Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression

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Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression. / Hinkelmann, K; Muhtz, C; Dettenborn-Betz, Lucia; Agorastos, A; Moritz, S; Wingenfeld, K; Spitzer, C; Gold, S M; Wiedemann, K; Otte, C.

in: PSYCHOL MED, Jahrgang 43, Nr. 11, 01.11.2013, S. 2255-63.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Hinkelmann, K, Muhtz, C, Dettenborn-Betz, L, Agorastos, A, Moritz, S, Wingenfeld, K, Spitzer, C, Gold, SM, Wiedemann, K & Otte, C 2013, 'Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression', PSYCHOL MED, Jg. 43, Nr. 11, S. 2255-63. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291713000287

APA

Hinkelmann, K., Muhtz, C., Dettenborn-Betz, L., Agorastos, A., Moritz, S., Wingenfeld, K., Spitzer, C., Gold, S. M., Wiedemann, K., & Otte, C. (2013). Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression. PSYCHOL MED, 43(11), 2255-63. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291713000287

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{d0d5b688062441df820acd7001c27600,
title = "Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: While impaired memory and altered cortisol secretion are characteristic features of major depression, much less is known regarding the impact of antidepressant medication. We examined whether the cortisol awakening response (CAR) is increased in depressed patients with and without medication compared with healthy controls (HC) and whether CAR is associated with memory function in each group.METHOD: We examined 21 patients with major depression without medication, 20 depressed patients on antidepressant treatment, and 41 age-, sex- and education-matched healthy subjects. We tested verbal (Auditory Verbal Learning Task) and visuospatial (Rey figure) memory and measured CAR on two consecutive days.RESULTS: Patient groups did not differ in severity of depression. We found a significant effect of group (p = 0.03) for CAR. Unmedicated patients exhibited a greater CAR compared with medicated patients (p = 0.04) with no differences between patient groups and HC. We found a significant effect of group for verbal (p = 0.03) and non-verbal memory (p = 0.04). Unmedicated patients performed worse compared with medicated patients and HC in both memory domains. Medicated patients and HC did not differ. Regression analyses revealed a negative association between CAR and memory function in depressed patients, but not in HC.CONCLUSIONS: While in unmedicated depressed patients the magnitude of CAR is associated with impaired memory, medicated patients showed a smaller CAR and unimpaired cognitive function compared with HC. Our findings are compatible with the idea that antidepressants reduce CAR and partially restore memory function even if depressive psychopathology is still present.",
author = "K Hinkelmann and C Muhtz and Lucia Dettenborn-Betz and A Agorastos and S Moritz and K Wingenfeld and C Spitzer and Gold, {S M} and K Wiedemann and C Otte",
year = "2013",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1017/S0033291713000287",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "2255--63",
journal = "PSYCHOL MED",
issn = "0033-2917",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Association between cortisol awakening response and memory function in major depression

AU - Hinkelmann, K

AU - Muhtz, C

AU - Dettenborn-Betz, Lucia

AU - Agorastos, A

AU - Moritz, S

AU - Wingenfeld, K

AU - Spitzer, C

AU - Gold, S M

AU - Wiedemann, K

AU - Otte, C

PY - 2013/11/1

Y1 - 2013/11/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: While impaired memory and altered cortisol secretion are characteristic features of major depression, much less is known regarding the impact of antidepressant medication. We examined whether the cortisol awakening response (CAR) is increased in depressed patients with and without medication compared with healthy controls (HC) and whether CAR is associated with memory function in each group.METHOD: We examined 21 patients with major depression without medication, 20 depressed patients on antidepressant treatment, and 41 age-, sex- and education-matched healthy subjects. We tested verbal (Auditory Verbal Learning Task) and visuospatial (Rey figure) memory and measured CAR on two consecutive days.RESULTS: Patient groups did not differ in severity of depression. We found a significant effect of group (p = 0.03) for CAR. Unmedicated patients exhibited a greater CAR compared with medicated patients (p = 0.04) with no differences between patient groups and HC. We found a significant effect of group for verbal (p = 0.03) and non-verbal memory (p = 0.04). Unmedicated patients performed worse compared with medicated patients and HC in both memory domains. Medicated patients and HC did not differ. Regression analyses revealed a negative association between CAR and memory function in depressed patients, but not in HC.CONCLUSIONS: While in unmedicated depressed patients the magnitude of CAR is associated with impaired memory, medicated patients showed a smaller CAR and unimpaired cognitive function compared with HC. Our findings are compatible with the idea that antidepressants reduce CAR and partially restore memory function even if depressive psychopathology is still present.

AB - BACKGROUND: While impaired memory and altered cortisol secretion are characteristic features of major depression, much less is known regarding the impact of antidepressant medication. We examined whether the cortisol awakening response (CAR) is increased in depressed patients with and without medication compared with healthy controls (HC) and whether CAR is associated with memory function in each group.METHOD: We examined 21 patients with major depression without medication, 20 depressed patients on antidepressant treatment, and 41 age-, sex- and education-matched healthy subjects. We tested verbal (Auditory Verbal Learning Task) and visuospatial (Rey figure) memory and measured CAR on two consecutive days.RESULTS: Patient groups did not differ in severity of depression. We found a significant effect of group (p = 0.03) for CAR. Unmedicated patients exhibited a greater CAR compared with medicated patients (p = 0.04) with no differences between patient groups and HC. We found a significant effect of group for verbal (p = 0.03) and non-verbal memory (p = 0.04). Unmedicated patients performed worse compared with medicated patients and HC in both memory domains. Medicated patients and HC did not differ. Regression analyses revealed a negative association between CAR and memory function in depressed patients, but not in HC.CONCLUSIONS: While in unmedicated depressed patients the magnitude of CAR is associated with impaired memory, medicated patients showed a smaller CAR and unimpaired cognitive function compared with HC. Our findings are compatible with the idea that antidepressants reduce CAR and partially restore memory function even if depressive psychopathology is still present.

U2 - 10.1017/S0033291713000287

DO - 10.1017/S0033291713000287

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 23442784

VL - 43

SP - 2255

EP - 2263

JO - PSYCHOL MED

JF - PSYCHOL MED

SN - 0033-2917

IS - 11

ER -