Friday, July 29, 2016

The New Psychiatry: Forget Everything You Think You Know About Mental Health

I felt this sensation in the pit of my stomach — it was a combination of sympathy and anger — listening to Annie tell me, through tears, about her postpartum journey into the world of psychiatry.
Three separate psychiatrists dismissed me when I expressed concerns about taking an addictive medication like Klonopin.  It’s been two years, I can’t get off it, I’m on four psych meds and I feel worse than I ever did before I started this treatment.
Annie was ushered into the promise-filled halls of psychiatry three months after the birth of her first baby when she began to experience racing heart, insomnia, vigilance, irritability, and a host of physical complaints including joint pain and hair loss.  No one did blood work, asked about her diet, or cared about any of the myriad observations about her body and its changes in functioning.  This was a “head-up” intervention. I believe women deserve better.  People deserve better.

Most patients who come to me for treatment of depression and anxiety do so because they want answers.  They want to know WHY they are struggling. The closest they will be offered by their prescribing psychiatrist or primary care doc is some reductionist hand waving about serotonin imbalances.  I think it is time to speak to these patients with respect, truthfulness, and to offer them more than a life-long relationship with a pill (or pills, as it will inevitably become over the years).  First, let’s review some basics:

Depression Is Not a Serotonin Deficiency

Thanks to direct-to-consumer advertising and complicit FDA endorsement of evidence-less claims, the public has been sold an insultingly oversimplified tale about the underlying driver of depression.  Here’s how we know depression is not a serotonin deficiency corrected by Zoloft:
  • There has never been a single study, in humans, to validate the theory of low serotonin in depression.  Low levels are found in a minority of patients.
  • An antidepressant marketed as Stablon, increases reuptake of serotonin (reducing serotonin activity) and appears to be equally effective as those that decrease it or have no effect on it at all.
  • Manipulation of serotonin levels (tryptophan depletion or enhancement) do not consistently result in a depressive syndrome, and may promote future episodes.
  • These medications are used to treat an impossibly non-specific and broad array of illnesses from obsessive compulsive disorder to anorexia to premenstrual dysphoria to bipolar depression to irritable bowel syndrome.
  • Antidepressants of all categories seems to work about the same regardless of their presumed mechanism of action with about 73 percent of the response unrelated to pharmacologic activity, according to metanalyses by Dr. Irving Kirsch and Fournier, which suggest a powerful role for active placebo effect in all but the most severe depression. In those cases, significant benefit may be achieved by points on a rating scale attributed to side effects such as sedation or activation (improved sleep or energy, unrelated to primary pharmacologic action).
You might wonder: Well, then how is it that antidepressants are a billion dollar industry and I have all these friends who are so much better on them?  Some pioneering individuals have investigated the data supporting antidepressant efficacy and have made compelling arguments for what is called the “active placebo” effect accounting for “breaking blind” in placebo-controlled trials.  In short, the expectation of relief and subsequent change in symptoms experienced by “responders” is related to perception of side effects. This analysis suggests that antidepressants may only have 10 percent efficacy above and beyond the placebo effect.  When you also consider the suppression of negative studies (permission of sedatives in trials, replacement of non-responders, and allowance of placebo washout) by pharmaceutical companies, you may start to worry that you have been sold a bill of goods.  When inefficacy, long-term risks, increase in suicidality and violent behavior are taken into account, it is a marvel to observe the star-power of these medications.

What Is It Then? Inflammation!

Inflammation is a buzzword, and a 41 million+ Google hit for a reason: It appears to underlie just about every chronic disease plaguing Americans today.  A contribution of genetic vulnerabilities likely determines who develops heart disease or cancer or obsessive compulsive disorder, but many researchers are convinced that depression may have a significant inflammatory component.  Just as a fever is one of your immune system’s mechanism for eradicating intruders, suppressing a fever, in no way, serves to resolve the underlying infection or to support the body’s return to balance. Similarly, suppressing symptoms of depression does not achieve rebalancing, and will likely result in the Whack-a-Mole phenomenon of shifting symptoms, and protracted resolution.

There appears to be a specific subset of non-responders to medication who have measurable markers of inflammation as explored in this study. We know that medications such as interferon given to patients with Hepatitis result in significant levels of depression and even suicide, and we know that anti-inflammatory agents such as infliximab or even aspirin can result in resolution of symptoms.  Investigators like Miller and Raison have discussed, in a series of wonderful papers, the conceptualization of depression as “sickness behavior” with accompanying social withdrawal, fatigue, loss of appetite, decreased mobility.  Recent meta-analyses have identified at least 24 studies that have correlated levels of inflammatory cytokines like CRP, IL6, and TNFalpha with states of depression.

What Drives Inflammation?

What causes inflammation in the body that can affect the brain?  This is the subject of an excellent book and it turns out the list is long, but these are the contributors that I see most commonly in my practice:

Sugar

It’s in almost every packaged food.  Seriously.  Look for it and you will find it. It may come with different labels — cane sugar, crystalline fructose, high fructose corn syrup — but it’s all sugar.  The way the body handles fructose and glucose is different, however, which may account for why fructose is seven times more likely to result in glycation end products or sticky protein clumps that cause inflammation. In addition to the above mood and anxiety roller coaster, sugar causes changes in our cell membranes, in our arteries, our immune systems, our hormones, and our gut, as I discuss here.


Food Intolerances

Gluten, soy, and corn have been identified as allergenic foods and a leading speculation as to how these foods became and are becoming more allergenic is the nature of their processing, hybridization, and genetic modification rendering them unrecognizable to our immune systems and vehicles of unwelcome information.  Gluten (and processed dairy), when incompletely digested, result in peptides that, once through the gut barrier, can stimulate the brain and immune system in inflammatory ways.

Autoimmunity

The epidemic incidence of autoimmune disorders in this country is a direct reflection of environmental assault on our system.  The body’s ability to determine self from other starts with the gut and our host defenses there.  Unfortunately, it doesn’t end there, because autoimmune disorders typically have psychiatric manifestations.  This makes sense — the body’s immune system is misfiring, and the immune cells of the brain (called microglia) are following suit.  Beyond rampant inflammation, autoimmune disorders such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (more here) also result in symptoms related to damage to tissues.  Low or erratic thyroid function can cause anxiety, depression, flattened mood, cloudy thinking, metabolism changes, and fatigue.  Sometimes even the presence of immune system misfiring can predict depression as was noted in this recent study where women with thyroid autoantibodies in pregnancy went on to develop postpartum depression.

Before You See a Psychiatrist

Diet

Do a 30-day diet overhaul.  If you feel committed to the cure, eliminate these provocative foods: corn, soy, legumes, dairy, grains.  What do you eat?  You’ll eat pastured/organic meats, wild fish, eggs, fruit, vegetables, and nuts/seeds.  If this is not revolutionary, then you may be someone for whom nightshade vegetables, nuts, or eggs are inflammatory.  If that seems entirely overwhelming, then start with dairy and gluten.  If that is too much, then gluten is my top pick.

Here are some top therapeutic foods:

Coconut Oil

Introduce 1-2 tablespoons of virgin coconut oil to give your brain an easy source of fuel that does not require significant digestion.  When your brain is inflamed and your sugar is out of balance, your brain cells end up starving for nutrients to make energy.  This can be an effective shortcut.

Turmeric

I use this spice in therapeutic doses, but it has recently been demonstrated to be as effective as Prozac. If you cook with it, use pepper and oil (red palm, coconut, olive oil, ghee) for enhanced absorption.

Fermented Foods

Naturally fermented foods like sauerkraut, kimchi, and pickles as well as kefir and yogurt if you are dairy tolerant are a source of beneficial bacteria that can retrain the gut to protect you from unwanted pathogens.  A recent study demonstrated that these bacteria can, indeed, affect brain function.

Detox Your Environment

Here’s an important way to call off the dogs of your immune system.  Give it less stimulation.

  • Filter air and water
  • Purchase products free of known carcinogens and endocrine disruptors such as parabens, TEA, fragrance (pthalates), sodium lauryl/laureth sulfate, triclosan
  • Eat organic produce, pastured meat/dairy
  • Make your own cleaning products from household vinegar, baking soda, tea tree oil, or purchase similarly simple products
  • Avoid eating or drinking from heated plastics
  • Avoid cell phone use
  • Avoid processed foods and sugar, consume low-mercury fish
  • Carefully consider risks and benefits of any elective medical interventions

Promote Healing Messages

I have developed an appreciation of the body’s ability to work towards balance when obstacles are removed.  An important obstacle is the stress response that is activated by many of the above factors as well as perceptions of busy-ness, lack of downtime and community support, and trauma.  Take 10-20 minutes a day (or even two!) to promote the relaxation response by breathing in with a count of six and breathing out with a count of six.  Imagine the air flowing in and out through your heart and cultivate a feeling of gratitude.  The benefits of this practice have been well-studied by Heartmath Institute.

Psychiatry has long suffered from pseudoscience and propaganda.  From an embarrassing history of pathologizing human behavior, applying crude “treatments,” and imposing beliefs about societal welfare on vulnerable populations, we haven’t come very far in the past century.  Incidence of mental illness is rising, partly from changes in diagnostic criteria, commercializing mental illness, collusion between doctors and patients around the “quick fix,” and partly because our bodies and minds are crying out in protest about this toxic world we live in.  Take control of your body to heal your mind — take back your health and bear witness to the power of a lifestyle renaissance.

Jan 23, 2014       Kelly Brogan, M.D.        Holistic Women’s Health Psychiatry, NYC       www.kellybroganmd.com

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Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Fear Keeps Depression in Place

Overcome fear and you are on your way out of depression ... ?


Fear of success is sometimes a bigger obstacle than fear of failure. 

In my previous blog, I was advocating asking others to help you move out of depression, drawing on their creativity, problem solving and their optimism to help you get energized. Whether you want to or not, you probably have to rely on other people to help you get out of depression. All that "pull yourself up by your own bootstraps" stuff is fine in theory, but the depressed person usually needs someone to help tug them along. That is because depression sucks the energy right out of you and robs you of the creativity to find a solution to the problem you are in.

One major reason you may not get out of the depressed spot you are in is that you are afraid: Afraid of asking for help and afraid that asking would make you look foolish. You may be afraid that trying and failing PROVES you are no good.

Another aspect of the fear that keeps depression in place, is the fear of what will happen if you succeed in your goals. Uncertainty about life after success can make the process a challenge. The willingness to succeed is necessary, but surprisingly hard. For some, succeeding may make all their previous beliefs about themselves wrong.

So if a person is certain that no love will ever come her way, then she does not have to be anxious and she can remain depressed as an unloveable person. That is better for some than knowing they are lovable and have not as yet achieved the romantic partnership they desire. (In the meantime they overlook all the other ways they can experience love - which might decrease their depression!)

Why is uncertainty such an issue? Anxiety is what we feel in the face of uncertainty: and in depression, uncertainty about how you will accomplish a success or about what it will feel like to succeed can create reluctance to try. Anticipating failure ironically diminishes anxiety if you are stuck in the depressed point of view that you are not the kind of person who gets to have love or money or success.

Keeping fear in place can keep isolation in place too. "No one cares enough," is a typical depressed way of thinking, and sticking to the notion that no one can help maintains self-fulfilling isolation. And isolation increases depression that robs you of creative problem solving and of optimism that a new solution could work. So if you are ready to draw on another person's aid, you still have to face the possibility of failure and the possibility of success.


Take a look at your fear specifically. Make some cognitive changes to deal with it and use the input of others to help you find better thought processes.

  1. Take a good hard look at the question, "So what?" (...if I fail?) "What would be different?" Probably nothing. But nothing will be different if you don't try either. You can fee less fearful of failing if you know what to expect by facing the possibility head on. A new solution might NOT work, but, then "So what?" If you were going to live without love, you still don't have it- nothing new. If you were afraid you would not succeed and did not try, then you did not succeed. Same difference.
  2. Dial down your assumptions about how bad it will be. Start by changing statements that are 'all or nothing'. For example, "If he does not want to go out with me a second time it will prove that no one will ever love me," could be said less extremely, "If he doesn't want a second date, that is one less bad date I have to go on!" Or, "If I apply for that promotion, even if I do not get it, the boss knows I am interested and may think of me for another position."
  3. Deal with your fear of success by first assessing what it might look like if something works out for you. Have your friend, colleague or family member help you make a list of the positives that could come of trying something different. You cannot guarantee success, but you can guarantee trying. "If I ask for help and get myself down to dinner, I may not get stronger, but at least I will enjoy my meal more if I eat with company." "If I do get someone interested in a second date, that will be fun, and I can take my time to know if it is a good relationship developing."
  4. Healthy skepticism about success may help us form realistic plans that we can achieve, but healthy optimism about success is often hard to come by. Ask someone to give you a reason why you will succeed. Write it down and read it daily.

Your courage develops from small steps, not from leaps.

Here is where courage really comes in. It can be easier to leave things as they are, and trying something new takes courage. And to get that first bit of courage you might need to be en-couraged. It takes courage to tell a friend or mentor or therapist that you are going to do something new. And when you do, their enthusiasm for you to try, and their implicit promise to respect you for trying (not for succeeding) can help you take that next courageous step into the uncertain territory where you can defeat fear and thus diminish depression.

Using that helping person you have chosen is in itself an act of courage that is like planting a seed. In a fairly short period of time it will grow into a strong enough courage to try, knowing you might succeed in changing your outcomes!

Posted Jul 20, 2016     Margaret Wehrenberg Psy.D.     Depression Management Techniques

Margaret Wehrenberg, Psy.D., is a licensed psychologist in private practice and a popular public speaker.
Her latest book is The 10 Best-Ever Depression Management Techniques.