Atkinson_1986_Biol.Psychiatry_21_612

Reference

Title : Neuroendocrine responses in psychiatric and pain patients with major depression - Atkinson_1986_Biol.Psychiatry_21_612
Author(s) : Atkinson JH, Jr. , Kremer EF , Risch SC , Dana R , Janowsky DS
Ref : Biological Psychiatry , 21 :612 , 1986
Abstract :

Basal and postdexamethasone concentrations of cortisol and prolactin were studied in three groups of male patients: chronic pain patients with no psychiatric diagnosis (n = 12), chronic pain patients with coexisting major depression by Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) (n = 24), and pain-free psychiatric patients meeting RDC criteria for major depression (n = 28). Basal cortisol concentrations were significantly higher in pain-major depression and psychiatric-major depression patients compared to pain patients without psychiatric illness. The frequency of cortisol nonsuppression after dexamethasone was significantly greater in pain patients with major depression (41.7%) compared to pain patients without psychiatric disorder (8.3%), and was comparable to that of psychiatric patients (21.4%). Prolactin concentrations, but not cortisol levels, were significantly correlated with observer-rated severity of depression in pain patients. These findings suggest that cortisol and prolactin abnormalities in chronic pain may be related to psychiatric disorder rather than to pain per se, at least in male patients, and may indicate a role for cholinergic mechanisms in the interface of pain and depression.

PubMedSearch : Atkinson_1986_Biol.Psychiatry_21_612
PubMedID: 3708035

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Citations formats

Atkinson JH, Jr., Kremer EF, Risch SC, Dana R, Janowsky DS (1986)
Neuroendocrine responses in psychiatric and pain patients with major depression
Biological Psychiatry 21 :612

Atkinson JH, Jr., Kremer EF, Risch SC, Dana R, Janowsky DS (1986)
Biological Psychiatry 21 :612