Types and Symptoms of Depression
Clinical Psychiatry and Neuroscience: An open access journal focuses on the study of scientific research on mental illnesses like schizophrenia, autism, ADHD, major depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and adjustment disorder. Other conditions covered include Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, and Parkinson's disease.
The Journal is dedicated to providing its examiners around the world with the most recent knowledge regarding mental illnesses and psychotherapy drugs.
In the upcoming issue we are going to publish a review article entitled: Types of depression, written by Gudisa Bereda, Department of Pharmacy, Negelle Health Science College, Guji, Ethiopia.
There were lights on for depression in this great piece of writing. A common psychiatric condition, depression affects 10% of people in the general population over their lifetime. Postnatal depression, also known as postpartum depression, is a type of sadness that affects mothers after giving birth and is often brought on by a combination of hormonal changes, psychological adjustment to motherhood, and weariness. Significant depressive episodes can happen just once or twice in a lifetime, or they can happen frequently. They can also happen on their own, during or after a loved one dies, a relationship ends a person gets sick, or experiences another major life event.
The following episodes of symptoms are indicative of a major depressive disorder: persistent sadness for the majority of the day, almost every day; loss of interest or pleasure in activities, including sex; guilt; feelings of helplessness; low energy; feeling "slowed down"; difficulty concentrating; difficulty remembering; difficulty making decisions; insomnia; early morning awakenings; or excessive sleeping; low appetite and weight loss; or overeating and weight gain.
Depression is characterized by feelings of sadness, emotional instability, discouragement, hopelessness, irritability, un-motivation, as well as an all-around loss of interest or enjoyment in life. Clinical depression and "depressive disorder" are other names for depression, which is a mood illness that produces distressing symptoms that interfere with daily tasks including sleeping, eating, and working. Depression has been linked to increased mortality, morbidity, functional disability, decreased quality of life, increased use of health services, and increased expenditures of care. A common psychiatric condition, depression affects 10% of people in the general population over their lifetime. Depression can be persistent or long-lasting, which significantly reduces a person's capacity for daily tasks.
Clinical depression and "depressive disorder" are other names for depression, which is a mood illness that produces distressing symptoms that interfere with daily tasks including sleeping, eating, and working. A type of depression that changes with the seasons, often commencing in the late fall and early winter and disappearing in the spring and summer, is known as seasonal affective disorder (SAD). Seasonal affective disorder is more prevalent in women and lasts at least two years in a row. Melancholic depression is a severe kind of intense depression that manifests as long-lasting, emotional sadness and unreasonable anxieties.
Melancholic depression is more common as people get older and is also more severe and psychotic. Loss of interest in once-enjoyable activities, a lack of energy, and anxiety are some of the signs of melancholic sadness.
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https://www.pulsus.com/submissions/clinical-psychiatry-neuroscience.html
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