorno depressivo maior
Meia-idade
Estudos transversais
title_short The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
title_full The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
title_fullStr The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
title_full_unstemmed The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
title_sort The major depressive disorder hierarchy : rasch analysis of 6 items of the Hamilton depression scale covering the continuum of depressive syndrome
author Alves, Lucas Primo de Carvalho
author_facet Alves, Lucas Primo de Carvalho
Fleck, Marcelo Pio de Almeida
Boni, Aline
Rocha, Neusa Sica da
author_role author
author2 Fleck, Marcelo Pio de Almeida
Boni, Aline
Rocha, Neusa Sica da
author2_role author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Alves, Lucas Primo de Carvalho
Fleck, Marcelo Pio de Almeida
Boni, Aline
Rocha, Neusa Sica da
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Escalas de graduação psiquiátrica
Transtorno depressivo maior
Meia-idade
Estudos transversais
topic Escalas de graduação psiquiátrica
Transtorno depressivo maior
Meia-idade
Estudos transversais
description Objectives Melancholic features of depression (MFD) seem to be a unidimensional group of signs and symptoms. However, little importance has been given to the evaluation of what features are related to a more severe disorder. That is, what are the MFD that appear only in the most depressed patients. We aim to demonstrate how each MFD is related to the severity of the major depressive disorder. Methods We evaluated both the Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS-17) and its 6-item melancholic subscale (HAM-D6) in 291 depressed inpatients using Rasch analysis, which computes the severity of each MFD. Overall measures of model fit were mean (±SD) of items and persons residual = 0 (±1); low χ2 value; p>0.01. Results For the HDRS-17 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.35 (±1.4); mean (±SD) of person residuals = -0.15 (±1.09); χ2 = 309.74; p<0.00001. For the HAM-D6 model fit, mean (±SD) of item residuals = 0.5 (±0.86); mean (±SD) of person residuals = 0.15 (±0.91); χ2 = 56.13; p = 0.196. MFD ordered by crescent severity were depressed mood, work and activities, somatic symptoms, psychic anxiety, guilt feelings, and psychomotor retardation. Conclusions Depressed mood is less severe, while guilt feelings and psychomotor retardation are more severe MFD in a psychiatric hospitalization. Understanding depression as a continuum of symptoms can improve the understanding of the disorder and may improve its perspective of treatment.
publishDate 2017
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv PLoS ONE. San Francisco. Vol. 12, no. 1 (Jan. 2017), e0170000, 13 p.
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