Depression Medications

By Stephen Lau
What depression medications can do
What depression medications cannot do
The side effects of depression medications
Withdrawal from depression medications
Rethink depression medications
Rethink Depression Medications
What depression medications can do


Medications are often the frontline treatments for major depression. This is especially the case with a severe depressive episode.

Why are medications necessary?

It is like you cut your finger. You need to use a Band-Aid to stop the bleeding. You don't think of how or why you cut your finger; you just want to stop the bleeding first.

What can depression medications do for your brain?

The human brain has two functions:

   ·   monitoring and regulating bodily functions
   ·   ensuring survival by looking out for potential dangers

Unfortunately, a depressive mind does not function normally: it fails in three aspects:

   ·   thinking clearly
   ·   solving problems
   ·   controlling emotion

When an individual is severely depressed, there is abnormal functioning in the brain due to:

   ·   faulty brain mechanism to regulate the productions of certain brain chemicals, such as serotonin

   ·   brain damage, often a result of recurrent depressive episodes 

Depression medications, therefore, play a critical role in managing major depression in the following ways:

   ·   They protect the brain from further damage due to repeated depressive episodes.

   ·   Certain mood-stabilizing drugs, such as lithium, promote the production of a certain protein conducive to the growth and rejuvenation of nerve cells in certain areas of the brain.

   ·   All medications in some ways suppress serious symptoms of major depression.

In addition to improving the emotional well-being, depression medications have other health benefits, such as:

   ·   deprivation or disruption of sleep
   ·   a stressful life event
   ·   abnormal functioning of certain brain chemicals

Controlling your strong emotions depends on the interactions of certain brain chemicals that are responsible for your emotional response, your clear and logical thinking, and a host of biological functions, such as sleep, appetite, energy level, and sex drive.

The imbalance of these chemicals responsible for your emotional well-being may be triggered by any one or all of the following:

   ·   controlling stress hormone cortisol to prevent damaging walls of blood vessels
   ·   reducing cortisol to strengthen the immune system
   ·   lowering cortisol to reduce the risk of developing osteoporosis


What depression medication cannot do



All depression medications are designed to regulate your emotions and get your brain back on the right track so that it can respond appropriately to life events.

However, no depression medications can change how you look at the reality of life, or your personality. Above all, no depression medications can change your life events - they still happen to you, with or without your medications.


The side effects of depression medications



Any depression medication, irrespective of the type, is a drug, and as such, is a chemical that may have impact on your overall health and well-being.

Take Prozac as an example. Nearly everyone knows someone who is taking Prozac. It is one of the most widely prescribed and controversial prescription drugs for major depression.

Prozac, including Zoloft and Paxil, is a new generation of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI), which “selectively” utilize the serotonin in your brain by blocking the degradation of serotonin, and hence improving any mental disorder due to the lack of serotonin.

Given the serotonin system is the most widespread neurotransmitter system in your brain, it affects many of your bodily functions, resulting in many adverse side effects.


Withdrawal from depression medications



Withdrawal from any depression medication is not only dangerous but also difficult.

Why is that? Because many psychiatrists have little experience in withdrawing patients from antidepressant drugs, and most of them are unwilling to do so.

If you insist on withdrawing from depression medication, you must seek the help and support of a psychotherapist and a general practitioner to supervise your withdrawal.

Tips

   ·   Stop one drug at a time.

   ·   Withdraw slowly - it is better to err on the side of withdrawing too slowly than too quickly.

   ·   Be aware of the development of any emotional or physical reaction within a few days after withdrawal.

   ·   Any symptom opposite to the drug effect may be due to withdrawal


Rethink depression medications



To take or not to take

It is as dangerous to start taking any depression medication as it is to stop taking it. That is to say, withdrawal from any depression medication can develop serious and even life-threatening emotional and physical reactions. Therefore, any withdrawal needs medical supervision. Do not do it on your own.

Rethink any withdrawal - or think twice before taking any in the first place.

Mental depression is a biochemical disorder, and psychiatrists justify the prescription of medication based on this reason of being a “physical disease.” (See below.).

Rethink the justification of a prescription.

Information available to the public, including warnings and side effects, on any depression medication, is probably advocated by pharmaceutical companies, and hence does not reflect the true nature of the drug.

Rethink the dark side of any drug.

If you are suffering from bipolar depression, find out from Bipolar Without Drugs why your doctor may not tell you everything you need to know about your disease; explore the steps you should take to make independent decisions regarding your disorder; learn what steps you should take to withdraw from your medications gradually and safely; and find out what to do if you are sick and suffering from severe manic episodes. This book is a must-read for anyone suffering from bipolar depression. Learn to manage your disorder yourself through your mind for ultimate mental health, instead of relying on medications, which only control but not cure the symptoms. Recommend this book to anyone who is suffering from this debilitating disorder.


Depression a physical disease?


Is depression a genetic and biochemical “physical disease”?

Many professionals and nearly all pharmaceutical companies would like you to believe it is “physical” as evidenced in weight loss, inability to focus, insomnia, and emotional agitation. You, too, may come to believe it is “physical” too because it is so real and  so painful to you

Is depression a physical or mental disease, or both? Is it even a disease or simply a state of mind? Once you have identified depression as a “disease”, you naturally turn to a doctor (which is only human and understandable), and subsequently to depression medications for help and treatment

Are they really your physical problems or the doctor’s problems? Do not give up easily on life in favor of medications. 

Rethink if depression is really your “physical” problems requiring medications.


The FDA approval


Dr. Peter R. Breggin
, M.D., in his book Talking Back To Prozac, states:

"According to the FDA approval process, it doesn’t matter how many times a drug fails to prove useful in its clinical trials. Innumerable scientific studies can show the drug to be ineffective, but as long as two or more show statistical superiority over placebo, the drug can win approval."


Rethink any FDA approved drug.


The drug’s label

According to FDA regulations, any drug label must contain the following sections:

   ·   Description
   ·   Clinical pharmacology
   ·   Indications and usage
   ·   Contra-indications
   ·   Warnings and precautions
   ·   Adverse reactions
   ·   Drug abuse and dependence
   ·   Over dosage
   ·   Dosage and administration
   ·   How supplied

The FDA works out the drug’s label with representatives of the drug company - often a give-and-take process. How much should you believe what the drug's label says?

Rethink what the label says or doesn’t say.


Depression medication to jump start your depressed life


Many people have the wrong concept of using depression medications to jump start for a forward leap. It is tantamount to taking cocaine to stimulate an otherwise insipid life. Any stimulant drug that brings “high” will also inevitably bring “low.” In addition, there may be abusive potential and withdrawal problems.

Rethink using depression medication to get an abnormal burst of energy.

To many, the positive side of depression medications is to raise your spirit and lift you mood, making you euphoric and feeling “better than ever.” However, it always comes with a price.

Rethink the price you pay for being out of touch with reality and living in fantasy.

Medicines have not been perfect. But without medicines, things could be even worse. Medicines are not always bad any more than nutritional supplements are always good.

Take the example of Seroquel, a popular prescription drug for bipolar disorder. According to the pharmaceutical company, the drug has the following adverse side effects:

   ·   High blood sugar or diabetes (excessive thirst or hunger, increased urination)

   ·   Physical weakness

   ·   Risk for cataracts

   ·   Risk for seizures, especially with a family history

   ·   Increasing the effects of alcohol

   ·   Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) (high fever, rigid muscles, shaking, confusion, changes in pulse, blood pressure, muscle pain)

   ·   Tardive dyskinesia (TD) (uncontrollable movements of the face, tongue, or other parts of the body)

You may find yourself in a catch-22 situation. Is there another alternative, such as improving your conditions by other means while keeping a low dosage?

Rethink the trade-off of taking a prescription drug.

Biological psychiatry is itself depressing. It is not surprising that many patients go from one drug to another, searching for a cure and ending up in a psychiatric hospital.

Rethink your depression medications. Only YOU have all the anwers.


Copyright© by Stephen Lau

Return from Rethink Depression Medications back to the Home Page