NEWS RELEASES
1/15/03 News Release
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DEPRESSION AND CHRONIC PAIN LINKED IN STANFORD STUDY; MAY INFLUENCE DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT
STANFORD, Calif. A persistent, long-lasting headache or an endlessly
painful back may indicate something more serious than a bad week at the
office. A new study finds that people who have major depression are more
than twice as likely to have chronic pain when compared to people who
have no symptoms of depression. This study could change how depression
is diagnosed and treated, say Stanford School of Medicine researchers.
This is potentially a really important finding, said Alan
Schatzberg, MD, the Kenneth T. Norris Jr. Professor of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences, who participated in the study published in the January
issue of the journal Archive of General Psychiatry. This will change
how we view pain and depression.
Schatzberg said previously published research hinted that people with
depression may be more likely to experience chronic pain and that depressed
people with chronic pain may respond better to a class of drugs that
treats both symptoms. If the relationship exists, then pain may be a
symptom that guides doctors to the drugs they prescribe for depressed
patients.
After hearing anecdotal evidence that certain drugs are more effective
in depressed people who also have chronic pain, Schatzberg and his colleague
Maurice Ohayon, MD, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral
sciences at the Stanford School of Medicine, tested the correlation using
data collected previously by Ohayon. These data included information
from 18,980 people in five European countries who agreed to answer health
questions over the phone.
Among the participants, 17 percent had chronic pain and 4 percent had
symptoms of major depression; however, 43 percent of those with major
depression also had chronic pain. Of the symptoms, headaches and backaches
were most commonly found in depressed people. People who had pain for
24 hours were also more likely to have major depression, indicating that
continuous pain increases the likelihood of having a major depressive
disorder diagnosis.
I was totally shocked, Schatzberg said. He had no idea so
many of the patients he treated for depression may also need treatment
for chronic pain. Now, he said, hell know to ask his depressed
patients if they also have chronic pain that should be treated. He added
that other doctors can monitor their chronic-pain patients for symptoms
of depression.
When doctors first diagnose a person with depression, they use a checklist
that includes symptoms such as changes in mood, appetite and sleep patterns
to determine the severity of the persons depression along with
the appropriate treatment. Schatzberg suspects that the presence of chronic
pain should be added to this list as a symptom for assessing depression.
He said that by more precisely diagnosing a persons symptoms doctors
have a better chance of prescribing medication that will be effective
in that patient.
The question now is which comes first: the depression or the pain. We
all have a certain amount of pain, Schatzberg said. It could
be that the perception of pain is greater in depressed people. He
pointed out that many people with depression reported more headache,
back pain or limb pain rather than pain stemming from disease.
Schatzberg added that future studies will look at how people with depression and chronic pain respond to different drugs used to treat depression.
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The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks among the nation’s top 10 medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about the school, please visit http://mednews.stanford.edu. The medical school is part of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. For information about all three, please visit http://stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html.
