Clinical Depression

Clinical Depression is a mental illness that is characterized by a lengthy time during which a person is sad.  However, it is important to understand that just because a person is being gloomy, doesn't mean that they are depressed.  This is because depression is also accompanied by a feeling of apathy, a loss of self-esteem, and the thought that they can never be happy again, which continues on endlessly. 

Of course, there are a variety of different types of depression.  These include Manic or Bipolar depression, Postpartum depression, Dysthimia, Cyclothemia, and Seasonal Affective Disorder.  There is also Clinical depression, which is sometimes called "major" depression.  "Clinical depression" is actually the medical term that doctors use whenever they refer to depression.  It is actually much more of a disorder than an illness.  This is because it basically covers only those people who are actually suffering from the symptoms that are related to depression. 

The most commonly attributed symptoms of this disorder include:

* A lack of joy in living, accompanied by an overwhelming sense of sadness, which will not go away.
* The depressed person avoids contact with others and when contact is made the person is usually very irritable and have a bad temper.
* There is no interest in the everyday pleasures of living.
* There is an inability to function well either at home or at work.
* There is an overwhelming sense of hopelessness.
* A depressed person often cries throughout the day and cannot stop their thoughts in order to sleep well at night.  Then they either wake up early in the morning or oversleep.  Naturally, this will lead to a decreased amount of energy and the inability to concentrate.  It may also cause their thought, speech and movement to become slowed.
* Sometimes clinical depression may also be accompanied by physical symptoms, which do not respond to treatment.  These may include headaches, digestive disorders and chronic pain.

Clinical depression is actually a disorder, which is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain that can be treated.  In fact, most doctors are very optimistic in that they believe that their patients who suffer from clinical depression will soon return to a life filled with good mental health.  Of course this hinges on the fact that these patients must be treated as soon as a diagnosis has been made.  Studies have actually shown that more than 10% of Americans each year suffer from depression.  These same studies have also shown that patients that have actually sought treatment for their clinical depression have been very successful in doing so.  Of these patients, the majority have been treated and have found relief from this disorder.  However, less than one third of those who suffer from depression will actually seek help.

The most common way of treating depression is through the use of antidepressant medications.  While these medications will not correct the problem overnight, they will correct the problem.  Usually it will take three or four weeks for the medication to go into effect.  However, a patient may not actually feel fully recovered until they have taken the medication for at least eight weeks.

Depression news on the Web

10.03.2010 - PRESS RELEASE: Evotec Reports Good Progress in Product Development in Treatment-Resistant Depression in ... (4investors)
Evotec AG / Evotec Reports Good Progress in Product Development in Treatment-Resistant Depression in its Alliance with Roche processed and transmitted by Hugin AS. The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

Wall Street posts best gains since Depression (The Age)
Wall Street has marked its best 12-month rise since the rebound from the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Evotec Reports Good Progress in Product Development in Treatment-Resistant Depression in its Alliance With Roche (GlobeNewswire via Yahoo! Finance)
HAMBURG, Germany -- Evotec AG today announced two positive aspects that strengthen its integrated product development in treatment-resistant depression in its strategic alliance with Roche.

Doctors Test Extreme Therapy For Depression (WCVB Boston)
For the most severe cases of depression, doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital are testing an extreme therapy -- placing electrodes deep inside patients' brains.

Seminar Focuses On Anxiety, Depression (The Kentucky Post)
FORT THOMAS , Ky. - Fort Thomas Independent Schools’ Parent Informational Seminar Series will present a discussion titled, “Understanding Depression and Anxiety” at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 9 in the Highlands High School media center.

Study on major depression published (The South End)
By: Aysha Jamali Professor assesses treatment across ethnic groups Fatigue, feelings of worthlessness, and recurring thoughts of death: these are some of the symptoms of major depression. It’s a disorder that affects approximately 14.8 million American adults in a given year, according to the National Institute of ...

Hope for Depression Research Foundation previews Krista Bard's art at Findlay Galleries (Palm Beach Daily News)
A preview of works by artist Krista Bard highlighted a reception honoring the Hope for Depression Research Foundation.

Maggie Lamond Simone: Living With Depression, Raising A Family (The Huffington Post)
If you're not familiar with depression, if the commercials for Cymbalta aren't enough to give you a general feel, it's like this: walking on the bottom of a murky, dark pond, able to breathe but really just barely.

Online Dating And The Link Between Depression And Relational Uncertainty (Medical News Today)
There's no doubt that meeting partners on the Internet is a growing trend. But can we trust the information that people provide about themselves via online dating services? And why is depression so dissatisfying in relationships? These two questions are explored in articles appearing in the latest issue of the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, published by SAGE. The authors also ...

Screening for depression before, during, after pregnancy can help (The Times Herald)
Amber cried a lot after the birth of her first child, a son.