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�? Depression : Depression Associated With Low Bone Mineral Density
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From: MSN NicknameSummerlove113  (Original Message)Sent: 12/30/2007 3:20 AM

Medscape Medical News 2007. ©2007 Medscape

Depression Associated With Low Bone Mineral Density 

CME/CE

News Author: Susan Jeffrey
CME Author: Penny Murata, MD

Disclosures

Release Date: December 3, 2007

December 3, 2007 �?A new study shows that low bone mineral density (BMD) is more prevalent in premenopausal women with major depressive disorder (MDD) than among health control women. The risk associated with MDD was similar in magnitude to other risk factors for osteoporosis such as smoking or low calcium intake. Site Meter

The study is published in the November 26 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Giovanni Cizza, MD, PhD, MHSc, from the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland, told Medscape Psychiatry that he hopes their findings will underline the need to test women with depression for bone loss.

"I think the practical message is depression is a risk factor for osteoporosis," he said. "The novelty of this study is the fact that these women were not severely depressed. They were mildly depressed, and yet they had bone loss of clinical significance, so the threshold to prescribe the test within the population of women with depression should be to almost everybody, not only the more severely depressed women, or those with a long duration of depression."

First author on the paper is Farideh Eskandari, MD, MHSc, from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio for the Premenopausal, Osteoporosis Women, Alendronate, Depression (POWER) Study Group.

A Disease of Chronic Stress

Depression is considered a disease of chronic stress, Dr. Cizza said, with attendant increases in the stress hormone cortisol, and cytokines produced by the immune system. "Those substances are helpful to fight stress, but if there is too much cortisol or cytokines, there are side effects," he said. "One of the side effects is bone loss, so it was obvious to ask the question, 'do women with depression have low bone mass?'"

In this study, they examined BMD in 89 premenopausal women with current or recent MDD, and 44 healthy control women enrolled in the POWER study, a prospective study of bone turnover carried out at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center.

MDD was defined according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV); women were enrolled if they met the criteria for MDD and had had a depressive episode within the last 3 years.

BMD was measured with dual energy x-ray absorptiometry at the spine, hip, and forearm. Mean hourly levels of plasma 24-hour cytokines and 24-hour urinary free cortisol and catecholamine excretion were measured in a subset of women.

They found that the prevalence of low BMD, defined as a T score of less than �?, was statistically significantly greater in women with MDD vs the control women at the femoral neck and total hip, and showed a trend to be greater at the lumbar spine.

See Full Article HERE


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