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Freeing up the flow: clearing neck-artery blockage diminishes signs of depression in elderly.


Unclogging and propping open the large artery that supplies blood to the head can ease symptoms of depression in elderly people. That finding adds fuel to the debate over the hypothesis that impaired blood flow to the brain can cause depression.

Wolfgang Mlekusch of Vienna General Hospital The Vienna General Hospital (German: Allgemeines Krankenhaus der Stadt Wien) (AKH) is the University clinic of the city of Vienna, Austria.  in Austria and his colleagues identified 143 patients, average age 70, who were scheduled to undergo a procedure to open a blocked portion of the carotid artery carotid artery
n.
1. An artery that originates on the right from the brachiocephalic artery and on the left from the aortic arch, runs upward into the neck and divides opposite the upper border of the thyroid cartilage, with the external and
. All patients had at least an 80 percent blockage in one of the branches of this artery, which carries freshly oxygenated blood Oxygenated blood
Blood carrying oxygen through the body.

Mentioned in: Patent Ductus Arteriosus
 from the heart.

In the medical procedure, performed under local anesthesia Anesthesia, Local Definition

Local or regional anesthesia involves the injection or application of an anesthetic drug to a specific area of the body, as opposed to the entire body and brain as occurs during general anesthesia.
, a doctor inserted a balloon-tipped catheter into an artery near the patient's groin or in an arm and threaded it up to the neck. Then, the doctor inflated the balloon to push aside the blockage and installed a mesh cylinder called a stent, which propped open the carotid artery.

Before the operation, the patients filled out a standard questionnaire that measures signs of depression. The researchers calculated a score that gauged each patient's depressive signs. At that time, the scores of 34 percent of the patients indicated significant depressive symptoms. The patients filled out the same questionnaire 4 weeks after the operation. Only 10 percent showed significant depressive symptoms then.

When the team compared pre- and postoperative scores, the average score fell by more than half. The researchers retested one-fourth of the patients 3 months later and found that the scores remained low, the team reports in the August Radiology.

For comparison, doctors gave the depression questionnaire to 102 people, average age 66, who were scheduled to have vascular surgery Vascular surgery is a subspecialty of general surgery in which diseases of the vascular system, or arteries and veins, are managed, largely via surgical intervention. The vascular surgeon is trained in the diagnosis and management of diseases affecting all parts of the vascular  on their legs. The scores of 17 percent of these patients indicated depressive symptoms shortly before their operations. That percentage remained about the same 4 weeks after surgery.

The findings lend support to the vascular-depression hypothesis, says psychiatrist David C. Steffens of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. If poor blood flow indeed does disrupt brain circuits that maintain normal moods, restoring the flow in those areas may rekindle re·kin·dle  
tr.v. re·kin·dled, re·kin·dling, re·kin·dles
1. To relight (a fire).

2. To revive or renew: rekindled an old interest in the sciences.
 "the normal drive and motivation to do things," he says.

Stanton R Newman, a psychologist at University College London “UCL” redirects here. For other uses, see UCL (disambiguation).
University College London, commonly known as UCL, is the oldest multi-faculty constituent college of the University of London, one of the two original founding colleges, and the first British
, suggests that the before-and-after depression scores could have another explanation. Rather than prove that a carotid carotid /ca·rot·id/ (kah-rot´id) pertaining to the carotid artery, the principal artery of the neck.

ca·rot·id
n.
 stent alleviates depression, he says, the study "more likely reflects the patients' anxiety and depression as measured just before a high-risk operation"--and their sense of relief afterward. The patients who underwent leg surgery wouldn't have felt as much anxiety, he contends.
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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 29, 2006
Words:425
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