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Core Symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder: Relevance to Diagnosis and Treatment

By Sidney H. Kennedy — 2008

The construct of major depressive disorder makes no etiological assumptions about populations with diverse symptom clusters. “Depressed mood” and “loss of interest or pleasure in nearly all activities” are core features of a major depressive episode, though a strong case can be made to pay increasing attention to symptoms of fatigue, sleep disturbance, anxiety, and neurocognitive and sexual dysfunction in the diagnosis and evaluation of treatment outcome.

Read on www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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Depression as a Loss of Heart

Depression is one of the most common problems in modern society. It appears in chronic low-grade forms that can drain a person’s energy and in more acute forms that can be completely debilitating.

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EXPLORE TOPIC

Clinical Depression