Patients With Late-Life Depression Have Increased Dementia Risk If Symptoms Increase Over Time

Medwire News (5/9, Piper) reports, “Patients with late-life depression have an increased risk of dementia if their symptoms increase over time, whereas a single episode of depression, even if severe, does not carry a significant risk,” research suggests. The findings of the 3,325-participant study were published online April 29 in The Lancet Psychiatry. An accompanying editorial observed, “More studies of depression trajectories over a long period, with inclusion of biological measures, are necessary to understand the link between depression and dementia, in particular the underlying mechanisms.”

Related Links:

— “Depression course predicts dementia risk,” Lucy Piper, Medwire News, May 9, 2016.

Posted in In The News.