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Ear, nose, and throat problems triple depression risk

posted Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Patients who experience a range of ear, nose, and throat (ENT)-related health problems exhibited a greater prevalence of depression than is observed in the general population, says new research presented at the 2008 American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Foundation Annual Meeting in Chicago, IL.

In any given one-year period, approximately 9.5 percent of the population, or about 18.8 million American adults suffer from a depressive illness. The new study, which analyzed the health of 12,516 distinct otolaryngology (ENT, head and neck disorders) patients, found that 30 percent of these patients either had been diagnosed with depressive illness or took antidepressants.

The study further broke down different otolaryngologic diagnoses to determine which conditions had the highest co-morbidity with depression. Researchers found that patients diagnosed with sleep apnea had the highest levels of depression and use of antidepressant medications (21 percent and 46 percent).


Epstein VA, Fishman AJ, ChanDr RK. Prevalence of Depression in Otolaryngology Patients AAO-HNSF Annual Meeting, Chicago Ill. 2008 Sep 23.   [Abstract]

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1. Hip left...
Friday, 31 October 2008 5:20 am :: http://chronicsorethroat.wordpress.com/

I caught a virus which caused a chronic sore throat, chronic congested nose and sinus infection, progressive hearing problems, as well as powerful mental symptoms including SEVERE anxiety, fatigue, depression and anhedonia.

Science is currently realizing that infectious pathogens like the one I caught are found behind a whole range of disease conditions, so it is not surprising that the are often several symptoms occurring together. They are often created by the same virus.

For details, see here: http://chronicsorethroat.wordpress.com/