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Apathy and depression: Which clinical specificities?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2020
Abstract
Apathy is a transnosographical symptom that is often described in psychiatric and neurological illness. The most known definition, proposed by Marin (1991), is a lack of goal-directed voluntary behavior. Apathy and depression may be present together but they are clinically independent. The confusion between signs of apathy and those of depression might reveal diagnostic and treatment issue. Our aim is to define a clinical profile of apathetic patients (Ap) with depression, hypothesizing there is a different clinic profile than non-apathetic patients (NAp).
Seventy adults diagnosed with depression were included in a comparative, non-randomized and open cohort, since November 2014. Clinical assessments targeted clinical scale evaluations (MINI, AES, MADRS, STAI, SHAPS). Patients were separated in two groups, Ap VS NAp, using a 42 points cut-off at AES score.
Ap represent 30%; n(Ap)= 21, n(NAp)= 49. Depressive severity scores (MADRS) are lower in the Ap group; W-test= 672, P= 0,044. State anxiety scores (STAI-A) are lower in Ap group; W-test= 739, P = 0,004. Anhedonia scores (SHAPS) are lower in Ap group; W-test= 412, P= 0,004. Pearson test show negative correlation between AES/STAI-A (r = -0,27; P= 0,02); AES/SHAPS (r= -0,45; P= 0,001).
Apathetic patients suffering from depression seem to present different clinical pattern in term of anxiety and anhedonia. These results are high of interest for therapeutic and further studies focus on pathophysiological issues.
The author has not supplied his/her declaration of competing interest.
- Type
- EW188
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 33 , Issue S1: Abstracts of the 24th European Congress of Psychiatry , March 2016 , pp. S159
- Copyright
- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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