2009
DOI: 10.1159/000205516
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Psychomotor Changes in Major Depressive Disorder during Sertraline Treatment

Abstract: Background: There is a relative scarcity of studies on major depressive disorder that use objective assessment methods to explore the psychomotor effects of antidepressants. Striatal dopaminergic disturbances are known to be involved in the pathogenesis of major depressive disorder that is associated with psychomotor retardation. Because of its additional dopaminergic mechanism, the psychomotor effects of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor sertraline merit further exploration. Methods: In 19 patients d… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Such studies, in combination with EMG recording, will allow us to better understand altered central-to-peripheral mechanisms related to both motor and the defining symptoms of ASD. Lastly, antihypertensive and antidepressant medications have unclear effects on psychomotor functioning, with studies documenting both improvement and decline [58,59,60,61]. However, it is unlikely performance was impacted in participants taking either of these medications given that these medications appear to have minimal effect on basic motor functioning and peripheral processes [62].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such studies, in combination with EMG recording, will allow us to better understand altered central-to-peripheral mechanisms related to both motor and the defining symptoms of ASD. Lastly, antihypertensive and antidepressant medications have unclear effects on psychomotor functioning, with studies documenting both improvement and decline [58,59,60,61]. However, it is unlikely performance was impacted in participants taking either of these medications given that these medications appear to have minimal effect on basic motor functioning and peripheral processes [62].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first concerns the lack of antidepressant effect of stimulant drugs, such as amphetamine. Although depressed patients have reduced levels of daily activity which are restored by successful antidepressant treatment (Merrick, 1992; Willner, 1997; Demyttenaere et al, 2005; Schrijvers et al, 2009), stimulants, even though they markedly suppress LC neural activity (Akaoka et al, 1991), have generally not been found to be clinically effective antidepressants and produce false positives in animal screening tests since they reverse forced swim immobility (Porsolt et al, 1978). A possible reason for this is that they can also activate other central stress nuclei, such as the paraventricular hypothalamus (Swerdlow et al, 1993; Armario, 2010), which aggravate depression and may offset any positive effect of the behavioral stimulation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, a local database of healthy controls was used to create an age-matched healthy control group (36 women, 15 men; mean age of 55.2 [±15.9] years), collected during previous similar psychomotor studies by our group, applying exactly the same fine psychomotor measurement methods [18, 33, 34]. …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%