5 research outputs found

    TNF-α Increase in a Cohort of Depressive Patients

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    Background. The model of neuroinflammation has been proposed as a possible explanation of depression. Investigations of serum levels of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) in depressed patients have previously shown contradictory results of increased and decreased levels of TNF-α during the treatment of depression. Methods. We compared the serum levels of TNF-α in two cohorts of patients suffering from depression (ICD-10 criteria): one cohort from a psychotherapeutic unit (n=18), where patients were treated with Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP), and the other cohort from a psychiatric day care unit (n=16). Both cohorts were investigated at the beginning and at the end of treatment. The intensity of depression was measured by means of the Beck Depression Inventory, 2nd edition (BDI-II) at both time points. Results. We observed a statistically significant increase of TNF-α in the psychotherapeutic unit at time point 2 compared to time point 1 (T=−14.71, p<0.001), but not in the psychiatric day care unit. In both cohorts, BDI-II scores at time point 2 were significantly decreased compared to time point 1 (psychiatric day care unit: T=3.32, p=0.005; psychotherapeutic unit: T=6.22, p<0.001). There was a significant correlation in the psychotherapeutic unit at time point 2 (r=−0.682, p=0.02). Conclusion. As TNF-α was increased at time point 2 in the psychotherapeutic unit but not in patients of the psychiatric day care unit, we propose the different durations of pretreatments in both cohorts and the associated processes of neuroinflammation as a possible explanation for our results. The lack of information about the time course of TNF-α in depression could in general explain the huge variety of TNF-α levels in different cohorts of depressed patients reported in the literature

    Fat Digestion and Absorption

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