Seeing Gray When Feeling Blue? Depression Can Be Measured in the Eye of the Diseased
Received 1 August 2009; received in revised form 28 January 2010; accepted 1 February 2010. published online 01 April 2010.
Background
Everyday language relates depressed mood to visual phenomena. Previous studies point to a reduced sensitivity of subjective contrast perception in depressed patients. One way to assess visual contrast perception in an objective way at the level of the retina is to measure the pattern electroretinogram (PERG). To find an objective correlate of reduced contrast perception, we measured the PERG in healthy control subjects and unmedicated and medicated patients with depression.
Methods
Forty patients with a diagnosis of major depression (20 with and 20 without medication) and 40 matched healthy subjects were studied. Visual PERGs were recorded from both eyes.
Results
Unmedicated and medicated depressed patients displayed dramatically lower retinal contrast gain. We found a strong and significant correlation between contrast gain and severity of depression. This marker distinguishes most patients on a single-case basis from control subjects. A receiver operating characteristic analysis revealed a specificity of 92.5% and a sensitivity of 77.5% for classifying the participants correctly.
Conclusions
Because PERG recording does not depend on subjective ratings, this marker may be an objective correlate of depression in human beings. If replicated, PERG may be helpful in further animal and human research in depression.
Address correspondence to L. Tebartz van Elst, M.D., Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany
Authors MB and LTvE contributed equally to this work.