C-reactive protein levels and depression in older and younger adults - A study of 19,947 individuals. The Tromsø study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30665Dato
2022-12-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bugge, Erlend; Wynn, Rolf; Mollnes, Tom Eirik; Reitan, Solveig Merete Klæbo; Lapid, Maria I.; Grønli, Ole KristianSammendrag
However, the research populations are predominantly younger adults, mainly in clinical settings, and there are few community-based studies providing comparative analyses of age-groups, or focusing specifically on the older population. For those that do, the results are inconsistent, as some demonstrate an association between CRP and depression (Bondy et al., 2021; Sonsin-Diaz et al., 2020; White et al., 2017), while others do not (Baune et al., 2012; Bremmer et al., 2008; Eurelings et al., 2015; Penninx et al., 2003). Thus, it is still unclear whether the inflammation in depression unfolds to the same extent in depressed older adults as in younger adults, and how the severity of the depression relates to inflammation in different age groups.