Depression (psychology).
Publié le 10/05/2013
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IV CAUSES
Some depressions seem to come out of the blue, even when things are going well.
Others seem to have an obvious cause: a marital conflict, financial difficulty, or somepersonal failure.
Yet many people with these problems do not become deeply depressed.
Most psychologists believe depression results from an interaction betweenstressful life events and a person’s biological and psychological vulnerabilities.
A Biological Factors
Depression runs in families.
By studying twins, researchers have found evidence of a strong genetic influence in depression.
Genetically identical twins raised in thesame environment are three times more likely to have depression in common than fraternal twins, who have only about half of their genes in common.
In addition,identical twins are five times more likely to have bipolar disorder in common.
These findings suggest that vulnerability to depression and bipolar disorder can beinherited.
Adoption studies have provided more evidence of a genetic role in depression.
These studies show that children of depressed people are vulnerable todepression even when raised by adoptive parents.
Genes may influence depression by causing abnormal activity in the brain.
Studies have shown that certain brain chemicals called neurotransmitters play an importantrole in regulating moods and emotions.
Neurotransmitters involved in depression include norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin.
Research in the 1960s suggestedthat depression results from lower than normal levels of these neurotransmitters in parts of the brain.
Support for this theory came from the effects of antidepressantdrugs, which work by increasing the levels of neurotransmitters involved in depression.
However, later studies have discredited this simple explanation and havesuggested a more complex relationship between neurotransmitter levels and depression.
An imbalance of hormones may also play a role in depression.
Many depressed people have higher than normal levels of hydrocortisone (cortisol), a hormone secretedby the adrenal gland in response to stress.
In addition, an underactive or overactive thyroid gland can lead to depression.
A variety of medical conditions can cause depression.
These include dietary deficiences in vitamin B 6, vitamin B 12, and folic acid ( see Vitamin); degenerative neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease and Huntington’s disease ( see Chorea); strokes in the frontal part of the brain; and certain viral infections, such as hepatitis and mononucleosis.
Certain medications, such as steroids, may also cause depression.
B Psychological Factors
Psychological theories of depression focus on the way people think and behave.
In a 1917 essay, Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud explained melancholia , or major depression, as a response to loss—either real loss, such as the death of a spouse, or symbolic loss, such as the failure to achieve an important goal.
Freudbelieved that a person’s unconscious anger over loss weakens the ego, resulting in self-hate and self-destructive behavior.
Cognitive theories of depression emphasize the role of irrational thought processes.
American psychiatrist Aaron Beck proposed that depressed people tend to viewthemselves, their environment, and the future in a negative light because of errors in thinking.
These errors include focusing on the negative aspects of any situation,misinterpreting facts in negative ways, and blaming themselves for any misfortune.
In Beck’s view, people learn these self-defeating ways of looking at the world duringearly childhood.
This negative thinking makes situations seem much worse than they really are and increases the risk of depression, especially in stressful situations.
In support of this cognitive view, people with “depressive” personality traits appear to be more vulnerable than others to actual depression.
Examples of depressivepersonality traits include gloominess, pessimism, introversion, self-criticism, excessive skepticism and criticism of others, deep feelings of inadequacy, and excessivebrooding and worrying.
In addition, people who regularly behave in dependent, hostile, and impulsive ways appear at greater risk for depression.
American psychologist Martin Seligman proposed that depression stems from “learned helplessness,” an acquired belief that one cannot control the outcome of events.In this view, prolonged exposure to uncontrollable and inescapable events leads to apathy, pessimism, and loss of motivation.
An adaptation of this theory by Americanpsychologist Lynn Abramson and her colleagues argues that depression results not only from helplessness, but also from hopelessness.
The hopelessness theoryattributes depression to a pattern of negative thinking in which people blame themselves for negative life events, view the causes of those events as permanent, andovergeneralize specific weaknesses as applying to many areas of their life.
C Stressful Events
Psychologists agree that stressful experiences can trigger depression in people who are predisposed to the illness.
For example, the death of a loved one may triggerdepression.
Psychologists usually distinguish true depression from grief , a normal process of mourning a loved one who has died.
Other stressful experiences may include divorce, pregnancy, the loss of a job, and even childbirth.
About 20 percent of women experience an episode of depression, known as postpartum depression, after having a baby.
In addition, people with serious physical illnesses or disabilities often develop depression.
People who experience child abuse appear more vulnerable to depression than others.
So, too, do people living under chronically stressful conditions, such as singlemothers with many children and little or no support from friends or relatives.
V TREATMENT
Depression typically cannot be shaken or willed away.
An episode must therefore run its course until it weakens either on its own or with treatment.
Depression can betreated effectively with antidepressant drugs, psychotherapy, or a combination of both.
Despite the availability of effective treatment, most depressive disorders go untreated and undiagnosed.
Studies indicate that general physicians fail to recognizedepression in their patients at least half of the time.
In addition, many doctors and patients view depression in elderly people as a normal part of aging, even thoughtreatment for depression in older people is usually very effective.
A Antidepressant Drugs
Up to 70 percent of people with depression respond to antidepressant drugs.
These medications appear to work by altering the levels of serotonin, norepinephrine, andother neurotransmitters in the brain.
They generally take at least two to three weeks to become effective.
Doctors cannot predict which type of antidepressant drug willwork best for any particular person, so depressed people may need to try several types.
Antidepressant drugs are not addictive, but they may produce unwanted sideeffects.
To avoid relapse, people usually must continue taking the medication for several months after their symptoms improve.
Commonly used antidepressant drugs fall into three major classes: tricyclics, monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO inhibitors), and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
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Liens utiles
- PRINCIPES DE PSYCHOLOGIE, Principles of Psychology, 1855. Herbert Spencer
- Depression (Medizin) - biologie.
- Cognitive Psychology.
- Memory (psychology).
- Perception (psychology).