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1 fluence hippocampal size (n = 8 depressed, 8 nondepressed).
3 t of substance use disorder in depressed and nondepressed adolescents, and whether substance use diso
5 Two primary care physicians (PCPs) and 5236 nondepressed adult patients were randomly sampled from e
6 ornia, among a community-based sample of 160 nondepressed adults aged 60 years or older (53 with inso
11 nts who were depressed and in those who were nondepressed at enrollment, after the effects of other f
15 linically mixed and nonmixed patients in the nondepressed cluster revealed that the mixed patients in
16 essed cluster, and about 40% of those in the nondepressed cluster, were in a mixed state according to
20 depressed patients 59 to 78 years old and 47 nondepressed comparison subjects 55 to 81 years old.
21 cipants currently taking antidepressants and nondepressed comparison subjects demonstrated greater to
22 irty-three elderly depressed patients and 27 nondepressed comparison subjects participated in this st
23 ed to both nonsuicidal depressed elderly and nondepressed comparison subjects, after controlling for
24 the subjects with primary depression and the nondepressed comparison subjects, but the Alzheimer's di
35 ion (n = 11) to that in age- and sex-matched nondepressed controls (n = 11) and in a larger group of
36 ts with co-occurring anxiety and 33 matched, nondepressed controls at baseline and after 12 weeks (of
37 edicated outpatients with MDD and 20 matched nondepressed controls completed rs-fcMRI scans after whi
38 lowing administration of zoster vaccine than nondepressed controls or depressed subjects receiving an
43 s (namely, from nondepressed or depressed to nondepressed, depressed, or death) was evaluated over ti
46 uantify the presence of CRN in depressed and nondepressed elderly Medicare beneficiaries and nonelder
47 47% to 51% higher in depressed compared with nondepressed elderly patients after adjustment for chron
48 in depressed elderly subjects with those of nondepressed elderly subjects by using voxel-based morph
49 in depressed elderly subjects, compared with nondepressed elderly subjects, and in Alzheimer's diseas
59 pressed high utilizers were more likely than nondepressed high utilizers to have higher medical costs
60 01), although expenditures for depressed and nondepressed high utilizers were similar for the previou
61 the amygdala, insula, and thalamus, whereas nondepressed individuals exhibit the opposite pattern.
62 ing an effortful affective reappraisal task, nondepressed individuals showed an inverse relationship
64 (PFC) when downregulating negative affect in nondepressed individuals, whereas depressed individuals
66 fspring of depressed (high familial risk) or nondepressed (low familiar risk) probands (first generat
68 nd increased early life stress (N=14) versus nondepressed male comparison subjects (N=14) before and
69 lon4 nor depression, the risk of dementia in nondepressed men with APOE epsilon4 was not significant
72 febrile illness in children of depressed and nondepressed mothers was estimated using a recurrent eve
73 d mothers compared with those in children of nondepressed mothers were 1.57 (95% confidence interval:
74 f depressed mothers (compared to partners of nondepressed mothers) and to examine how these paternal
78 00 person-years among those depressed versus nondepressed, multiadjusted hazard ratios [95% confidenc
79 tive (ADNI) Depression Project study and 119 nondepressed (ND) cognitively unimpaired participants ma
81 SSRI) antidepressants, and infants born to a nondepressed, nonmedicated comparison group across the f
82 ed with a decrease in striatal metabolism in nondepressed OCD patients but with an increase in striat
83 ikelihood of transitioning from depressed to nondepressed (odds ratio, 0.27; 95% confidence interval,
84 ssing may mitigate the risk of depression in nondepressed older adults, especially older males with i
86 hood of 6 possible transitions (namely, from nondepressed or depressed to nondepressed, depressed, or
88 en (generation 3) of depressed compared with nondepressed parents (generation 2) had 2-fold increased
89 pring of moderately to severely depressed or nondepressed parents selected from the same community we
90 year follow-up of offspring of depressed and nondepressed parents to determine the magnitude and cont
92 ffspring of depressed parents, compared with nondepressed parents, had more serious and impairing dep
97 e risk of mortality in depressed relative to nondepressed participants was 1.64 (95% CI=1.56-1.76), w
99 have a three-fold greater risk of dying than nondepressed patients (95% CI, 1.07 to 8.30; P =.04) bet
101 s in speech production between depressed and nondepressed patients have been suggested as a potential
103 depression were nine times more likely than nondepressed patients to drop out of prolonged exposure
104 robability of survival for the depressed and nondepressed patients was 85% (95% confidence interval [
105 trial for prevention of depression among 176 nondepressed patients was conducted within 3 months foll
107 Studies with data contrasting depressed vs nondepressed patients who did and did not later develop
111 istered to 18 psychotropic medication-naive, nondepressed patients with OCD aged 8.8 to 16.9 years an
114 ospital and outpatient medical services than nondepressed patients, but they did not receive more men
117 ed medical utilization between depressed and nondepressed patients, we conducted a study that focused
132 -blind treatment study were compared with 42 nondepressed stroke patients who remained nondepressed t
134 ) deficiency was present in 14.9% of the 478 nondepressed subjects, 17.0% of the 100 mildly depressed
141 ike broadening and synaptic facilitation for nondepressed synapses is the inverse of that in adults.
146 ad a higher likelihood of transitioning from nondepressed to depressed (odds ratio, 2.02; 95% confide
150 -up were classified into depressed (n = 44), nondepressed with other neuropsychiatric symptoms (n = 9
152 ss-sectional sample of 318 depressed and 658 nondepressed women between the ages of 36 and 44 who wer
153 Finally, 21% of the depressed and 3% of the nondepressed women met criteria for premenstrual dysphor
154 -one percent of the depressed and 20% of the nondepressed women met criteria for significant menses-r
156 d premenopausal women with depression and 25 nondepressed women who were matched by age and menstrual
157 dvantage for processing words, compared with nondepressed women, but this difference was not seen amo
159 y compared striatal volumes in depressed and nondepressed women, screened to exclude major cerebrovas