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Title: Outcome at discharge and six months in major depression. The significance of psychotic features. Author: Coryell W, Zimmerman M, Pfohl B. Journal: J Nerv Ment Dis; 1986 Feb; 174(2):92-6. PubMed ID: 3944599. Abstract: Inpatients with nonbipolar psychotic major depression (N = 46) had significantly lower Hamilton Rating Scale scores at discharge and a significantly greater number of weeks back to their "normal selves" during a 6-month follow-up than did patients with nonpsychotic major depression (N = 159). While both baseline severity and the receipt of electroconvulsive therapy distinguished these groups, neither accounted for the outcome differences noted. Severity ratings at discharge were clearly more predictive of follow-up course in psychotic patients than they were in nonpsychotic patients. Moreover, patients with psychotic depression had clearer outcomes in that their average follow-up weeks were more likely to involve either full syndromes or a complete absence of depressive symptoms. This finding, if replicated, may account in part for the lack of consensus on the prognostic significance of psychotic depression.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]