Background: The relationship between migraine and depression has been thoroughly investigated, indicating a bidirectional comorbidity. The exact temporal relationship between acute depressive... Show moreBackground: The relationship between migraine and depression has been thoroughly investigated, indicating a bidirectional comorbidity. The exact temporal relationship between acute depressive symptoms (mood changes) and the various phases of the migraine attack has not yet been examined. Methods: We performed a prospective diary study in n = 487 participants with migraine. Participants filled out a daily diary on migraine and acute depressive symptoms during a 1-month period. We randomly selected one migraine attack per participant, consisting of six days around an attack, including the interictal, premonitory, ictal, and postdromal phases. Acute depressive symptoms covered five major items from the DSM-5 classification. Primary analysis was performed using a mixed model with post-hoc testing. We also tested whether lifetime depression influenced the presence of acute depressive symptoms. Results: During a migraine headache day, patients scored higher on acute depressive symptoms than on all other days of the migraine attack (p < 0.001). There were no early warning signs for an upcoming headache attack through acute depressive symptomatology. Migraine patients with lifetime depression scored overall higher during the migraine attack than those without lifetime depression (p < 0.001). Limitations: Migraine attacks were based on self-reported migraine and one migraine attack per patient was randomly selected.Conclusion: We now clearly demonstrate that during the migraine headache phase, but not in the prodromal phase, patients report increased depressive symptomatology. No evidence was found for mood changes as an early warning sign for an upcoming migraine attack. Show less
BACKGROUND: Depression has been associated with metabolic alterations, which adversely impact cardiometabolic health. Here, a comprehensive set of metabolic markers, predominantly lipids, was... Show moreBACKGROUND: Depression has been associated with metabolic alterations, which adversely impact cardiometabolic health. Here, a comprehensive set of metabolic markers, predominantly lipids, was compared between depressed and nondepressed persons.METHODS: Nine Dutch cohorts were included, comprising 10,145 control subjects and 5283 persons with depression, established with diagnostic interviews or questionnaires. A proton nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics platform provided 230 metabolite measures: 51 lipids, fatty acids, and low-molecular-weight metabolites; 98 lipid composition and particle concentration measures of lipoprotein subclasses; and 81 lipid and fatty acids ratios. For each metabolite measure, logistic regression analyses adjusted for gender, age, smoking, fasting status, and lipid-modifying medication were performed within cohort, followed by random-effects meta-analyses.RESULTS: Of the 51 lipids, fatty acids, and low-molecular-weight metabolites, 21 were significantly related to depression (false discovery rate q < .05). Higher levels of apolipoprotein B, very-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, diglycerides, total and monounsaturated fatty acids, fatty acid chain length, glycoprotein acetyls, tyrosine, and isoleucine and lower levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, acetate, and apolipoprotein Al were associated with increased odds of depression. Analyses of lipid composition indicators confirmed a shift toward less high-density lipoprotein and more very-low-density lipoprotein and triglyceride particles in depression. Associations appeared generally consistent across gender, age, and body mass index strata and across cohorts with depressive diagnoses versus symptoms.CONCLUSIONS: This large-scale meta-analysis indicates a clear distinctive profile of circulating lipid metabolites associated with depression, potentially opening new prevention or treatment avenues for depression and its associated cardiometabolic comorbidity. Show less