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oo o Vol. 94 No. 4 October 2002 ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY MEDICAL MANAGEMENT UPDATE Editor: Donald Falace Late-life depression: Psychopathology, medical interventions, and dental implications Arthur H. Friedlander, DDS,a and Dean C. Norman, MD,b Los Angeles, Calif VETERANS AFFAIRS GREATER LOS ANGELES HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA–LOS ANGELES Background. Late-life depression (LLD) initially occurs after age 65 years and is a major public health concern because the elderly who are at high risk constitute an ever-expanding segment of the population. LLD is a mental illness in which mood, thought content, and behavioral patterns are impaired, causing the individual distress, compromising social function, and impairing self-maintenance skills (eg, bathing, dressing, hygiene). LLD characterized by marked sadness or a loss of interest or pleasure in daily activities and may be accompanied by weight change, sleep disturbance, fatigue, difficulty in concentration, and a high suicide rate. Diagnosis of LLD is sometimes complicated by a denial of mood change and an inability to distinguish symptoms of a concurrent physical illness from those of a depressive etiology. The disorder is most frequently treated with antidepressant medications, and although older individuals have a recovery rate that is comparable with younger adults, they often take longer to recover, have more frequent relapses, and are more sensitive to the side effects of the drugs. Clinical implications. Individuals undergoing treatment for LLD and those whose illness has not been diagnosed or treated often are seen with significant oral disease by the dentist. Dentists need to be cognizant of how to safely and compassionately provide care to those already receiving mental health services. They must also be familiar with the psychiatric symptoms of the disorder to effectuate a timely referral to a physician of those with occult or relapsing disease. LLD is frequently associated with a disinterest in oral hygiene, a cariogenic diet, diminished salivary flow, rampant dental decay, advanced periodontal disease, and oral dysesthesias. Many medications used to treat the disease magnify the xerostomia and increase the incidence of dental disease. Appropriate dental management necessitates a vigorous preventive dental education program, the use of artificial salivary products, antiseptic mouthwash, daily fluoride mouth rinse, and special precautions in administration of local anesthetics with vasoconstrictors and prescription of analgesics. Conclusion. Dentists who invoke appropriate precautions can usually provide a full range of services to individuals with LLD, thereby enhancing patient self-esteem and contributing to the psychotherapeutic aspect of management. (Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod 2002;94:404-12) Late-life depression (LLD) initially begins after age 65 and classically presents as dysphoria (feeling sad, mis- a Associate Chief of Staff and Director of Graduate Medical Education, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Professor of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Director of Quality Assurance, Hospital Dental Service, UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles. b Chief of Staff, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, and Professor of Internal Medicine, Geriatric Medicine and Infectious Diseases, UCLA School of Medicine. Los Angeles. Received for publication Nov 21, 2001; accepted for publication Dec 18, 2001. © 2002, Mosby, Inc. 1079-2104/2002/$35.00 ⫹ 0 7/13/122434 doi:10.1067/moe.2002.122434 404 erable, helpless, and hopeless) and anhedonia (an inability to enjoy oneself). Among community-dwelling individuals, this may appear as a loss of interest or pleasure in activities that were formerly sources of enjoyment, such as watching television or playing with grandchildren. For nursing home residents, this may take the form of no longer eating dinner in the group dining room or going to concerts, movies, or discussion groups. A loss of self-esteem, or a preoccupation over past minor failings, and thoughts of suicide may accompany the dysphoria and anhedonia. In addition, alterations may be seen in appetite that result in weight loss or gain, insomnia, neglect of personal hygiene, an inability to sit still (agitation), sad fixed facial expres- ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY Volume 94, Number 4 sion, slowed speech and body movements (psychomotor retardation), lack of energy, and cognitive impairment (ie, difficulty in thinking, concentrating, and making decisions). This cluster of symptoms is emotionally painful for the individual and impairs their social interactions and activities of daily living (eg, ability to groom, bathe, and perform oral hygiene).1-3 LLD is at times difficult to diagnose (masked depression) because many symptoms of the disorder, such as sleep disturbance, fatigue, and impaired concentration, overlap with symptoms of other medical problems, such as heart disease, lung disease, and cancer, that are prevalent in older persons.4,5 Similarly, appetite disturbance may be caused by factors such as age-related diminished smell and taste, medication-derived xerostomia, and an absence of teeth.6 LLD may also be difficult to diagnose because some elderly individuals express depression with complaints about numerous bodily aches and pains that lack objective signs or with denial of a depressive mood and symptoms of guilt and self-reproach. This often results in the patient being provided medication for the somatic complaints but with the depression going undiagnosed and untreated.7-9 EPIDEMIOLOGY The overall prevalence rate for LLD is 3.3% for women and 1.4% for men; however, when broken down by setting, there is marked variation.10 The illness is relatively uncommon (1%) among the physically healthy elderly living independently in the community, but the prevalence increases (12%) among those hospitalized for medical illnesses (eg, diabetes, angina, myocardial infarction), neurologic disease (eg, stroke), and surgical conditions and rises even further (20% to 25%) among chronically ill but cognitively intact patients in nursing homes.11,12 This epidemiologic pattern of LLD occurring in relation to age-related physical illness, chronic disabilities, and social isolation is a major public health concern because it is estimated that between 2002 and 2040 the segment of the population over age 65 years will grow by 160% and that over age 75 years will grow by 270%.13-15 The reasons for the greater prevalence of the disorder among women remain unclear but is probably related to social influences.16 Women on average live 7 years longer than men and outnumber men 3 to 2 in the population at the age of 65 years and 5 to 2 in the population aged 85 years and older. Thus, they are at greater risk than men of having multiple vulnerabilities that lead to increased risk of institutionalization and concomitant depression. The relapse rate of LLD is approximately 60%, with those at highest risk having a concurrent severe medical Friedlander and Norman 405 illness, an absence of a social support network, or a history of relapse.17-21 Individuals with LLD are high consumers of general healthcare, may abuse alcohol and sedative-hypnotic agents, and have an increased overall mortality rate compared with that of nondepressed peers.22 Risk of suicide is a major concern for those with LLD. From 1980 to 1992, the suicide rate for men and women aged 65 years and older increased 9%, and for those aged 80 to 84 years, it increased 35%.23 At highest risk of suicide are elderly white males without friends or social support with an initial onset of mild to moderately severe depression uncomplicated by substance abuse.24,25 However, even with these profiles, it is still uniquely difficult to predict which individuals will commit suicide. Seventy-five percent of depressed individuals who commit suicide have visited a primary care physician within the prior month and 39% within the prior week, but their mental illness was neither recognized nor treated.26,27 PATHOPHYSIOLOGY The etiology of late-onset depression remains ill defined; however, it appears to be an acquired condition that arises from a combination of the physiologic effects of aging, medical illnesses, physical disabilities, medications, and psychosocial stress (eg, death of a spouse, enforced change of residence, increased dependency).28,29 Data from computerized tomographic scans often reveal regional cerebral atrophy, such as smaller prefrontal lobe volume. Magnetic resonance imaging studies show enlarged cerebral ventricles and whitematter hyperintensities, which are construed to be areas of compromised brain tissue resulting from hypertension-induced, small blood vessel ischemic occlusive disease (silent infarctions/silent strokes).30 Similarly, functional neuroimaging with positron emission tomographic scanning shows decreased regional cerebral blood flow and decreased cerebral glucose metabolism.31 Aging also is associated with a decline in the levels of the neurotransmitter hormones norepinephrine and serotonin (because of neuronal loss, decreased synthesis, or increased degradation) and in the number of -adrenergic and serotonin postsynaptic binding sites. These deficits also are believed responsible for LLD in some individuals because they hinder the transmission of neural impulses in the limbic system (amygdala and hippocampus), areas of the brain responsible for the regulation of mood, sleep, appetite, libido, and memory.32 LLD differs from early-onset disease with less prominence of depressed mood, delayed diagnosis because of greater difficulty in distinguishing the disease from the overlapping symptoms of physical illness, a lower 406 Friedlander and Norman Table I. Antidepressant medications Heterocyclic antidepressant drugs Secondary amines Desipramine hydrochloride Nortriptyline hydrochloride Tertiary amines Amitriptyline hydrochloride Clomipramine hydrochloride Doxepin hydrochloride Imipramine Trimipramine SSRIs Citalopram hydrobromide Fluoxetine Fluvoxamine Paroxetine hydrochloride Sertraline hydrochloride Atypical antidepressant drugs Bupropion hydrochloride Maprotiline Mirtazapine Nefazodone hydrochloride Trazodone hydrochloride Venlafaxine hydrochloride MAOIs Phenelzine sulfate Tranylcypromine sulfate frequency of family history of the disease but a higher frequency of cognitive impairment, anatomic and physiologic changes in the brain, increased time lag in therapeutic response, treatment resistance, and increased mortality from medical illness and suicide. MEDICAL MANAGEMENT Pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy, or a combination of both is used with great efficacy to treat the disorder.33 Electroconvulsive therapy is reserved for those who cannot tolerate medication or are at risk of imminent death because of a refusal to eat or suicidal tendency. More than 2 dozen antidepressant medications are currently available and are divided into 4 groups: heterocyclic antidepressants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), “atypical” antidepressants, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs; Table I). Medications are chosen on the basis of the patient’s symptoms, drug side effect profile, and the presence of concurrent medical illness. If the patient is agitated (ie, restlessness and insomnia), an antidepressant with sedative qualities will be chosen; however, if the patient is lethargic, a less sedating drug will be prescribed.34 Older patients are more likely to have side effects because of age-related pharmacokinetic alterations in drug absorption, binding, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. Medications with excessive anticholinergic ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY October 2002 activity are avoided in individuals whose medical conditions (eg, glaucoma) could be worsened by these side effects, and antidepressants that cause sexual dysfunction are avoided in those who remain sexually active. These medications are effective approximately 75% of the time, with patients usually responding in 6 to 12 weeks. The medication regime commonly remains in force for at least 1 year after recovery because of the propensity for relapse. The heterocyclic antidepressants (also known as the tricyclic antidepressants) exert their effect by preventing presynaptic neurones from reabsorbing (blocking reuptake) noradrenaline and serotonin from the synaptic cleft for recycling. Thus, the concentration of these 2 neurotransmitters is elevated and neuronal activity is increased. The heterocyclic antidepressants are divided into 2 subgroups. The secondary amines (eg, desipramine hydrochloride, nortriptyline hydrochloride) have relatively mild, peripheral, and central anticholinergic profiles and have been used for many years to treat elderly patients. The tertiary amines (eg, amitriptyline hydrochloride, doxepin hydrochloride) have more pronounced anticholinergic effects (eg, fecal impaction, urinary retention, falls and hip fractures, xerostomia, and altered cardiac rate and rhythm) and are less commonly used.35 The SSRIs (eg, fluoxetine) exert their antidepressant effect by preventing presynaptic neurones from reabsorbing (reuptake) serotonin from the synaptic cleft for recycling.36 Thus, the concentration of serotonin in the cleft is elevated and neuronal activity is enhanced. The SSRIs are becoming the drugs of choice in the physically ill depressed patient because of their reduced anticholinergic side effects, reduced cardiotoxicity, and much diminished likelihood of inducing confusion.37 The use of these medications, however, may be of concern to dentists because of the potentially increased bleeding time secondary to a disruption in platelet function.38,39 A third group, known as the atypical antidepressants, consists of a heterogeneous collection of medications that exert their effects through varied mechanisms. Mirtazapine enhances presynaptic norepinephrine release and secondarily enhances serotonin neurotransmission. Nefazodone hydrochloride inhibits reuptake of serotonin and also selectively blocks serotonin receptors, and venlafaxine hydrochloride inhibits reuptake of serotonin and noradrenaline. The MAOIs (eg, phenelzine sulfate, tranylcypromine sulfate) exert their antidepressant effect by downregulating -noradrenergic and ␣2-noradrenergic receptors and serotonin1 and serotonin2 receptors. The MAOIs are used infrequently and are reserved for those whose depression has been refractory to a course of heterocy- ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY Volume 94, Number 4 clics, SSRIs, or the atypical antidepressants. The rationale for the limited use of these medications (⬍10% of antidepressant prescriptions) arises because of dangerous dietary and drug interactions (eg, with ephedrine) that may cause severe, acute hypertension. MAOIs prevent the gut wall and liver from inactivating exogenous amines (eg, tyramine found in aged cheeses, meats, and red wine). The amines reach the systemic circulation and then noradrenergic nerve endings where they release noradrenaline, resulting in vasoconstriction and hypertension.40 Older individuals with fragile cerebral vasculature are potentially at high risk of death from a hypertensive-induced intracranial hemorrhage. Other major side effects associated with the use of MAOIs are orthostatic hypotension, xerostomia, and weight gain. Psychotherapeutic intervention, without adjunctive medication, is effective treatment for some patients with LLD. It is an especially attractive option in the frail medically ill to avoid drug side effects and drugdrug interactions. Psychotherapy also is frequently used in combination with drugs in severely ill patients to increase compliance with medication use and decrease the likelihood of relapse.41,42 Psychotherapeutic interventions include cognitive-behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy.43,44 Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is another form of treatment for LLD with antidepressant effects that occur much more rapidly (within 7 to 10 days) than those obtained with antidepressive medication. For this reason, it is considered a first-line treatment for patients with LLD who refuse to eat or are in danger of a completed suicide.45 ECT is also indicated for patients with LLD who are medication resistant or for those with concomitant medical conditions (eg, cardiovascular disease) that preclude the administration of adequate dosages of psychopharmacologic agents.46,47 With general anesthesia, a brief electric stimulus is administered to the brain via electrodes placed on the temples. The current passes through the central parts of the brain stimulating the centrencephalic structures to produce a grand mal seizure. The massive depolarization of neurones alters cerebral blood flow and metabolism and renders the neuronal membranes more responsive to noradrenaline, thereby enhancing neuronal activity.48 This results in approximately 75% of patients having remission of their depression; however, to prevent relapse, an antidepressant may be prescribed for 1 year after the patient has completed the course of ECT.49 Medical complications of ECT are rare; however, the procedure is associated with a brief headache and an increased vulnerability to cognitive side effects.50,51 Anterograde amnesia (newly learned information is rapidly forgotten) and retrograde amnesia (deficits in Friedlander and Norman 407 recall or recognition of events that occurred closest in time to the treatment) commonly occur. After termination of ECT, anterograde amnesia typically resolves within a few weeks, but retrograde amnesia diminishes more gradually and may possibly persist.52 Irrespective of these issues, two thirds of patients who have had ECT report that the experience was no more challenging than a visit to the dentist.53 An often overlooked aspect of the pre-ECT work-up is the orofacial examination, which could identify broken or loose teeth that may be aspirated during the seizure, upper airway obstruction from destructive arthritis of the temporomandibular joint, dental abscesses, or facial deformities that may preclude ECT.54-57 Similarly, it is recommended that loose teeth than cannot be protected during the procedure be prophylactically extracted before ECT.58,59 This latter admonition is important because of the severe jaw clenching that results from the stimulation of the masseter muscles.60 OROFACIAL FINDINGS Persons with undiagnosed, untreated, or treatmentresistant LLD may present with numerous orofacial complications. These individuals may appear to have a fixed facial expression and deep furrows in the forehead and beside the mouth, which can accompany psychomotor retardation.61 Studies with standarized psychologic tests (eg, Beck Depression Inventory, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) to evaluate older individuals seeking treatment for chronic facial pain or a burning sensation of the oral mucosa and tongue reveal that approximately 40% would qualify for a diagnosis of LLD.62-69 Studies that evaluated the oral health of patients with LLD receiving long-term treatment with antidepressant medications have noted that these individuals evidence extensive dental decay. This is likely the result of many factors, including a disinterest in oral hygiene, a preference for carbohydrates because of reduced serotonin centrally, a craving for intense sweets (because of impaired taste perception), a decrement in whole mouth and parotid gland saliva (because depression itself is related to increased anticholinergic activity), and a high lactobacillus count.70-77 Individuals with LLD are also at high risk of advanced periodontal disease because of neglect of oral hygiene, xerostomia, an increase in smoking, and an altered immune response facilitating increased colonization by pathogenic bacteria, thus leading to a breakdown of the periodontal attachment.78,79 Individuals with diagnosed LLD under treatment are also at risk of development of dental decay because many antidepressants add to the xerostomia by blocking parasympathetic stimulation of the salivary glands. 408 Friedlander and Norman ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY October 2002 Table II. Adverse orofacial reactions to heterocyclic antidepressant medications Medication Xerostomia Sialadenitis Dysgeusia Stomatitis Gingivitis Glossitis Bruxism Miscellaneous Amitriptyline hydrochloride Clomipramine hydrochloride ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 0 Desipramine hydrochloride Doxepin hydrochloride Imipramine Nortriptyline hydrochloride Protriptyline hydrochloride Trimipramine ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caries, cheilitis, dysphagia, oral ulcers, halitosis, sinusitis Facial edema 0 Facial edema Facial edema Facial edema Facial edema A metaanalysis of the results of double-blind, randomized control trials has shown that the crude rates of occurrence of xerostomia are 27% for heterocyclics and 22% for the SSRIs.80 However, even though this is a statistically significant difference, studies reveal that individuals receiving both classifications of drugs evidence extensive dental decay secondary to the medications’ xerostomic effects.81,82 Long-term use of heterocyclic agents also is associated with an increase in dental decay because this group of medications enhances the craving for carbohydrates by a still unexplained mechanism.83 Similarly, individuals receiving SSRIs or the atypical antidepressants may on occasion have a movement disorder develop that includes clenching or bruxing of the teeth, further worsening the periodontal condition.84 This may occur because these medications increase extrapyramidal levels of serotonin, thereby inhibiting dopaminergic pathways that control movements.85 The most frequently prescribed antidepressant medications are associated with a significant number of adverse orofacial reactions.86,87 These complications (ie, xerostomia, sialadenitis, gingivitis, dysgeusia, and stomatitis) almost always arise because of medicationinduced salivary gland dysfunction (Tables II to V). However, if stomatitis develops in a patient taking mirtazapine, it may represent the initial signs of medication-induced bone marrow suppression (ie, agranulocytosis, leucopenia, or granulocytosis), a potentially fatal event. DENTAL MANAGEMENT Some patients who undergo psychiatric treatment for depression may be reluctant to admit it because of local or historic stigma attached to a psychiatric diagnosis. To overcome such barriers and obtain necessary information, the dentist should display a supportive, nonjudgmental attitude and advise patients that such information will be held confidential and is indispensable to the provision of safe dental care. Before a patient with LLD begins dental treatment, their physician should be consulted. With consent of the patient, information requested should include the patient’s current psychologic status and current psychotropic medication regimen and any history of alcohol or other substance abuse. Preventive dental education is paramount for these patients. Family members, however, must also be involved during the development of the preventative dental regime; if the depression does not adequately respond to therapy, the patient may lack the motivation and concentration necessary to autonomously comply. Instructions should be given in proper tooth brushing and flossing methods that maximize dental plaque removal. Artificial salivary products, antiseptic mouthwash (eg, chlorhexidine), and a 0.05% sodium fluoride mouth rinse may be prescribed for patients with xerostomia. Dental treatment should consist of subgingival scaling, root planing and curettage, caries control, application of fluoride gel, and dental restorations. Effective local anesthesia is mandatory in depressed and often anxious individuals. Use of local anesthetic solutions containing epinephrine as a vasoconstrictor for patients receiving heterocyclics is controversial because of the fear of precipitating a hypertensive crisis or a cardiac arrhythmia. The primary mechanism for terminating the pressor action of adrenergic amines (eg, epinephrine) is their reuptake by presynaptic sympathetic nerve fibers, which precludes their continued access to receptor sites. Heterocyclics block this reuptake process. The heterocyclics also block muscarinic and ␣1-adrenergic receptors, thereby directly depressing the heart. Thus, the combination of a heterocyclic antidepressant and epinephrine may potentially result in an increase in systolic blood pressure or a cardiac arrhythmia. Therefore, Howe and Whitehead88 recommend the use of anesthetic solutions that do not contain epinephrine (for instance, 3% mepivacaine hydrochloride). However, others do not report any untoward results with the use of epinephrine in Friedlander and Norman 409 ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY Volume 94, Number 4 Table III. Adverse orofacial reactions to SSRIs Medication Xerostomia Sialadenitis Dysgeusia Stomatitis Gingivitis Glossitis Bruxism Miscellaneous Citalopram hydrochloride Fluoxetine ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ Fluvoxamine Paroxetine hydrochloride Sertraline hydrochloride ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ 0 Jaw pain, buccal glossal syndrome Toothache Caries, dysphagia Dysphagia, gingival hyperplasia Table IV. Adverse orofacial reactions to atypical antidepressant drugs Medication Xerostomia Sialadenitis Dysgeusia Stomatitis Gingivitis Glossitis Bruxism Bupropion hydrochloride ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ Maprotiline Mirtazapine ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ See Miscellaneous 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 0 Nefazodone hydrochloride ⫹ 0 ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ ⫹ 0 Trazodone hydrochloride Venlafaxine hydrochloride ⫹ ⫹ 0 0 ⫹ ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ 0 ⫹ Miscellaneous Toothache, oral edema, dysphagia Dysphagia Stomatitis may indicate agranulocytosis, leucopenia, or granulocytosis; facial edema Moniliasis, dysphagia, periodontal abscesses, oral ulcers sinusitis Moniliasis, dysphagia, halitosis, oral ulcers Table V. Adverse orofacial reactions to MAOIs Medication Phenelzine sulfate Tranylcypromine sulfate Xerostomia Sialadenitis Dysgeusia Stomatitis Gingivitis Glossitis Bruxism Miscellaneous ⫹ ⫹ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 patients taking heterocyclic antidepressants and conclude that the amount of epinephrine used in dental anesthetic preparations is too insignificant to interact with the heterocyclics.89,90 Regardless, it may be prudent to administer no more than 50 g of epinephrine, as is found in 2 to 3 cartridges of 2% lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine, with care being taken to avoid intravenous administration. Similarly, the American Dental Association Guide to Dental Therapeutics suggests cautious use of epinephrine and in as low a dose as is feasible but avoidance of the use of levonordefrin and norepinephrine.91 It is also recommended that gingival retraction cords impregnated with epinephrine be avoided.92 Other adverse drug interactions between heterocyclics and medications used in dentistry may occur. The respiratory depressant effects of narcotic analgesics (eg, codeine) are potentiated by tricyclics. Barbiturates (eg, phenobarbital) may accelerate the metabolism of heterocyclics and attenuate their antidepressant effects. The administration of medications with anticholinergic properties, such as atropine or scopolamine, can cause an increase in intraocular pressure and precipitate or worsen narrow angle glaucoma. Finally, care should be observed when prescribing acetaminophen because of its ability to decrease the metabolic rate of heterocyclics.93 Patients taking MAOIs can receive local anesthetic solutions containing epinephrine because the MAOIs do not potentiate the pressor or cardiac effects of this direct-acting sympathomimetic.94 The use of meperidine hydrochloride by a patient taking MAOIs may result in fatal elevations in body temperature (hyperpyrexia) because of increased serotonin release. MAOIs also interfere with the detoxification of barbiturates and anticholinergic drugs (eg, atropine, scopolamine) and thus potentiate their effects.95 Adverse interactions between the SSRIs and some 410 Friedlander and Norman medications used in dentistry may occur because these antidepressants inhibit certain metabolic pathways. Specifically, the SSRIs inhibit P-450 isoenzymes needed to adequately metabolize codeine, benzodiazepines, erythromycin, and carbamazepine. These dental therapeutic agents therefore should be used cautiously and in reduced dosages.96 At 3-month follow-up visits, a clinical examination, oral prophylaxis, and application of a fluoride gel with a concentration at least 10,000 ppm are performed. Correction of defects in the natural dentition or prosthetic replacements are also performed during these recall visits. A consequent enhancement of self-esteem in these patients is often noticed by family and friends and may potentially contribute to the psychotherapeutic aspect of management. CONCLUSION The purpose of this paper is to familiarize dentists with LLD so that patients may safely and compassionately be treated and to help dentists recognize individuals who present with signs and symptoms consistent with occult depression so that they can knowledgeably refer them to a physician for evaluation and treatment. In addition, some within our own profession may suffer from this disorder, either diagnosed or occult, and this information may be of benefit to them. It should be recognized that dentistry, in concert with medicine, has much to offer patients with depression. REFERENCES 1. World Health Organization. The ICD-10 classification of mental and behavioral disorders clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1992. 2. Lockwood KA, Alexopoulos GS, Kakuma T, Van Gorp WG. Subtypes of cognitive impairment in depressed older adults. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2000;8:201-8. 3. Steffans DC, Hays JC, Krishnan KRR. Disability in geriatric depression. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 1999;7:34-40. 4. Sheehan B, Banerjee S. Review: somatization in the elderly. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 1999;14:1044-9. 5. Schein RL, Koenig HG. The center for epidemiological studiesdepression (CES-D) scale: assessment of depression in the medically ill elderly. 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