(CHICAGO) -- Blood tests have long been the diagnostic standard for diagnosing teenage diseases, such as mono and diabetes. Now, researchers have developed a blood test that can diagnose depression in teens, a step they hope will lead to a better way to identify the disorder in young people.
Currently, diagnosing depression depends entirely on a patient's willingness to report symptoms -- and a doctor's ability to interpret them. For teens, the diagnosis is particularly challenging, given the natural emotional ups and downs of adolescence.
"Teenagers are extraordinarily vulnerable to depression," said Eva Redei, author of the study and a professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. "And there are no objective, biological measures for evaluating them for depression."
In the study, published Tuesday in the journal Translational Psychiatry, Redei and her team developed a test that looks for markers in the blood of teens with major depressive disorder. By studying rats that had genetic and environmental predispositions for depression, the researchers were able to pinpoint 26 markers of major depression.
They looked for these markers in the blood of 28 human teenagers, ages 15 to 19, half with depression and half without. They found that 11 of the markers showed up in the depressed teens, but not in teens without depression.
They were also able to distinguish different subtypes of depression, successfully identifying teens who suffered from depression alone and depression combined with anxiety disorders.
"The uniqueness of this study is that we showed that it can be done. The technology is available to make this diagnosis," Redei said.
Experts say there is a great need to diagnose depression early in life, particularly among teens.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 11 percent of 13- to 18-year-olds develop major depression at some point in their adolescence. Reports from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration are slightly lower -- in 2008, 8.3 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds dealt with depression.
The disorder puts teens at greater risk for other health dangers, including substance abuse, physical illness and suicide. Also, when depression begins earlier in life, the chances that it will persist and perhaps worsen in adulthood are great.
Currently, diagnosing depression depends entirely on a patient's willingness to report symptoms -- and a doctor's ability to interpret them. For teens, the diagnosis is particularly challenging, given the natural emotional ups and downs of adolescence.
"Teenagers are extraordinarily vulnerable to depression," said Eva Redei, author of the study and a professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. "And there are no objective, biological measures for evaluating them for depression."
In the study, published Tuesday in the journal Translational Psychiatry, Redei and her team developed a test that looks for markers in the blood of teens with major depressive disorder. By studying rats that had genetic and environmental predispositions for depression, the researchers were able to pinpoint 26 markers of major depression.
They looked for these markers in the blood of 28 human teenagers, ages 15 to 19, half with depression and half without. They found that 11 of the markers showed up in the depressed teens, but not in teens without depression.
They were also able to distinguish different subtypes of depression, successfully identifying teens who suffered from depression alone and depression combined with anxiety disorders.
"The uniqueness of this study is that we showed that it can be done. The technology is available to make this diagnosis," Redei said.
Experts say there is a great need to diagnose depression early in life, particularly among teens.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 11 percent of 13- to 18-year-olds develop major depression at some point in their adolescence. Reports from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration are slightly lower -- in 2008, 8.3 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds dealt with depression.
The disorder puts teens at greater risk for other health dangers, including substance abuse, physical illness and suicide. Also, when depression begins earlier in life, the chances that it will persist and perhaps worsen in adulthood are great.
ABC News Radio
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