The prevalence of antidepressant use was similar in residents with and without dementia. Clinician-observed pain was inversely associated with antidepressant use but there was no association between self-reported pain and antidepressant use.
The effects of mianserin 30-60 mg and clomipramine 75-150 mg were compared in a randomized double-blind study of 62 mildly depressed outpatients. Treatment was continued for three to four weeks, after which approximately SO% of patients left the study clinically much improved. Significant benefits for mianserin were apparent at days 7 and 21 on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) total score and at day 7 on the HDRS anxietysomatization factor score. No difference in overall antidepressant activity was found in those patients treated for four weeks. There was a significantly greater number of side-effects in the clomipramine treated group. It is suggested that mianserin is a more rational treatment than clomipramine in this group of patients because of a greater anxiolytic action and a lower incidence of sideeffects.
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