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applegrove

(118,642 posts)
Wed Jan 7, 2015, 12:57 AM Jan 2015

"Is depression a kind of allergic reaction?"

Is depression a kind of allergic reaction?

by Caroline Williams at the Guardian, Raw Story

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/01/is-depression-a-kind-of-allergic-reaction/

"SNIP.....................



According to a growing number of scientists, this is exactly how we should be thinking about the condition. George Slavich, a clinical psychologist at the University of California in Los Angeles, has spent years studying depression, and has come to the conclusion that it has as much to do with the body as the mind. “I don’t even talk about it as a psychiatric condition any more,” he says. “It does involve psychology, but it also involves equal parts of biology and physical health.”

The basis of this new view is blindingly obvious once it is pointed out: everyone feels miserable when they are ill. That feeling of being too tired, bored and fed up to move off the sofa and get on with life is known among psychologists as sickness behaviour. It happens for a good reason, helping us avoid doing more damage or spreading an infection any further.

It also looks a lot like depression. So if people with depression show classic sickness behaviour and sick people feel a lot like people with depression – might there be a common cause that accounts for both?

The answer to that seems to be yes, and the best candidate so far is inflammation – a part of the immune system that acts as a burglar alarm to close wounds and call other parts of the immune system into action. A family of proteins called cytokines sets off inflammation in the body, and switches the brain into sickness mode.

Both cytokines and inflammation have been shown to rocket during depressive episodes, and – in people with bipolar – to drop off in periods of remission. Healthy people can also be temporarily put into a depressed, anxious state when given a vaccine that causes a spike in inflammation. Brain imaging studies of people injected with a typhoid vaccine found that this might be down to changes in the parts of the brain that process reward and punishment.




...................SNIP"
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"Is depression a kind of allergic reaction?" (Original Post) applegrove Jan 2015 OP
another approach: elleng Jan 2015 #1
That might partly explain my fondness for prednesone. hunter Jan 2015 #2
I know that when they were looking for a cure for arthritis, applegrove Jan 2015 #3

elleng

(130,895 posts)
1. another approach:
Wed Jan 7, 2015, 01:12 AM
Jan 2015

What If Everything We Know About Treating Depression Is Wrong?

Scientific studies indicate that current medications target the wrong parts of the brain.


A new study is challenging the relationship between depression and an imbalance of serotonin levels in the brain, and brings into doubt how depression has been treated in the U.S. over the past 20 years.

Researchers at the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center and Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit have bred mice who cannot produce serotonin in their brains, which should theoretically make them chronically depressed. But researchers instead found that the mice showed no signs of depression, but instead acted aggressively and exhibited compulsive personality traits.

This study backs recent research indicating that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, may not be effective in lifting people out of depression. These commonly used antidepressants such as Prozac, Paxil, Celexa, Zoloft, and Lexapro, are taken by some 10% of the U.S. population and nearly 25% of women between 40 and 60 years of age. More than 350 million people suffer from depression, according to the World Health Organization, and it is the leading cause of disability across the globe.

The study was published in the journal ACS Chemical Neuroscience. Donald Kuhn, the lead author of the study, set out to find what role, if any, serotonin played in depression. To do this, Kuhn and his associates bred mice who lacked the ability to produce serotonin in their brains, and ran a battery of behavioral tests on them. In addition to being compulsive and extremely aggressive, the mice who could not produce serotonin showed no signs of depression-like symptoms. The researchers also found, to their surprise, that under stressful conditions, the serotonin-deficient mice behaved normally.


http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/what-if-everything-we-know-about-treating-depression-wrong

posted elsewhere, earlier: http://www.democraticunderground.com/11515449

hunter

(38,311 posts)
2. That might partly explain my fondness for prednesone.
Fri Jan 9, 2015, 02:14 PM
Jan 2015

It seems quite possible that many sorts of mental illness are related to allergies, auto-immune diseases, and other inflammatory processes.

Asthma, Arthritis, and Major Depressive Disorder... Maybe I scored a three-for-one special in the health problem lottery.


applegrove

(118,642 posts)
3. I know that when they were looking for a cure for arthritis,
Fri Jan 9, 2015, 04:32 PM
Jan 2015

they were using SSRIs and they found they did wonders for depression. Thus Prozac was born.

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