Pp. Hubain et al., TSH RESPONSE TO TRH AND EEG SLEEP IN NON-BIPOLAR MAJOR DEPRESSION - AMULTIVARIATE APPROACH, European neuropsychopharmacology, 4(4), 1994, pp. 517-525
The TSH response to TRH and selected sleep EEG variables were studied
in a homogeneous sample of 280 non-bipolar major depressed inpatients
(95 males and 185 females). The TSH response to TRH was blunted in 28%
of the sample. Delta max TSH was correlated negatively with age, Hami
lton rating scale, Newcastle scale, percentage of wake, and positively
with basal TSH, percentage of stage II, slow wave sleep, REM sleep an
d REM latency. Delta max TSH was also lower in male patients and in pa
tients suffering from an endogenous or a psychotic subtype of major de
pression. Basal TSH was only correlated negatively with the Newcastle
score. In view of intercorrelations between all these variables, and b
ecause of the confounding effect of age, gender and severity on both t
he TSH response to TRH and sleep EEG variables, a multiple regression
analysis was performed and demonstrated that basal TSH and gender were
the two variables with the highest contribution to the Delta max TSH
variance, followed by age and the presence of psychotic symptoms. When
controlling strictly for these significant effects, correlation with
the severity or with the endogenous character of depression, and with
sleep EEG parameters disappeared.