Depression (major depressive disorder or clinical depression) is a common but serious mood disorder. It causes severe symptoms that affect how you feel, think, and handle daily activities, such as sleeping, eating, or working. To be diagnosed with depression, the symptoms must be present for at least two weeks.
Some forms of depression are slightly different, or they may
develop under unique circumstances, such as:
·
Persistent
depressive disorder (also
called dysthymia) is a depressed mood that lasts for at least two
years. A person diagnosed with persistent depressive disorder may have episodes
of major depression along with periods of less severe symptoms, but symptoms
must last for two years to be considered persistent depressive disorder.
Perinatal
depression is much more serious than the “baby
blues” (relatively mild depressive and anxiety symptoms that typically clear
within two weeks after delivery) that many women experience after giving birth.
Women with perinatal depression experience full-blown major depression during
pregnancy or after delivery (postpartum depression). The feelings of extreme
sadness, anxiety, and exhaustion that accompany perinatal depression may make
it difficult for these new mothers to complete daily care activities for
themselves and/or for their babies.
·
Psychotic
depression occurs when a person has severe
depression plus some form of psychosis, such as having disturbing false fixed
beliefs (delusions) or hearing or seeing upsetting things that others cannot
hear or see (hallucinations). The psychotic symptoms typically have a
depressive “theme,” such as delusions of guilt, poverty, or illness.
· Seasonal
affective disorder is
characterized by the onset of depression during the winter months, when there
is less natural sunlight. This depression generally lifts during spring and
summer. Winter depression, typically accompanied by social withdrawal,
increased sleep, and weight gain, predictably returns every year in seasonal
affective disorder.
·
Bipolar disorder is
different from depression, but it is included in this list is because someone
with bipolar disorder experiences episodes of extremely low moods that meet the
criteria for major depression (called “bipolar depression”). But a person with
bipolar disorder also experiences extreme high – euphoric or irritable – moods
called “mania” or a less severe form called “hypomania.”
Examples of other types of depressive disorders newly added
to the diagnostic classification of DSM-5 include disruptive mood
dysregulation disorder (diagnosed in children and adolescents) and premenstrual
dysphoric disorder (PMDD).
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