Could A Diagnostic Blood Test Be Created For Depression?
Editor's ChoiceMain Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Also Included In: Depression; Mental Health; Genetics
Article Date: 25 Jul 2010 - 1:00 PDT
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4 (4 votes) |
| Article Opinions: | 4 posts |
Psychiatry, unlike many other areas of medicine, lacks diagnostic blood tests. Blood tests have been extremely useful in helping doctors make medical diagnoses and aiding them in treatment options for conditions and diseases in most medical fields.
An article in Biological Psychiatry reports that Dutch researchers may eventually generate blood tests for psychiatric conditions, such as depression.
Under increasingly intensive research by scientists are the studies of:
- Variations in DNA (genes) that can be extracted from blood cells
- Genomics like proteomics, the measurement of the levels of specific proteins in the blood
- Gene expression profiling, which measure the levels of RNA produced from DNA as an indication of the activity of specific genes.
- Patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD)
- Healthy individuals
Dr. Sabine Spijker, one of the authors, said:
This is a first, but major step in providing a molecular diagnostic tool for depression.
Experts say this type of diagnostic test would be especially useful for diagnosing mental health disorders when it is more difficult to have a conversation with the patient; it would also be unbiased.
The writers add that blood tests of this type may also help in reducing the stigma associated with mental health illness, conditions, and problems.
Dr. John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry cautions:
It is far too early to be confident that gene expression profiling will lead us to diagnostic or prognostic tests for depression. However, the objective of this line of research is extremely important. In the past, many types of tests have been explored as potential diagnostic markers, but they all have failed to have sufficient sensitivity and specificity to guide doctors in making psychiatric diagnoses or choosing between treatments. I look forward to seeing whether the patterns of gene expression profiling are replicable and diagnostically specific as multiple groups report their findings.
Hopefully, say the authors, this study may be a stepping stone towards finding markers that may predict treatment outcome and recurrence.
"Stimulated Gene Expression Profiles as a Blood Marker of Major Depressive Disorder"
Sabine Spijker, Jeroen S. Van Zanten, Simone De Jong, Brenda W.J.H. Penninx, Richard van Dyck, Frans G. Zitman, Jan H. Smit, Bauke Ylstra, August B. Smit, Witte J.G. Hoogendijk
Biological Psychiatry, Volume 68, Issue 2, 15 July 2010, Pages 179-186
Written by Christian Nordqvist
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (4)
I reject your prejudice
posted by Harold A. Maio on 25 Jul 2010 at 8:08 amThe writers add that blood tests of this type may also help in reducing "the stigma" associated with mental health illness, conditions, and problems.
I reject your assignation of a "stigma."I reject your prejudice.
Harold A. Maio
khmaio@earthlink.net
Stigma is a reality, I'm afraid
posted by Maria GOnzalez on 25 Jul 2010 at 9:44 amMy son has a mental illness. He refuses to see someone, just because of the stigma. I showed him this article and he agrees - if there were a blood test he would go and have one. Just because of the stigma. So, you can reject whatever you like - it just means you are refusing to acknowledge problems some people have with stigma, like my son.
Realities
posted by Harold A. Maio on 25 Jul 2010 at 12:35 pmEstimada Maria,
Concrete acts of prejudice and discrimination are not a "stigma." It is a clever term, claiming the fault lies in the victim, not in the victimizer. As a linguistic tool it is among the best. Once internalized by the victim, that victim becomes an active agent in the victimization, self torture. Like your son, I have a mental illness, depression, I no longer allow people to claim I carry a "stigma" for having an illness. Like your son, I once did.
Women in the US, and many other countries, no longer succumb to the prejudice, the "stigma" of rape. Self-empowered here, they refuted it, and forced us to focus on the criminal, the criminal act. Few American journalists would dare that term in that association today. That we allow ourselves to accept this term, now re-directed, shows just how pernicious this particular prejudice is.
I do not disagree with you that a blood test would present fewer opportunities for people to express prejudice and discrimination, and becasue of that fewer people would experience prejudice and discrimination, but, please teach those around you, it is the people who demonstrate prejudice against your son who are wrong, not he.
Harold A. Maio
khmaio@earthlink.net
Blood Test Becoming a Reality at Mayo Clinic
posted by Andrea Hazlitt on 26 Jul 2010 at 4:24 pm"Mayo Clinic researchers are working to develop better antidepressant drug treatments and to identify the right drug for each patient based on his or her genes. Mayo Clinic in Minnesota psychiatrists and laboratory medicine specialists developed a blood test (cytochrome P450) to pinpoint genetic factors that play a role in a person's response to many antidepressant medications." from mayoclinic.org/depression
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