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Psychosomatics 1998 Sep-Oct;39(5):416-21

Depression in Parkinson's disease. The impact of symptom overlap on
prevalence.

Hoogendijk WJ, Sommer IE, Tissingh G, Deeg DJ, Wolters EC
Graduate School of Neurosciences Amsterdam, Department of Psychiatry, Free
University, The Netherlands.

The reported prevalence of depression concomitant with Parkinson's disease
varies greatly in the literature, which may partly be explained by symptom
overlap. To determine the impact of symptom overlap on the prevalence, the
authors tested 100 Parkinson's disease patients for major depression
(DSM-III-R) with both a standard, inclusive method and a
diagnostic-etiologic, exclusive method. The authors found that the
prevalence detected with the inclusive method (23%) decreased when the
exclusive method was used (13%), which was mainly caused by lower scores on
the item "loss of interest." The study's findings give empirical support for
the relevance of the new category in DSM-IV "mood disorder due to a general
medical condition."

PMID: 9775698, UI: 98448837
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