Elevated Concentrations of CSF Corticotropin-Releasing Factor-Like Immunoreactivity in Depressed Patients

Charles B. Nemeroff(Duke University), Erik Widerlöv(Uppsala University), Garth Bissette(Duke Medical Center), Helena Walléus(Uppsala University), Ingvar Karlsson(University of Gothenburg), Kurt Eklund, Clinton D. Kilts(Duke Medical Center), Peter T. Loosen(Salk Institute for Biological Studies), Wylie Vale(Salk Institute for Biological Studies)
Science
December 14, 1984
Cited by 1,487

Abstract

The possibility that hypersecretion of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) contributes to the hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis observed in patients with major depression was investigated by measuring the concentration of this peptide in cerebrospinal fluid of normal healthy volunteers and in drug-free patients with DSM-III diagnoses of major depression, schizophrenia, or dementia. When compared to the controls and the other diagnostic groups, the patients with major depression showed significantly increased cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of CRF-like immunoreactivity; in 11 of the 23 depressed patients this immunoreactivity was greater than the highest value in the normal controls. These findings are concordant with the hypothesis that CRF hypersecretion is, at least in part, responsible for the hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis characteristic of major depression.


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