Some persons are affected
with anhedonia permanently, or at any rate with a loss of the usual appetite for life.
Not exact matches
Rather than excluding all study subjects who do not fit a DSM diagnosis, such as major depression, for example, the new approach might include a range of participants
with different diagnoses who all demonstrate
anhedonia, the impaired ability to experience pleasure, and might look for underlying brain abnormalities that they share in common.
Specifically, our data
with the CSDS model suggests that animals most susceptible to social stress after going through the 10 - day social defeat paradigm exhibit increased social avoidance behavior,
anhedonia and potentiated fear responding to sound cues.
With a history of alcohol abuse, memory problems and
anhedonia, I suspect a possible brain infection.
POMS measures levels of depression, anger, hostility, fatigue, and confusion, while DASS gauges other negative mood states as well, including hopelessness, lack of interest,
anhedonia (lack of pleasure), agitation, irritability, and impatience
with other people.
So a chance encounter in the hotel, which turns into an intimate erotic affair
with a self - esteem - challenged woman named Lisa (voiced by Jennifer Jason Leigh), briefly makes Stone believe he has found a cure to his
anhedonia (without too many spoilers: best.
The test characteristics of a two - question case - fidning instrument that asks about depressed mood and
anhedonia were compared
with six common case - finding instruments, using the Quick Diagnostic Interview Schedule as a criterion standard for the diagnosis of major depression.
Does
anhedonia and / or depressed mood predict recurrent major adverse cardiac events (MACEs) in people
with acute coronary syndromes (ACS)?
A short - term longitudinal examination of the relations between depression,
anhedonia, and self - injurious thoughts and behaviors in adults
with a history of self - injury.
Box 4 shows that the sample of 812 patients
with pain more frequently experienced depression subscale items reflecting sadness, lack of initiative and
anhedonia (inability to experience pleasure) than those reflecting low self - worth and meaningless of life.
Our finding that patients
with pain reported that they more frequently experienced the depression subscale items reflecting sadness, lack of initiative and
anhedonia than those reflecting low self - worth and lack of meaning is consistent
with some earlier research in similar samples of patients
with chronic pain.6, 9 It is also interesting to compare these items to those endorsed by patients
with both depression and medical illnesses, who invariably favour a cognitive formulation.29