Tag Archive 'symptoms of depression'

Aug 25 2008

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Alternative Remedies for the Treatment of Depression

Filed under Depression

I just found an interesting video on YouTube that covers some alternative remedies for the treatment of depression. The young woman in the video appears to genuinely believe that the advice she gives will benefit someone who suffers depression. I agree with most of what she has to say, but strongly disagree with a couple of the recommendations. However sweet and sincere she is, my guess is that she’s never experienced a suicidal bout of depression.

It’s a short video, so take a look and then I’ll tell you what I agree with and what I disagree with…

 

I agree that a diet that contains a healthy variety of nutrients is a good idea for everyone, not just for those suffering with depression. I also agree that supplements such as  L-Tyrosine and 5-HTP can help reduce the symptoms of depression, but that a healthy diet and supplements only provide a sort of "band aid" effect and don’t do much to cure the underlying cause of depression.

Here are other points with which I agree:

  • Let go of the past and learn to live in the present moment is right on target
  • Getting out in nature is an excellent recommendation - our bodies are composed of the same elements found in nature, so connecting with nature can be very healing on many levels
  • Advice to follow a spiritual practice is helpful. It truly doesn’t matter what your beliefs are, it is your faith in a higher power (the Source that created all things) that can aid you is what’s important. Prayer and meditation are powerful.
  • Creating a strong bond with family and friends without being dependent on them in a needy way
  • A pet can be a tremendous source of comfort

Now, here are the points I take issue with:

"Love for life can pull you out of a depression" is a tricky thing. Do we really have the right to expect that someone will love us our entire lifetime? What if someone we believe will love us forever dies? It isn’t a good idea to give responsibility for the way we feel to someone else.

Asking the questions "What makes me sad? What causes this horrible part to my life that makes me feel like this, and then change it" is a form of thinking that will most likely cause us to feel that we are a victim of life’s circumstances.

She states that if you’rein a job or a relationship that isn’t satisfying, just change it. This brings to mind one of my favorite quotes:

“The significant problems we face in life cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them."  ~ Albert Einstein

In light of the quote above, my advice would be to deal with the depression first, and once you’re feeling better, give consideration to whatever changes you think are necessary. It’s funny how the same circumstances look differently when you’re feeling good as opposed to when you’re feeling the symptoms of depression.

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Aug 19 2008

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The Role of Exercise in Reducing Symptoms of Depression

Filed under Depression

"A vigorous five mile walk will do more good for unhappy, but otherwise healthy adults than all the medicine and psychology in the world"
~ Dr. Paul Dudley White

Many research studies have been performed for the purpose of evaluating the effect of exercise in reducing symptoms of depression. These studies report that exercise is very effective in alleviating the symptoms of depression. In fact, they have proven that exercise is as effective, or perhaps even more so, than  the use of medication, cognitive therapy and individual or group psychotherapy for reducing depression symptoms.

Just ask any serious runner and they will readily tell you that the phenomena known as the "runner’s high" is real. One of the most surprising things, though, is that even light exercise such as walking seems to be enough exercise to boost the moods and help reduce the symptoms of depression in most research participants.

Medical experts had long held the belief that only people who were mildly or moderately affected by depression would benefit from exercise.  Now, there is research that indicates their beliefs are not correct and that the mood of sufferers of severe depression is also improved.
 
Conclusions of A Medical University Research Project

A study performed at Duke University in North Carolina, under the direction of James Blumenthal, Ph.D., professor of medical psychology, followed 156 people who were middle-aged and older adults who had been diagnosed with mild to severe clinical depression. The study lasted 16 weeks and compared the effect of three different treatment programs.

The treatment used with one group was exercise alone which consisted of running or walking as a group for a minimum of 30 minutes, three times a week. One group was treated with the often prescribed antidepressant Zoloft. And the third group was treated with a combination of the two programs stated above. All three groups reported marked improvements, much to the surprise of the researchers. The two groups that took Zoloft felt better sooner, but the antidepressant did not prove to be more effective in the long-term than exercise alone.

Dr. Blumenthal did not expect the surprising results of his study which concluded that exercise is beneficial for severe depression as well as mild to moderate symptoms of depression. As reported in the October 25th, 1999 Archives of Internal Medicine he said "Those with moderate to severe depression responded as well as those with mild depression."

According to the October 2000 edition of Psychosomatic Medicine, the lowest relapse rates were experienced by those individuals still participating in their prescribed program of exercise six months later. The group that used exercise alone had a recurrence rate of only 8 % versus a 38% relapse in the group that was treated with only Zoloft. The group whose treatment consisted of both medication and exercise had a relapse rate of 31%.

How Exercise Helps
 
All of the ways in which exercise benefits people who suffer with depression isn’t fully understood, but two of the primary ways is as follows:

  • Exercise increases the production, in some complex way, of "feel good" chemicals which are produced in the brain including dopamine, serotonin, norepinephrine and phenylethylamine or PEA. 
  • Reduces the release of stress chemicals like cortisol and adrenaline and makes a more relaxed state of mind easier to attain.

If you want to reduce or, perhaps, alleviate your symptoms of depression, why not consider beginning a regular exercise routine. It doesn’t have to be strenuous. If you haven’t exercised in a long time, start out slowly and work up to 30 minutes of aerobic exercise, three times a week, in order to get the same benefits as the research group in Dr. Blumenthal’s study. Of course, just to be on the safe side, you will want to check with your primary care physician first to find out if there is any reason you should not exercise.

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