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What Is Dysthymia?

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What Is Depression?

What Is Dysthymia?

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Mental health professionals use the term dysthymia (dis-THIGH-me-ah) to

refer to a low-level drone of depression that lasts for at least two years in

adults or one year in children and teens. While not as crippling as major

depression, its persistent hold can keep you from feeling good and can intrude

upon your work, school, and social life. If you were to equate depression with

the color black, dysthymia might be likened to a dim gray. Unlike major

depression, in which relatively short episodes may be separated by considerable

spans of time, dysthymia lasts for an average of at least five years.

If you suffer from dysthymia, more often than not you feel depressed during

most of the day. You may carry out daily responsibilities, but much of the zest

is gone from your life. Your depressed mood doesn’t lift for more than two

months at a time, and you also have at least two of the following symptoms:

overeating or loss of appetite

insomnia or sleeping too much

tiredness or lack of energy

low self-esteem

trouble concentrating or making decisions

hopelessness.

Sometimes an episode of major depression occurs on top of dysthymia; this is

known as double depression.

Dysthymia often begins in childhood, the teen years, or early adulthood. Being

drawn into this low-level depression appears to make major depression more

likely. In fact, up to 75% of people who are diagnosed with dysthymia will have

an episode of major depression within five years.

It’s difficult to escape the grasp of untreated dysthymia. Only about 10% of

people spontaneously emerge from it in a given year. Some appear to get beyond

it for as long as two months, only to spiral downward again. However, proper

treatment eases dysthymia and other depressive disorders in about four out of

five people.

From the Harvard Health Publications Special Health Report, Understanding

Depression. Copyright 2006 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.

Illustrations by Avishai, Leighton, and Marcia . All rights

reserved. Written permission is required to reproduce, in any manner, in whole

or in part, the material contained herein. To make a reprint request, contact

Harvard Health Publications. Used with permission of StayWell.

https://www.iamshaman.net/affiliatewiz/aw.aspx?A=317

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