T. Marcos
University of Barcelona
7 Papers
135 Citations
T. Marcos is an academic researcher from University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Depression (differential diagnoses) & Perfusion scanning. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Citalopram versus nortriptyline in late‐life depression: a 12‐week randomized single‐blind study
TL;DR: The aim of this single‐blind study was to examine the efficacy and tolerability of citalopram compared to nortriptyline in moderate to severe major depressive patients aged 60 years or over.
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Normalization of frontal cerebral perfusion in remitted elderly major depression: a 12-month follow-up SPECT study.
TL;DR: Findings are consistent with the hypothesis that certain neuroanatomic regions of the central nervous system may be functionally and reversibly involved in unipolar major depression, particularly in the late-onset subgroup.
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Frontal cerebral perfusion after antidepressant drug treatment versus ECT in elderly patients with major depression: a 12-month follow-up control study.
Víctor Navarro,Cristóbal Gastó,Francisco Lomeña,J.J. Mateos,Maria J. Portella,Guillem Massana,Miguel Bernardo,T. Marcos +7 more
TL;DR: The long-term evolution of frontal perfusion in elderly major depressives who respond to antidepressant biological treatment is essentially the same in those who receive electroconvulsive therapy and in thosewho receive medication.
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Residual symptoms in elderly major depression remitters.
TL;DR: To assess residual symptoms in severe geriatric major depression in remission, and to determine baseline clinical and sociodemographic predictors of residual Symptoms in remitters.
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No brain perfusion impairment at long-term follow-up in elderly patients treated with electroconvulsive therapy for major depression.
Victor Navarro,Cristóbal Gastó,Francisco Lomeña,J.J. Mateos,Maria J. Portella,Guillem Masana,Miguel Bernardo,T. Marcos +7 more
TL;DR: The result suggests that elderly patients given ECT for severe unipolar major depression do not suffer brain perfusion abnormalities at long-term follow-up, and adds new evidence in favor of the safety of the ECT, particularly in elderly subjects.
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