This book offers a state-of-the-art report on recent discoveries
concerning the basic and clinical, neuroscientific and psychiatric
findings in depression research. Depressive disorder is a severe and
recurrent brain disorder that can manifest in depressive mood, somatic
symptoms and cognitive impairment. The underlying mechanisms of
depressive disorder and its clinical practice are subjects of
long-standing interests. This book is a biologically plausible and
multilevel theory which describes neural, physiological, molecular and
genomic mechanisms that drive depression pathogenesis, as well as
navigates the clinical practice and management for depressive disorder.
It mainly describes advances made over the past 20 years on the neural,
molecular, neuroimaging, physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology and
internet-based measurement and management of depressive disorder. It
will help postgraduate students and academic researchers to get either
basic or clinical picture of depressive disorder. Also, it may benefit
pharmaceutical companies for developing novel drugs to treat this
disease.