Effects of exercise training on
older patients with major depression
by
Blumenthal JA, Babyak MA, Moore KA, Craighead WE,
Herman S, Khatri P, Waugh
R, Napolitano MA, Forman LM,
Appelbaum M, Doraiswamy PM, Krishnan KR
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences,
Duke University Medical
Center,
Durham, NC 27710, USA.
blume003@mc.duke.edu
Arch Intern Med 1999 Oct 25;159(19):2349-56
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Previous observational and interventional studies have suggested
that regular physical exercise may be associated with reduced symptoms of
depression. However, the extent to which exercise training may reduce depressive
symptoms in older patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) has not been
systematically evaluated. OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of an aerobic
exercise program compared with standard medication (ie, antidepressants) for
treatment of MDD in older patients, we conducted a 16-week randomized controlled
trial. METHODS: One hundred fifty-six men and women with MDD (age, > or = 50
years) were assigned randomly to a program of aerobic exercise, antidepressants
(sertraline hydrochloride), or combined exercise and medication. Subjects
underwent comprehensive evaluations of depression, including the presence and
severity of MDD using Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,
Fourth Edition criteria and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D) and
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores before and after treatment. Secondary
outcome measures included aerobic capacity, life satisfaction, self-esteem,
anxiety, and dysfunctional cognitions. RESULTS: After 16 weeks of treatment, the
groups did not differ statistically on HAM-D or BDI scores (P = .67); adjustment
for baseline levels of depression yielded an essentially identical result.
Growth curve models revealed that all groups exhibited statistically and
clinically significant reductions on HAM-D and BDI scores. However, patients
receiving medication alone exhibited the fastest initial response; among
patients receiving combination therapy, those with less severe depressive
symptoms initially showed a more rapid response than those with initially more
severe depressive symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: An exercise training program may be
considered an alternative to antidepressants for treatment of depression in
older persons. Although antidepressants may facilitate a more rapid initial
therapeutic response than exercise, after 16 weeks of treatment exercise was
equally effective in reducing depression among patients with MDD.
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