221 The results indicated www.selleckchem.com/products/cobimetinib-gdc-0973-rg7420.html progressive resistance to antidepressant therapies from normal weight to obesity. Future interventions could target overweight and obesity as a possible remediable cause of treatment resistance. Depression is a complex condition with many potential causal pathways; two, possibly interrelated mechanisms, diet-associated overweight and obesity and inflammation have been reviewed. Although these mechanisms represent only two among many causal paths, they potentially explain many features, such as the common association between inflammatory
diseases and depression risk. Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical Nevertheless, there is cause for optimism for possible intervention strategies given the evidence for success of lifestyle modifications such as exercise, diet, and other weight loss approaches to inflammatory
diseases a nd obesity.116,167,207,216,223-225 Selected abbreviations and acronyms 5HTT serotonin transporter CRP C-reactive protein IFN interferon IL interleukin KYN Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical kynurenine TNF tumor necrosis factor
Medications can lead to depressive symptoms. These effects can be direct, by altering levels of neurotransmitters in the central nervous system (CNS). Alternatively, they can be indirect, by causing fatigue, diminished appetite, sedation, or other side effects, leading to subsequent frustration, demoralization, or even a Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical full depressive episode. However, it is often difficult to ascertain whether a medication has caused depression in any Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical given patient. Depression is substantially more common in patients with medical illness than it is in the general population. For example, approximately 10% to 20% of patients with acute cardiac disease, diabetes, Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical renal failure, or cancer suffer from current major depressive disorder (MDD), and even more patients have clinically significant, subsyndromal depressive symptoms.1-4 Therefore, though depression may appear concurrently with one or more medications used to treat medical
illness, depression is so common in these patients that this temporal connection may be coincidental. In addition, the vast majority of studies that associate medications with depression have been case reports and case series (not systematic investigations) and have been limited by small and potentially biased samples. Furthermore, these reports typically do not use standardized else instruments to evaluate the presence or severity of the apparent depression; they instead rely on general reports of symptoms. Prospective, well-controlled trials examining the links between a medication and depression are relatively rare, and may contradict clinical lore that says that a certain medication causes depression. In this article, we will carefully examine the links between medications and the onset and progression of depression.