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- <text id=92TT1531>
- <title>
- July 06, 1992: Depression:The Growing Role Drugs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 06, 1992 Pills for the Mind
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 57
- DEPRESSION
- The Growing Role of Drug Therapies
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As doctors learn more about the biology of mental illness, they
- are unlocking the mysteries of depression and creating a new
- science of the mind
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT -- With reporting by Andrew Purvis/New
- York and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Mental illness can wear many masks. Most are subtler than
- the deranged face of schizophrenia, but they can be just as
- paralyzing. Take the case of Dick Cavett. To many TV viewers,
- the talk-show host and actor seemed to have it all -- wit,
- charm, fame and fortune. But behind the glib facade, Cavett was
- falling apart. About 12 years ago, a chronic depression that
- had haunted him for years rose up and began undermining what he
- believed was his most valuable asset: his intellect. He became
- convinced that his brain was "broken" and that life without it
- was hardly worth living. "Everything seemed to be growing
- gray," he recalls. "All the things that used to give me
- pleasure suddenly weren't worth the effort."
- </p>
- <p> Desperate, Cavett checked into a hospital, where for five
- weeks he was protected from himself while a seemingly mild but
- potent drug called an MAO inhibitor took effect. Such
- antidepressants cause subtle changes in the concentrations of
- certain neurotransmitters, the chemicals that carry electrical
- messages to and from nerve cells in the brain. The medication,
- which he still takes on a maintenance dose in conjunction with
- psychotherapy, worked. His wit, humor and facility for words
- returned, good as new. And Cavvett came away from the
- experience with a conviction that his disorder was, as he puts
- it, "absolutely chemical."
- </p>
- <p> That conviction reflects a growing consensus among
- scientists that dysfunctions like depression and schizophrenia
- -- and indeed most mental disorders -- are at their core
- disruptions of normal brain chemistry and can often be treated
- as such. The talk-therapy tradition pioneered by Freud and
- others still has its place. Subconscious issues are believed to
- affect brain chemistry, and most studies show that drug
- treatments work best when administered along with some form of
- talk therapy. But it is the psychopharmacologists, not the
- psychiatrists, who are making the breakthroughs in mental-health
- circles.
- </p>
- <p> "There is an explosion of activity," says Richard Wyatt,
- chief of neuropsychiatry at the National Institute of Mental
- Health (NIMH) in Bethesda, Md. With computerized scanners,
- researchers are peering at the chemistry of the working mind.
- Meanwhile, molecular biologists are beginning to map abnormal
- behavior to specific strands of dna. And by tracing the action
- of drugs like clozapine for schizophrenia and Prozac
- (fluoxetine) for depression, scientists can link moods and
- feelings to the action of certain chemicals in the brain. The
- result is a burst of new ideas about how the mind works -- and
- what is going on when it does not -- unequaled since the days of
- Freud and Jung.
- </p>
- <p> Advances are being made against virtually every affliction
- to which the human mind is prey. Generalized anxiety can be
- treated with surprising success with benzodiazepines like
- Valium, as well as with a new drug called BuSpar (buspirone).
- Manic depression was effectively treated with lithium long
- before anyone knew why it worked; now therapy is being
- fine-tuned with medications like the anticonvulsant Tegretol
- (carbamazepine) and drugs that ameliorate lithium's side
- effects. Debilitating panic attacks can be prevented with both
- antidepressants and benzodiazepines. Hyperactivity, addictive
- disorders, phobias, sleep disturbances, even dementia -- all
- are succumbing to the new science of the brain.
- </p>
- <p> But it is the treatment of ordinary depression -- the
- crushing despondency that strikes more than 12 million
- Americans each year and accounts for at least half the nation's
- suicides -- that represents mental health's greatest success
- story. The condition once called melancholia, and now better
- known as clinical or major depression, has been the target of
- an all-fronts research assault over the past decade. The
- immediate result is a crop of new, highly specific
- antidepressant drugs that offer fast relief with relatively few
- side effects. Today depression can be treated -- quickly and
- effectively -- in 7 cases out of 10. If a second round of
- treatment is required, the cure rate jumps to 90%.
- </p>
- <p> Depression comes in many flavors, from seasonal depressions
- that come and go with the short days of winter to low-level
- chronic depressions that linger for months. Among the symptoms
- of clinical depression are weight loss, early waking, diminished
- sex drive and a general hopelessness. But some people have what
- are called atypical depressions in which they put on weight and
- sleep much of the day.
- </p>
- <p> Of course not everyone who has the blues is depressed.
- Feelings of sadness, frustration and unhappiness are natural
- reactions to real-life problems -- a painful loss, a
- relationship gone sour, a conflict that won't go away.
- Psychiatrists refer to such reactions as "adjustment
- disorders," and the people who suffer from them as the "worried
- well." A simple rule of thumb prevails: If the symptoms
- gradually clear up as the problem subsides, you've probably had
- an ordinary adjustment disorder. If not, you may be suffering
- from clinical depression.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly, researchers are seeing depression as a
- "disregulation" of the brain's reaction to stress. Even a bad
- case of clinical depression will not go on forever: the disease
- tends to run its course in nine months to a year.
- Unfortunately, it often returns. The initial episode has what
- researchers call a "kindling effect"; it seems to carve a
- pathway in the brain that leaves 70% of its victims vulnerable
- to another attack. "While a psychosocial stress can be involved
- in the onset of the first episode, the triggering mechanism for
- subsequent depressions can be more autonomous," says Robert
- Post, the NIMH scientist who developed the kindling theory.
- "Once someone has a number of depressions, they are likely to
- happen on their own."
- </p>
- <p> As with Thorazine for schizophrenia, the first breakthrough
- for treating depression with drugs came accidentally. Doctors
- using a tuberculosis drug called iproniazid in 1952 discovered
- that the medicine had a remarkable effect on the mood of their
- patients: they literally began dancing in the halls.
- </p>
- <p> Five years later, scientists found out why. Iproniazid falls
- into the category of antidepressant medications known as MAO
- inhibitors, which work by blocking the breakdown of two potent
- neurotransmitters -- norepinephrine and serotonin -- and
- allowing them to bathe the nerve endings for an extended length
- of time. A second category of antidepressants, the tri cyclics
- (so named for their triple-carbon-ring structure), raises the
- level of these neurotransmitters in the brain by slowing the
- rate at which they are reabsorbed by nerve cells. The third and
- newest category of medications, represented by the popular
- Prozac and a number of other drugs, inhibits the uptake of zero
- serotonin alone. As a result of this specificity, these newest
- drugs reverse depressive symptoms without the severe side
- effects of other antidepressants, which can cause low blood
- pressure, dizziness and blurred vision if not monitored. (Some
- people allege, however, that Prozac can cause irrational
- behavior and suicidal tendencies.)
- </p>
- <p> The effectiveness of Prozac, which is the world's
- top-selling antidepressant, has led some researchers to
- speculate that serotonin is the key regulator of mood, and that
- depression is essentially a shortfall of serotonin. But the
- theory has some serious flaws. If serotonin is so important,
- why do the tricyclics (which affect both norepinephrine and
- serotonin) work slightly better than the drugs that act on
- serotonin alone? And why, since these drugs act quickly to
- change the serotonin levels in the brain, does it take up to a
- month for their effects to be felt? Finally, some scientists
- wonder how a single neurotransmitter could trigger the
- disruptions of sleep, appetite, memory, learning and sexuality
- that characterize a typical depressive episode. The nerve
- endings responsible for these functions, after all, are located
- in totally different regions of the brain.
- </p>
- <p> Some scientists believe that the neurotransmitters are just
- links in a chain of reactions and that the real master molecules
- of mood reside higher up in that chain. One leading candidate:
- a substance called corticotropin-releasing hormone, or crh,
- which is pumped directly into the spinal fluid and thus bathes
- the entire brain at once. Discovered in 1981 by researchers
- studying the biochemistry of stress, crh is known to promote
- vigilance and decrease interest in food and sex when
- administered in small doses. In higher doses, it triggers
- anxiety. When Philip Gold, chief of the clinical
- neuroendocrinology branch of the NIMH, began looking for the
- hormone in his depressed patients, he found it was not only
- elevated, but elevated all the time -- even during sleep. What
- looked like depression was really a state of hyper-arousal, a
- kind of permanent flight-or-fight response. "In melancholia,"
- explains Gold, "CRH gets stuck."
- </p>
- <p> CRH may be the master molecule of more than just depression.
- This stress-related substance is also elevated in people
- suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorders and eating
- disorders such as anorexia and bulimia. Equally intriguing is
- the fact that the same drugs used to treat depression are
- effective against all these conditions and against panic
- attacks as well. Some researchers have therefore concluded that
- the diverse disorders may in fact be linked. "Depression may be
- only the tip of the iceberg of a family of dysfunctions," says
- James Hudson, a psychiatrist at Harvard.
- </p>
- <p> Much work remains to be done to explain the connection
- between these disorders and determine why abnormal levels of
- CRH would lead to one set of symptoms in one person and another
- in someone else. Genetics may ultimately hold many of the
- answers. But it is clear that the study of depression and the
- drugs that relieve it has opened a breathtaking view on the
- mysterious world of human mood and emotion -- and provided new
- ways to calm some of its most troubling storms.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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