Involutional melancholia explained

Involutional melancholia or involutional depression is a traditional name for a supposed psychiatric disorder which was thought to affect mainly elderly or late middle-aged people, often in association with paranoia.

As with other historical descriptions of melancholia, this diagnostic label is not recognized as a psychiatric disorder by the DSM-5, the American Psychiatric Association's (APA) classification and diagnostic tool.

History

In 1907, the German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin was the first to propose (in the seventh edition of his influential textbook) the existence of involutional melancholia as a distinct clinical entity, separate from the manic-depressive psychosis.[1] [2] At the time, he believed that 'the processes of involution in the body are suited to engender mournful or anxious moodiness', and that this could help explain the more frequent occurrence of depression among elderly people.[1] Later, Kraepelin's stance changed, broadly in line with the results of a study he had commissioned by his colleague Georges L. Dreyfus: by the time of the publication of the eighth edition of his textbook in 1913, he had incorporated involutional melancholia under the general heading of 'manic-depressive illness'.[1] [3]

Dreyfus had challenged (in 1907) Kraepelin's concept of an acquired origin, maintaining it to be endogenous in origin (although statistical review of Dreyfus's analysis of his case series has questioned his conclusion that the natural history of involutional melancholia was similar to that of depression in younger people).[3] Some debate about its status as a potential clinical entity, as well as possible causation - endogenous or environmental - continued into the late twentieth century. It was noted that whereas "involutional melancholy was conceptualized as an acquired rather than constitutional disorder, these ideas have not survived careful scrutiny."[4]

Characteristics

Symptoms were thought to include agitation, depersonalization, and delusions of bodily change, in the absence of manic features.[4] Symptoms of fear were also considered to occur, as well as despondency and hypochondriacal delusions. In the absence of treatment, the disorder was thought to have a prolonged, deteriorating course with poor prognosis.

Treatments

Involutional melancholia was classically treated with antidepressants and mood elevators.

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) was also used. Around the mid-twentieth century, there was some consensus that ECT was the most effective treatment option, and could prevent years of hospitalization.[5] (Such an approach has also been reported in the 21st century.[6])

Psychoanalysis

Otto Fenichel considered that "psychoanalytically, not much is known about the structure and mechanism of involutional melancholias; they seem to occur in personalities with an outspoken compulsive character of an especially rigid nature. In the climacterium the compulsive defensive systems fail."[7]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Kendler KS, Engstrom EJ . Dreyfus and the shift of melancholia in Kraepelin's textbooks from an involutional to a manic-depressive illness . Journal of Affective Disorders . 270 . 42–50 . 2020 . 32275219 . 10.1016/j.jad.2020.03.094 .
  2. Book: Berrios . German E. . The history of mental symptoms: descriptive psychopathology since the nineteenth century . 1998 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 9780521437363 . 311.
  3. Book: Abou-Saleh . MT . Katona . CLE . Kumar . A . Principles and practice of geriatric psychiatry . 2011 . Wiley . Chichester, UK . 9780470669594 . 5 . 3rd.
  4. I. F. Brockington, Motherhood and Mental Health (1996) pp. 47–48
  5. Eric Berne, A Layman's Guide to Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis (Penguin 1976) p. 358
  6. M. A. Taylor, M. Fink, Melancholia (2006) p. 153
  7. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (London 1946) p. 406