Title of article :
ICD-10 or DSM-IV? Anhedonia, fatigue and depressed mood as screening symptoms for diagnosing a current depressive episode in physically ill patients in general hospital
Author/Authors :
Ingrid Sibitz، نويسنده , , Ingrid and Berger، نويسنده , , Peter and Freidl، نويسنده , , Marion and Topitz، نويسنده , , Andrea and Krautgartner، نويسنده , , Monika and Spiegel، نويسنده , , Wolfgang and Katschnig، نويسنده , , Heinz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Objective
lore the usefulness of “anhedonia”, “fatigue” and “depressed mood” as screening symptoms for predicting a depressive episode in physically ill patients.
tients filled in a modified version of the Patient Questionnaire and were subsequently assessed by psychiatrists with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI; ICD-10 version).
s
ients suffered from a current depressive episode according to the CIDI. If at least two of the three symptoms were used for screening positively (ICD-10 algorithm), the sensitivity was 93.2% and the specificity 72.7%, while the simpler algorithm of DSM-IV – requiring depressed mood or anhedonia to be present – yielded a slightly higher sensitivity (95.2%) and a slightly lower specificity (66.5%). One in five patients with a depressive episode did not report “depressed mood”.
tion
ains unclear how relevant the three core symptoms of depression are for the diagnosis of an ICD-10 depression in people who are not physically ill.
sion
ct that both diagnostic algorithms yielded comparable results suggests that the more parsimonious DSM-IV algorithm is preferable and “fatigue” could be left out as a screening symptom. Since “depressed mood” was absent in a substantial proportion of patients, special attention has to be paid to “anhedonia”. Medical students and non-psychiatric clinicians should be especially trained to ask for anhedonia, so that cases of depression will not be overlooked.
Keywords :
depression , comorbidity , Anhedonia , Screening
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders