Authors
Maria Giulia Nanni, Rosangela Caruso, Alex J Mitchell, Elena Meggiolaro, Luigi Grassi
Publication date
2015/1
Source
Current psychiatry reports
Volume
17
Pages
1-11
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Depression is the most common neuropsychiatric complication in HIV-infected patients and may occur in all phases of the infection. Accurately, diagnosing major depressive disorder in the context of HIV is an ongoing challenge to clinicians and researchers, being complicated by the complex biological, psychological, and social factors associated with the HIV illness. Evidences exist to support the importance of improving the identification of depressive symptoms and their adequate treatment. Depression has long been recognized as a predictor of negative clinical outcomes in HIV-infected patients, such as reducing medication adherence, quality of life, and treatment outcome, and possibly worsening the progression of the illness and increasing mortality. By analyzing the most relevant studies (MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycLit, Cochrane Library), the review discusses the epidemiology and the main clinical …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MG Nanni, R Caruso, AJ Mitchell, E Meggiolaro… - Current psychiatry reports, 2015