Hidden depression — 5 atypical faces: "smiling depression", irritable male depression, somatization, hyperphagia, hypersomnia (comparison table)

Hidden depression — 5 atypical faces: "smiling depression", irritable male depression, somatization, hyperphagia, hypersomnia (comparison table)

If you only memorize DSM-5's "typical" depression criteria (depressed mood, decreased appetite, insomnia, reduced concentration), you miss half of Korean depression. Five atypical / hidden presentations: ① "Smiling Depression" — cheerful at work and on social media, suicidal when alone. Suicide risk ↑↑. ② Irritable Depression — no sadness; irritability, anger outbursts, road rage. Common in Korean men. ③ Somatic Depression — headaches, indigestion, muscle pain, palpitations. "Tests are normal but I'm in pain". Common in middle-aged Korean women and the elderly. ④ Atypical Depression (DSM-5 specifier) — increased appetite and weight, hypersomnia (10h+), leaden heaviness, rejection sensitivity. Common in young women. ⑤ Masked Depression — covered by alcohol, workaholism, gambling, affairs. PHQ-9 self-assessment must be supplemented by checking these 8 variants. Undiagnosed atypical depression accounts for a large share of "treatment-resistant depression".

TL;DR

Knowing only typical depression misses half of Korean depression. 5 faces: smiling, irritable, somatic, atypical (appetite / sleep ↑), masked (covered by addiction). PHQ-9 + 8-item variant check. Smiling depression has the highest suicide risk. Much of "treatment-resistant depression" is actually atypical. Honestly report your daily pattern to psychiatry. 1577-0199.

1. Why looking only at "typical" depression is dangerous

Korea's diagnosed depression rate is about 30% of its lifetime prevalence (OECD average is 60%). A large part of the gap behind Korea's #1 suicide rate is missed depression in "non-typical" presentations. People themselves think, "I don't have depression".

2. Comparison table of 5 atypical depressions

TypeCore symptomsCommon demographicSuicide risk
① Smiling DepressionOutward cheer, helplessness and suicidal thoughts when aloneHigh-functioning 30s–50s, active on social mediaVery high (means and plan often prepared)
② Irritable DepressionNo sadness; irritability, anger, cursing, road rageKorean men in their 40s–50sHigh (impulsivity ↑)
③ Somatic DepressionHeadache, indigestion, muscle, palpitations — tests normalMiddle-aged women, elderly, rural, less-educatedMedium (chronified by diagnostic delay)
④ Atypical DepressionAppetite ↑, weight ↑, hypersomnia, leaden fatigue, rejection sensitivityYoung women, often with seasonal patternMedium
⑤ Masked DepressionAlcohol / workaholism / gambling / affairs in front, depression behindMiddle-aged men, perfectionistsHigh (suicide + accident + addiction complications)

3. Smiling Depression — the most dangerous form

The better one's external evaluation, the more likely. "If I say I'm depressed, others will be disappointed" → fake cheer. Even when suicidal thoughts arise, they're denied ("I would never"). Means, plan, and notes are quietly prepared. After sudden death, family and coworkers say "we had no idea" — classic smiling depression.

Red flags

  • Seems "suddenly better" after long depression (in fact, calm after decision)
  • Tidying belongings, giving away treasured items
  • Avoiding long-term commitments, future plans disappear
  • Sudden spike or drop in social-media / messenger activity

4. Irritable Depression — the "hidden depression" of Korean men

DSM-5 accepts irritability as a depression symptom only in adolescents / children. But clinical research (Fava et al., 2010): 40% of adult male depression presents with irritability and anger as the dominant symptoms rather than sadness. Part of why Korean male suicide is 2.5× the female rate.

Symptoms

  • Cursing while driving, increased road rage
  • Explosive reactions to small things with family / subordinates
  • Violence or verbal abuse after alcohol
  • Sadness learned as "weakness" → expressed as anger

5. Somatic Depression — "tests normal but I'm in pain"

The common path of middle-aged Korean women and the elderly — circling internal medicine and neurology instead of psychiatry. WHO research: 60% of primary-care depression patients first present with somatic complaints. Normal tests → suspected of malingering → more depression.

Common somatic symptoms

  • Headache (tension, migraine), back pain, muscle pain
  • Indigestion, IBS
  • Palpitations, chest tightness
  • Chronic fatigue, "no energy"

6. Atypical Depression (DSM-5 specifier)

Called "atypical" but actually common in young-adult depression. Diagnosis requires:

  1. Mood reactivity (good things lift mood temporarily)
  2. Appetite ↑, weight ↑ (opposite of typical)
  3. Hypersomnia (10h+, opposite of insomnia)
  4. Leaden paralysis — arms / legs heavy "like lead"
  5. Rejection sensitivity — explodes at small rejections

Treatment: MAOIs (phenelzine) or SSRI + bupropion are preferred over SSRI alone. MAOI prescription is rare in Korea — consult psychiatry in advance.

7. Masked Depression — hiding behind addiction

Alcohol, gambling, workaholism, affairs, overeating are impulsive / addictive self-medication. Just reducing the behavior unmasks the depression and makes things worse. Bidirectional treatment is mandatory: addiction + depression treated simultaneously.

8. Atypical screen — PHQ-9 + 8 items

After PHQ-9 (typical), add the following 8 items:

  1. I'm cheerful to others but think of dying when alone.
  2. I feel more irritated and angry than sad.
  3. I'm often in physical pain but tests are normal.
  4. My appetite or weight has increased.
  5. I sleep 10+ hours and still feel tired.
  6. I overreact to rejection or criticism.
  7. Alcohol / work / games / shopping have been increasing.
  8. Thoughts of death or suicide have arisen.

3 or more "yes" → recommend psychiatric consultation.

9. Crisis

Suicidal ideation / plan / means: call 1577-0199 immediately. If family detects the red flags above, ask the person directly: "Are you having thoughts of suicide?" — the question does not increase risk; it lowers it (Dazzi et al., 2014 meta-analysis).

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Frequently asked questions

My PHQ-9 score is low — could I still have depression?

Yes. PHQ-9 is centered on typical depression. If your main symptoms are atypical (increased appetite / sleep, irritability, somatic), you can have clinical depression at PHQ-9 ≤ 9. Add the 8 items above and see psychiatry.

My husband is constantly angry — could it be depression?

Quite possibly. 40% of Korean male depression presents as irritability / anger. Especially: 1) atypical increase in irritability vs his baseline, 2) alcohol + violence, 3) explosions at trivial things — evaluation is warranted. If he refuses, family can attend psychiatric consultation first.

Are atypical-depression medications different?

Yes. Typical depression: SSRI first-line. Atypical (DSM-5 specifier): MAOIs or SSRI + bupropion are more effective. Somatic depression: SNRIs (duloxetine) also help pain. Explain the atypical pattern clearly to your psychiatrist.

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