Jump to content

The Serotonin Theory of Depression is Collapsing


Barbarannamated

Recommended Posts

Just one more brief article about the debunked-but-still-circulating serotonin theory of depression. Pharmapsychiatry started this myth but, to my knowledge, has done nothing to retract it from the lay public.

 

The Serotonin Theory of Depression Is Collapsing

http://m.psychologytoday.com/blog/charting-the-depths/201007/the-serotonin-theory-depression-is-collapsing

Jonathan Rottenberg, Ph.D

Psychology Today July 23, 2010

 

You've all heard the analogy that depression is like diabetes, a "chemical imbalance" in the brain. The chemical most often mentioned as imbalanced is a neurotransmitter called serotonin, which is hypothesized to be low in depresed people. Fortunately, like the diabetic, the depressed person can take a drug like Prozac that corrects this imbalance and raises serotonin to normal levels. ....The serotonin theory of depression is a good illustration that if you repeat something enough times, people will come to believe it. The widespread use of serotonergic drugs for treating depression and evidence for their efficacy has also greatly boosted the serotonin theory of depression (even in the face of evidence that the beneficial drug effects are relatively modest). But just as headaches are not caused by a lack of aspirin, the efficacy of serotonergic drugs are not a proof that depression is caused by a lack of serotonin. As it turns out, over the past few decades, neuroscientists have had difficulty supporting the core of the theory with a demonstration that serotonin was low in depressed people. Part of the problem is that it is very difficult to measure serotonin in the brain of a live human. Studies used a variety of different assay methods and researchers had difficulty obtaining any replicable results. In the meantime, new antidepressant drugs came on the market that had little pharmacologic effect on serotonin but had similar effiicacy as the SSRIs. This, at a miminum, suggested that the serotonin theory of depression was incomplete.

 

Now recent data present even more serious problems for the low serotonin theory of depression. New findings that directly contradict the core of the theory: A paper in the flagship journal, Archives of General Psychiatry, found evidence of increased serotonin activity in depressed persons. Furthermore, growing evidence suggests that it is an error to even talk about the brain having a single serotonin level.  Based on work with rats and mice, neuroscientists are increasingly moving to the view that there are different populations of serotonin neurons that are each independently regulated. As a scientific venture, the theory that low serotonin causes depression appears to be on the verge of collapse. This is as it should be; the nature of science is ultimately to be self-correcting. Ideas must yield before evidence. I am less confident about the nature of pubilc opinion. How many times more will the mantra of depression as diabetes (with Prozac starring as insulin) be repeated? Who will dispel the illusion that the smart scientists have firmly established that depression is caused by low serotonin? Make no mistake, it will be difficult to alter the dominant lay theory of depression. I offer this blog post as a humble harbinger of change.

Edited by Altostrata
edited to conform to fair use

Pristiq tapered over 8 months ending Spring 2011 after 18 years of polydrugging that began w/Zoloft for fatigue/general malaise (not mood). CURRENT: 1mg Klonopin qhs (SSRI bruxism), 75mg trazodone qhs, various hormonesLitigation for 11 years for Work-related injury, settled 2004. Involuntary medical retirement in 2001 (age 39). 2012 - brain MRI showing diffuse, chronic cerebrovascular damage/demyelination possibly vasculitis/cerebritis. Dx w/autoimmune polyendocrine failure.<p>2013 - Dx w/CNS Sjogren's Lupus (FANA antibodies first appeared in 1997 but missed by doc).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you for this post. I must admit, the theory of serotonin did not really make that much sense to me even the first time I heard it. How could they know what tiny chemical reactions are taking place within a live brain anyhow?

6/96. 20mg. Paxil. 1 day.

2/02 to 6/09 Prozac 20-30 m & birth control

Spr07 to 6/09 Ativan or Xanax during menstruation.

June 2009: stopped bc pill. Last menstrual period.

2010-11: tapered off Prozac 30m- 5mg at a time to 5 to none.

April-May- 2011: Prozac 6 weeks. Celexa 3 days. Lexipro 3 days.

6/11 to 9/11: Ativan or Xanax daily.

9/15/11: wd Ativan quick taper.

10/11. +Lamictal

12/11. +Seroquel

12/21/11: start Mirtazapine. 15-30-45-30.

2/29/12.. stop Mirt. start Wellbutrin. stop WB, + Mirt.

June 2012; Mirt at 7.5 m.

4/02/13. Mirt down to 3.75. withdrawal symptoms. still on Lamictal & Seroquel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use Privacy Policy