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Re: Anxiety AND Depression Causes Brain Damage????

Posted by bluedog on November 28, 2002, at 3:03:38

In reply to Re: Anxiety Causes Brain Damage????, posted by Larry Hoover on November 26, 2002, at 11:36:31

I have taken the liberty of linking to a post by ItsHowdyDudyTime in the thread down below called "is depression damaging my brain?" which reads as follows:-

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20021127/msgs/129658.html

"Posted by ItsHowdyDudyTime on November 27, 2002, at 21:11:02

In reply to Is depression damaging my brain?, posted by catmint on November 26, 2002, at 0:54:02

OK I found out I was posting those in Spanish and coming out weird. This should come out normally.

To answer your question, yes depression does damage the brain. Particularly when the depression is severe, left untreated or partially treated for long time periods. What is a long time period? Several years is what I was told by a famous TRD researcher at a elite teaching hospital. Severe depression causes literal atrophy of brain tissue, the frontal lobes shrink in size, the hippocampus atropies. There are many physical brain changes that occur in severe depression.

This is all the reason to catch it early, get a correct diagnosis early on and get on the correct class of psychiatric medication early on. Stringing things along only prolongs recovery. Those who have had severe, untreated or partially treated depression for years on end oftentimes find it nearly impossible to fully recover no matter what they do. This is the hard, sad reality of severe mental illness.

ECT is probably your best bet if you are one of these folks who has ignored your mood disorder for years. MAOIs are also good for longstanding, severe and unsuccessfully treated depression. MAOIs can be combined with mood stabilizers like lithium or depakote in bipolar individuals.

Severe mood disorders are nothing to play around with. They tend to sneak up on you, snowball, get worse and worse and one day you realize you are chronically disabled...or worse almost dead. All because you didnt handle it properly in the beginning. Do not underestimate the severity and lethality of a severe mood disorder and Im not even talking about suicide here. Im talking about things like you will never have another good night of sleep for the rest of your life, severe cognition problems, lack of sex drive for the rest of your life which results in inability to maintain meaningful relationships with the opposite sex. Its just bad news and its too bad more people dont understand the true nature of severe depression or manic depression left untreated or undertreated."

Larry has already mentioned it but these two threads are dealing with the same topic!!

I couldn't agree more with what howdydudy writes!! I had an appointment with my psychiatrist today and (surprise, surprise) he was in complete agreement with the sorts of views that have been bandied about in these threads. He says that he has observed severe cognitive dysfunction including concentration and memory problems in patients who have suffered long term anxiety and depression which he attributes to brain damage (either the death or atrophy of brain neurons) caused by phenomena such as excitotoxicity.

He also agrees with my view that in the future there will be a new medical specialty in nutrition and that these nutritional specialists will be held in as high regard by their medical peers as cardiologists, neurologists and psychiatrists and they will take away a lot of the patients who are currently being seen by the other specialty fields.


bluedog



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URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20021127/msgs/129692.html