Название: Depression
Автор: Aaron T. Beck, M.D.
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Общая психология
isbn: 9780812290882
isbn:
The sample consisted of the last 486 patients of the 966 patients described in Table 2-2. The distribution of the clinical features among the nondepressed, mildly depressed, moderately depressed, and severely depressed are found in Table 2-8.
Most cases of depression can be diagnosed by inspection.18 The sad, melancholic expression combined with either retardation or agitation is practically pathognomonic of depression. In contrast, many patients conceal their unpleasant feelings behind a cheerful façade (“smiling depression”), and it may require careful interviewing to bring out a pained facial expression.
The facies show typical characteristics associated with sadness. The corners of the mouth are turned down, the brow is furrowed, the lines and wrinkles are deepened, and the eyes are often red from crying. Among the descriptions used by clinicians are glum, forlorn, gloomy, dejected, unsmiling, solemn, wearily resigned.5 Lewis reported that weeping occurred in most of the women but in only one-sixth of the men in his sample.
In severe cases, the facies may appear to be frozen in a gloomy expression. Most patients, however, show some lability of expression, especially when their attention is diverted from their feelings. Genuine smiles may be elicited at times even in the severe cases, but they are generally transient. Some patients present a forced or social smile, which may be deceiving. The so-called mirthless smile, which indicates a lack of any genuine amusement, is easily recognized. This type of smile may be elicited in response to a humorous remark by the examiner and indicates the patient’s intellectual awareness of the humor but without any emotional response to it.
A sad facies was observed in 85 percent of the depressed group (including mild, moderate, and severe cases) and in 18 percent of the nondepressed group. In the severely depressed group, 98 percent showed this characteristic.
Retardation
The most striking sign of a retarded depression is reduction in spontaneous activity. The patient tends to stay in one position longer than usual and to use a minimum of gestures. Movements are slow and deliberate as though the body and limbs are weighted down. He or she walks slowly, frequently hunched over, and with a shuffling gait. These postural characteristics were observed in 87 percent of the severely depressed patients in our sample.
The speech shows decreased spontaneity and the verbal output is reduced. The patient does not initiate a conversation or volunteer statements and, when questioned, responds in a few words. Sometimes, speaking is decreased only when a painful subject is being discussed. The pitch of the patient’s voice is often lowered and speech tends to be in a monotone. These vocal characteristics were observed in 75 percent of the severely depressed patients.
The more retarded patients may start sentences but not complete them. They may answer questions with grunts or groans. The most severe cases may be mute. As Lewis points out, it is sometimes difficult to distinguish the scanty talk of a depressive from that of a well-preserved, suspicious paranoid schizophrenic. In both conditions, there may be pauses, hesitations, evasion, breaking off, and brevity. The diagnosis must rest on other observations—of content and behavior.
In severe depressions patients may manifest signs of a syndrome that has been labeled stupor or semi-stupor.19 If left alone, they may remain practically motionless whether standing, sitting, or lying in bed. There is rarely, if ever, any waxy flexibility as seen in catatonia or any apparent clouding of consciousness. The patients vary in the degree to which they respond to stimulation. Some respond to sustained efforts by the examiner to establish rapport; others appear oblivious. I questioned several patients in the latter category after they recovered from their depression, and they reported that they had experienced feelings and thoughts during clinical examination but had felt incapable of expressing them in any way.
In extreme cases, patients do not eat or drink even with urging. Food placed in the mouth may remain there until removed, and under such circumstances tube feeding becomes necessary as a life-preserving measure. Sometimes patients do not move their bowels and digital removal of feces or enemas are necessary. Saliva accumulates and drools out of the mouth. They blink infrequently and may develop corneal ulcers. A more complete description of these extreme cases will be found in the section on Benign Stupors in Chapter 8.
Bleuler (p. 209)20 described the melancholic triad consisting of depressive affect, inhibition of action, and inhibition of thinking. The first two characteristics are certainly typical of retarded depression. There is, however, a strong question as to whether there is an inhibition of the thought process. Lewis5 believes that thinking is active—or even hyperactive—even though speech is inhibited. Refined psychological tests, furthermore, have failed to show significant interference with thought processes (Chapter 10).
Agitation
The chief characteristic of agitated patients is ceaseless activity. They cannot sit still but move about constantly in the chair. They convey a sense of restlessness and disturbance in wringing the hands or handkerchief, tearing clothing, picking at skin, and clenching and unclenching fingers. They may rub their scalp or other parts of the body until the skin is worn away.
They may get out of the chair many times in the course of an interview and pace the floor. At night, they may get out of bed frequently and walk incessantly back and forth. It is just as difficult for them to engage in constructive activity as it is to stay still. Their agitation is also manifested by frequent moans and groans. They approach doctors, nurses, and other patients and besiege them with requests or pleas for reassurance.
The emotions of frenzy and anguish are congruent with their thought content. They wail, “Why did I do it? Oh, God, what is to become of me? Please have mercy on me.” They believe they are about to be butchered or buried alive. They moan, “My bowels are gone. It’s intolerable.” They scream, “I can’t stand the pain. Please put me out of my misery.” They groan, “My home is gone. My family is gone. I just want to die. Please let me die.”
The thought content of the retarded patient appears to revolve around passive resignation to his or her fate. The agitated patient, on the other hand, cannot accept or tolerate the torture envisioned. The agitated behavior appears to represent desperate attempts to fight off impending doom.
Variations in Symptoms
Children and Adolescents
Weiss and Garber21 reviewed the empirical findings on whether children and adolescents experience and express depression in the same way as do adults. Although it is commonly accepted that depression occurs in this age group, and that developmental level has relatively little influence on the phenomenology of the depression, the developmental perspective predicts the possibility of unique manifestations and experiences of such. Thus, it is possible that a person’s level of physiological, social, and cognitive development must be taken into account in defining depression.
Considering over a dozen studies relevant to the question, Weiss and Garber21 concluded that the matter remains unresolved: It is not known how depression in childhood and adolescence may differ from that in adults. However, they did articulate the issues. In so doing, they distinguished between continuity within the individual and continuity of the form or nature of depression СКАЧАТЬ