WillSpirit!

Where Will meets Spirit
∞ Love, Clarity, Balance, Peace, & Bliss ∞

A science, mental health and spirituality blog written by a physician.








  • Red_Exclamation_DotDisclaimer
    • Dear Visitors:
      Although I trained and practiced as a physician, my background does not include formal instruction in psychiatry beyond basic medical education. This journal presents ideas about treatment philosophy, but must not be considered therapeutic advice. Abrupt changes in one's psychiatric medications can trigger profound cognitive, emotional, and physical symptoms, including suicidal thoughts and actions. Consequently, pharmaceutical agents should not be increased or decreased without supervision by a mental health clinician.

    • ON THE OTHER HAND, your brain belongs to you, and your opinion counts. If you decide that changing your medication regimen will serve your best interest, then I believe your providers have an obligation to help you try to achieve your goals. I want everyone to be educated about their options, and do what will be most helpful for themselves. No one should feel pushed around by dogmatic and/or limited viewpoints, whether those of psychiatrists, anti-psychiatry advocates, or myself.


New Direction

Acupuncture_chart_300px

You may have noticed my posts have been slow in coming lately. The good news is I’ve decided to pursue a new career direction: using acupuncture for mental health issues. Acupuncture has been a mainstay of my recovery. By itself it would not have been enough, but as a regular refuge where I can recharge and rebalance it has been invaluable. Since licensed physicians can train to practice the technique in a relatively short time, it is a great way for me to get back to clinical work without the inconceivable stress and difficulty of finding and completing a residency in a more traditional discipline. I’m tremendously excited. It will be less visible work than writing, but it will provide far more security. And being a doctor again means more to me than I’ve been willing to admit.

The bad news is I will have less time for writing. I will try to keep posting, but the essays will be less frequent. They may also be shorter, but that may turn out to be an improvement. I tend to underrate the value of brevity.

For today, I’m posting a piece I wrote for Hopeworks Community. Larry Drain is a prolific writer and activist in the mental health field, and he invited guest posts for his blog. Here’s mine:

This is my story of recovery from severe depression, and my message is one of hope. On the one hand, I doubt many people have experienced longer lasting or more severe depression than me (though a multitude have it just as bad). On the other, I have found my way to a place of contentment and steadiness that I never dreamt possible.

Although depression has dogged me for most of my adult life, my mood reached new lows after I lost my surgical career to severe arthritis in my neck. My spirits were especially crushed because the loss of occupation brought up lingering self-doubts left over from a highly traumatic childhood.

In recovering, I tried every type of therapy and group program that promised to assist me with my problems. These methods helped me improve my thought patterns, accept the present moment, and find spiritual peace. To my delight and surprise, I am often happy. Although I still get depressed from time to time, my spiritual centering and acceptance work have taught me that grief and sadness are as important and rich as happiness; I would not want to miss the textured sense of connection with tragedy. Whether happy or sad, I am at peace with my mind and my history.

Medications played a big role at first, but they ultimately turned on me. Under the direction of a psychiatrist whose only tools were drugs and endless exploration of my childhood, I spent five years heavily sedated and unable to function productively. After horrible side effects threatened to lower my self esteem even more, I switched to another care system and have spent recent years reducing an oppressive cocktail of medications. Perhaps I needed to escape into a medicated haze for several years, but when the drugs were reduced my grief awaited me, and I still had to deal with feelings about my losses. I learned there is no way to sidestep mourning.

During the past decade I’ve tried many times to build a new career. False starts and rejections added to my burden, until I gave in and accepted permanent retirement from defined employment. Then, after I finally felt at peace with not working, I discovered a career direction that makes sense. The operative concept is acceptance. Once I quit fighting my fear of being seen as unproductive, and once I learned to keep busy and avoid boredom, my mind opened to a new possibility. I had to accept what I feared before moving past it.

I have learned that there is no single answer to depression or other mental health issues. Medications may help, but they do not magically take away the problem. Acceptance is vital, but by itself is insufficient. One needs to learn to think without fostering depression, but that alone won’t end the sadness. Exercise, meditation, group work, writing, good nutrition, and regular sleep all need to be considered. With a comprehensive approach, recovery is possible.

It takes effort and time. If you are suffering from depression, you will need to both work hard and remain patient. You may also need to learn to live with some low feelings. But knowing how much I’ve improved despite years of despair, I suspect that no matter how depressed you may feel, you can find peace.

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Insomnia, and other underrated forms of madness

brainasleepanatomy

One manifestation of my brain’s atypicality can be seen by tracking my sleep patterns. Over about a six day cycle, I regularly drift from spending about nine hours asleep to getting only three hours a night. It averages out to six hours per twenty-four, which is not bad, but it’s hard to maintain a sense of predictability and regularity with this pattern. Also, sometimes around 8:30 pm I feel worn out to the point that I can’t stop myself from going to bed early, but then I wake up after midnight, like I have now, and remain awake for four or five hours. After that I’ll go back to bed and (hopefully) sleep for another hour or two. Over the years I’ve tried many things to smooth out this roller-coaster, but to no avail. I don’t want to take sleeping medications 50% of the time, which is what I would need to avoid the three-hours-of-sleep nights. And if I try to stay awake when I’m tempted to tuck in early, I find my mood sinks so low that nothing gets done except sitting and brooding. Or watching TV and dozing off. Reading and writing just don’t happen when I feel that way.

I try to take advantage of the nights I don’t sleep. I write or study or meditate. If I’m at our Yosemite place, I may sit in the hot tub and marvel at the stars (so many stars up there in those primordially dark skies). Now that I take fewer psychiatric medications, I see that I need even less sleep. As humans age, some data suggests they tend to sleep fewer hours (there is better evidence that the proportion of time in REM sleep decreases). Since I started out not requiring much more than six hours, it’s beginning to look like I’ll end up needing only five.

What is sleep doing for us, anyway? In what I’ve read, and it’s not extensive, the answer is clear: no one knows.

One popular idea is that it helps consolidate memories. Experiments with sleep deprivation after certain types of learning tasks back this up. In particular Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep seems connected with acquiring new skills. When people sleep after learning complex tasks, brain imaging sometimes shows that the same regions are active during REM sleep as were active when the task was being practiced. This seems to suggest that REM is replaying the learned activity, presumably in order to fix it in the mind.

On the other hand, although facility at learning tasks (technically called ‘procedural memory’) associates with sleep, the ease of learning information (‘declarative memory’) does not. And even if REM helps some forms of memory formation, that does not explain the need for all the other stages of sleep (and there are several).

Although I like to understand the brain, I am happy that there remain so many mysteries. My suspicion is that this will be the case for a long time, possibly forever. The organ has such unimaginable complexity that figuring out what it does is truly daunting. Despite all that we’ve learned, we really don’t understand more than some superficial information like which areas demand more blood during which activities, or the types of neurotransmitters that mediate different brain functions. The fine details of how computation (a.k.a. thought) occurs remain quite obscure. Some basic facts have been established. For instance that information processing is modular. This means that incoming visual data get broken down into components such as depth, color, movement, and orientation in space. Each of these are handled by separate (though often adjacent) clumps of nerve tissue, and later recombined. But computational studies remain coarse in the level of activity they investigate: typically the combined signals of hundreds of simultaneously active cells.

In fairness to the brain science community, I am oversimplifying. Enormous amounts of research have been done. So much has been learned that I really have only vague estimates about how much is known. But I have a pretty good idea about what is not understood: i.e., most of what the brain does.

It is easy to get impressed with the volume of factual information about the brain that scientists have collected in the past one hundred years. But it is even easier (and more important) to get a sense of awe from the realization that despite all the millions of pages written about the brain, we really don’t know something as basic as why sleep evolved.

Psychiatrists, and those who consult with them, would do well to keep this in mind as they try to address complex personal issues (like excessive worrying, chronic sadness, or uneven sleep) by adding one or a few chemicals to the blood stream. These solutes reach every cell in the brain, and affect many, many more neurons than the ones ‘targeted’. And even in the cells the medications are meant to affect, the actions are varied and all too often transient. The brain is quite adept at restoring its native state (see my post on receptor downregulation).

Sometimes it is better to accept an atypical pattern, like wacky sleep cycles, than to wrestle the brain into normative behavior with drugs. Besides, there can be advantages. Like writing a post in the middle of the night, so tomorrow I can concentrate on the other work of blogging: reading what others write. Or maybe I’ll have time for more fun with Mandy and the dogs. Or a longer workout. If I gave in now and took a sleeping pill, I would spend a nice restful night in bed. But I would wake up tomorrow after too many hours asleep, and still feel groggy. And if I kept taking the pill night after night, pretty soon my sleep would be dependent on the drug. If I stopped it, I would face several nights of near-total insomnia before I got back to what my brain wants: a six day rotation between nine hours and three hours of sleep.

I don’t know what this says about my brain’s health. It would be easy to call the three-hour nights ‘hypomanic’. In fact, I used to live in fear of them, thinking that hypomania meant possible manic loss-of-control and/or inevitable subsequent depression. Now I find that is not true. Provided I always allow myself to sleep when I can, and make sure that even if I can’t sleep I get some time in bed resting and calming my thoughts, I do pretty well. I don’t find myself making horrible decisions, or getting pounded by despairing feelings of worthlessness and futility. Admittedly, in my life I have seldom had true manic episodes (maybe only one time, but it lasted 2 years and destroyed my life). So I don’t worry too much about completely ‘losing it’, and (for instance) gambling away my life savings. But I know some who do have more trouble with severe mania, who find they can manage it with less or no medication, provided they are diligent and committed to keeping things healthy. It helps to have a devoted and observant spouse.

Society exerts pressure on people to conform. That becomes obvious in grade school, and it never changes. The main body of humanity tugs hard on the fringes, trying to pull them into the huddled center. Deviance, or even disagreement, tend to be poorly tolerated. So those of us with brains that function ‘differently’ from the ones comfortably in the center of the bell curve have to contend with criticism, rejection, and pressure to take drugs. All are either indirect or direct efforts to get us to conform.

There are mental states that pose hazards. Particularly to the individual who suffers them (i.e., suicide), and more rarely to others (e.g., the family left bankrupt by a manic run to a casino, or the spouse broken-hearted by a string of impulsive and dangerous sexual liaisons). The tiny threat of physical violence against strangers (the ‘psycho’ murdering students with an assault weapon), gets a great deal of attention. But if we define wanton violence as pathological (which I’m not saying is a bad idea), then many heads of state should be diagnosed as ill. If we go a step further, and say all those with a propensity for needlessly harming others require pharmacologic therapy, then we really should have force fed George W. Bush with Seroquel.

I’m not saying that no one should get psychiatric medications. That is not my position. But it is all-too-clear they are overused, that they cause physical and mental anguish, and that they are not particularly effective (unless you count drugging someone into a slurred stupor a success). The pharmaceutical companies have had free reign to promote their product, and we need to rise up and apply counter-promotion to balance the scales.

insomnia

In a larger sense, it is vital that we stand against the shove of society, and reclaim our right to be different. The tension between those who demand absolute obedience to the dominant culture’s standards, and those who advocate diversity and creativity, is never ending. The first step is to recognize that this is the problem we face. We need to demand to be allowed to be different, and then accept help when we want it. Otherwise we get the current situation, where we are told we are sick, and have to refuse drugs at every turn.

I’ll be up for a while longer. I’ll edit this post, write a letter or two, and explore some of my fellow travelers’s blogs. I’ll appreciate this night of little sleep as a time for making up the lost ground that resulted from weeks of rocky moods while withdrawing from Cymbalta. I’ll be glad I’m different. I’ll claim my privilege to consider myself ‘better’ than the boring norm.

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‘Through a glass, darkly’

rose tinted glasses on a dog

Sometime back I promised a post about how one’s attitude changes with drugs. When I quit Cymbalta almost a month ago, I quickly lost my confidence, started to feel tired and discouraged, and decided life did not have much value. I fear that without my strong connection, devotion, and commitment to Mandy I would have succumbed at last to the suicidal tendencies that have dogged me since my first major depression at age twenty. Yet not long before things had looked pretty rosy to me.

At present I am coping with some medication-induced injuries that will never leave me, even though I’ve quit the drugs that caused the damage. I find the destruction visited upon my body demoralizing and infuriating. But before stopping the Cymbalta, it seemed like my grip on the situation had improved, and I had hope that with a little time and meditation my distress would abate and I would settle into a more-or-less calm acceptance. Not long after my final dose of that drug (I continue to take several others), the problem started looming large again. I felt, once more, like my life had been destroyed. Given that my passion for breathing (and all the other essential components of human life) has always been lukewarm, suicide started to look like a logical and acceptable solution. How much grief, defeat, and loss can one person take?

As I’ve implied, my agreement with myself and Mandy is that I will stay around for our relationship. So although I had a well-worked out plan for my demise, I never set a time frame, and just sat out the foul emotional weather. In just the past day or so, I have started to feel more like I can continue to live without merely gritting my teeth and waiting for natural death. Life has begun to look worthwhile again. Mandy and I have more frequent affectionate moments, I smile more often, and I feel like my energy has returned. Today we happen to be enveloped in smoke, due to a supposed ‘controlled burn’ that escaped its lines and is now raging in Yosemite. Every few hours the wind shifts to carry a thick cloud of particulate haze into our region. If we did not have so much air pollution, I’d be outside catching up on all the chores I neglected as I fought my way through this withdrawal. It feels good to recover the desire to be productive. I hypothesize that my brain is building more serotonin and norepinephrine receptors to compensatefor the reduced levels of those transmitters that followed stopping Cymbalta. (See this discussion about what is probably going on.)

My optimism would be greater if this had not already happened once. About two weeks after cessation there came a previous time of relief from the whirlwind, but it only lasted five or six days. So I will not be surprised if the curtain descends again. But right now I am feeling better, and I won’t spoil it by predicting another setback. This is how I ended my post back at the time of the last break from despair: “What I’ve written so far is the introduction to my real topic: the relationship between the chemicals that traverse my brain and the ‘person’ that the organ produces.”

For a number of reason I never got back on-subject. Today I am going to try to tackle, in a small way, the relation between chemical changes in our brains and the people we think we are.

In my opinion, it comes down to something like different vantage points. I wrote during the last storm break about how my little house in the hills would be invisible to a passenger in one of the airliners that regularly stretch contrails above me. I live my drama down here in the trees, yet those in the aluminum tubes soaring overhead have no clue about my problems and discouragement. They just don’t see my world of concerns. When I am medicated, it is like I am flying in the stratosphere. I observe my anxieties glide beneath me, but they look tiny and far away. Sometimes they get obscured by the pretty scenery, and I can almost forget they exist. But when I stop the drugs, I land flat on my belly on the August-baked earth, and gasp for full breaths in the smoky air. The pharmaceutical agents become the proverbial ‘rose-colored glasses’, that make a dim world look bright.

If they worked as well as I describe, I’d have to ask why one should fight the way I do to end my dependence on the medications. But if you look through pink-tinted lenses long enough, you no longer see the pink. Your mind adjusts and everything starts looking the way it did before. So then you are no longer jetting through the upper atmosphere close to the speed of sound, and instead end up bouncing along at ground level in a dilapidated truck. What’s more, even though the chemicals no longer help as much, the side effects continue. That is why I stopped Cymbalta. It helped my mood a bit, but the benefit diminished until it no longer seemed worth the heavy cost in adverse reactions (primarily anorgasmia). So I stopped taking my daily green pills, and have been fighting to regain my footing ever since.

If my entire opinion about whether to live or die hinges on a chemical called duloxetine marinating my brain, the question becomes, who am I? The suicidal man who feels life has dealt so many injuries it no longer warrants engagement? That is to say, am I ‘really’ this troubled person who emerges upon cessation of the drugs? Or am I instead the (kind of) bubbly soul that can discover benefits even in raw wounds and festering infections? Am I ‘in fact’ the wry middle-aged guy who emerges when the drugs (occasionally) work perfectly well?

Or am I both? Or neither?

At least I now recognize that my feelings change. It used to be hard for me to see that my attitudes shift. If the world felt awful, I believed in an unshakeable way that my feelings at that moment accurately summed up the nature of life as it had always been. On the flip side, if things looked cheery, I had a hard time remembering how it felt to be depressed. After years of gyrating feelings and world-views, I now recognize that tectonic shifts have repeatedly rocked my inner environment. My ability to predict eventual good feelings even when I am mired in deep depression has improved. I have recollection when I feel rotten that life once seemed fun, and vice versa.

As that sort of memory consolidates, I start to appreciate that my feelings are transient little things that have no direct relationship to outside reality. They are my internal filters, and not firmly connected to either the external scenery or my actual ‘self’. The same person (me) and the same life (mine) can look ashen through one set of spectacles, and sunny-yellow through another. I am the person behind the glasses, or even further back: behind the eyes. Possibly the real me looks through yet another screen: the brain. Some believe that our true selves have no material biology, but exist as ethereal spirits. I don’t go quite that far, but there is no question that somewhere separate from all the opinions, all the filters, all the moods and feelings, sits a person who is protected from the storms, and watches with a wise and tolerant eye as all the hurricanes and earthquakes and volcanoes thunder over the landscape. I’ve mentioned Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) before, and I am touching here on ACT’s core assumption.

I am not the earth’s tremors, or the volcano’s blast. I am not the wind or the sun or the rain. I am the ‘self’ that observes all the changes, all the weather, all the thoughts and feelings. But this is so easy to forget. It is as if, while watching a movie, I confused the events on the screen for things in real life. If I think that somehow my identity is that of a scared and lonely man, hemorrhaging and forlorn, I am overlooking the fact that at other times, with different chemicals in my blood, I feel like ‘someone’ entirely different.

It could be that I am nothing more than a memory stream. A dynamic album of photographs that keeps adding page after page after page. My identity cannot be pinned down to any particular image, not even the most recent ones. Instead, to get any sense at all of ‘me’ as a stable and defined entity, you have to look at the entire book as a unit.

By changing my drug regimen I am not creating a different person. I am just turning the page, putting in new pictures taken through different lenses. What I think and feel today is just an addition to my identity, not the summation of it.

Does this make any sense at all to others? I know these ideas are not mine alone, and no doubt writers more eloquent than I have stated something like the same point of view with greater clarity and logical support. But this is what I meant to bring up two weeks ago, during my previous respite from the Cymbalta-withdrawal nightmare that has been my ‘reality’ since August first. I am aware of some texts I need to read that touch on similar streams of thought. When I get more information, a wider perspective, and time to digest, I will return to this subject of self and how it relates to the turbulent currents of mood, opinion, biochemistry, and experience.

mothdrawing
For now, I am glad of the break from the pain. It feels good to expand again, and fill my wings with blood the way a newly metamorphosed moth pumps itself up before taking flight into the moonlit sky. For now, at least, I can nourish myself again, and savor the nectar of daily life.

(Click here to link to a nice video showing a moth feeding on nectar.)

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Freedom from Cymbalta, Flights of Fancy, and Highfalutin Philosophy

contrail

Last night sleep came. Since stopping Cymbalta 13 days ago, most nights have provided only a few hours of true dozing. Once or twice in the past fortnight I took zolpidem to knock myself out. But that does not lead to refreshing slumber, just a kind of drugged unconsciousness. Even with the sleeping pill, no more than five hours were spent sleeping; the rest of the night passed with me either laying in bed trying to relax, or else reading and eating blueberries (there must be a bumper crop this year, the prices are so low). But yesterday I retired early, then slept almost ten hours without awakening. What’s more, after arising I sat in our hot tub like I often do, but afterward got out and dozed for another hour.



We have a two-person spa on our deck, with a fine view to the east. Most mornings as dawn brightens I sit in water heated to 104° F (40° C), while I take in my surroundings in a silence broken only by a few buzzing insects and the first active birds. I leave the nozzles turned off, since I dislike the mechanical noise. I overlook a line of forested ridges rolling toward Yosemite, where the horizon is jagged with granite peaks. With an early enough start I am rewarded by a view of the sun rising into a salmon-colored sky, usually cloudless and marred only by the contrails of passenger jets in the stratosphere. These aircraft cross over the Sierra Nevada mountains on the last leg of their flight to San Francisco. One time I looked out the window during such a flight, and saw Yosemite Valley below the wing, looking like a small broken slab of gray stone. As I soak in the morning, loosening the tension in my damaged neck, I look up at those specks gliding through the twilit sky, and wonder about the travellers drinking morning coffee while looking down at the expanse of conifer forests and rock mountains. I wonder if it occurs to them that someone lives among those trees, watching them as they soar in the upper reaches of the atmosphere. I think about how insignifcant my corner of the world must look from their perspective, my home invisible in the green carpet of sugar pines. It amazes me that we will never know each other, that we will each live our entire complicated stories, each entirely unaware of the other’s drama. Our only connection is my fifteen-second reverie about a stranger in a jumbo jet, drinking coffee as her plane travels hundreds of miles per hour, drawing a rose-colored line across the dome of morning sky. Today such warm water thinking put me back to sleep.

After all that, my point is that I feel better. Yesterday my mood stayed pretty solid, with only a slight dip toward depression in the afternoon, something I experienced my whole life up until starting SSRI antidepressants. This morning, after finally getting up for good, I have been productive and energetic. Could it be I am finally getting past the Cymbalta withdrawal syndrome? The past two weeks have been brutal. If I did not have a strong commitment to survive and be here for my wife, suicide would have been the likely result of how badly I felt. Life seemed so very pointless, and not at all worth the torment roiling in my heart and soul. Countless times each day I dreamt and prayed (to the extent that I pray, since the God of my belief is not the kind that keeps an ear to the mutterings of mammalian nervous systems) that I just drop dead on the spot. Now I feel ready to engage my corner of the earth once more. Not that I am thrilled to be alive, singing like Julie Andrews on a grass-blanketed mountainside. No, I am still the not-too-optimistic failed surgeon. I sit before a small computer screen connected by a wire to my even smaller laptop, typing with nine fingers and one elbow (actually a finger in a thick dressing). The hillside I gaze upon is covered by an expanse of dead weeds baking in the August afternoon sun. But today I am pleased enough with this little drama of mine to stay in the production until it finishes its natural run. Once more, I survived all-out assaults launched by the mood-demons who dwell in darkest recesses of my mind. Thank you, big Pharma, for marketing a drug that required me to weather such torment in order to release myself from its grasp.

That altering my brain chemistry by withdrawing a drug had such an effect on my worldview brings to mind, once more, my curiosity about what it means to exist as a human consciousness. I wrote earlier about the origins of decisions and intention. This ordeal has made me wonder, too, about the locus of attitudes and feelings about life. When something as fundamental as whether I think my story is worth living can be affected by removing a synthetic chemical from my bloodstream, then who am I? Is there ‘nothing’ more to ‘me’ than proteins, and cell membranes, and DNA, and myriad organic molecules? That kind of musing resurrects my whole philosophy about the relationship between living things and (what I for convenience call) ‘God’.

Aside from feeling that the Cymbalta wash-out may be behind me, I also cheered up after looking a bit at my web statistics. OK, OK, I know doing that is pointless. Numbers are not my objective, and obsessing about how many computers connect with my site will drive me (even more) nuts. Still, I noticed that my post ‘Is Depression Sane?‘ has been viewed two-and-a-half times as often as any other. This strikes me as great news, because I enjoyed writing that essay, and it touched on a number of philosophical points. I like to include in my blog my homespun views about the mind, mental distress, and how one can lead a satisfying life. Knowing that one of the essays that most does that also attracted the most interest encourages me to continue.

I resolved to keep my posts short. What I’ve written so far is the introduction to my real topic: the relationship between the chemicals that traverse my brain and the ‘person’ that the organ produces. In particular, how does an organism acquire the gifts of pleasure and pain, instead of just having a drive to move toward or away from certain stimuli and experiences? Rather than launching into that now, and even further exceeding my supposed daily word quota, I will put the topic out there as something to either look forward to or avoid, depending on your attitude.


(I modified this post on 2009 August 13, c. 23:00 PDT.)

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Wouldn’t it be great if long-term antidepressant treatment worked?

Before antidepressants.

Before antidepressants.

After 1 year on antidepressants.

After 1 year on antidepressants.

This is a response to a post on the Hopeworks Community blog.

Dear Hopeworks Community,

Personally, I believe you overstate the value of medications, especially in bipolar II/depression. (They are indeed quite effective against manic escalation. It is not impossible for someone with Bipolar I to go without meds, but it is difficult and takes discipline.) However, the efficacy of antidepressants is regularly exaggerated by psychiatrists and pharmaceutical representatives. Are you aware of a single long term placebo-controlled study that demonstrates sustained benefit of any antidepressant over time frames longer than a few months? I’m not. Approval trials typically last six weeks. And even in that short time period, usually not much more than half the population benefits (compared to 30% that respond just to placebo). Yes, when people first start antidepressants, they often feel better. But if they are someone with longterm problems with low moods, and many recurrences, (which is the story for most bipolar II patients) when you look a year later they are usually back to fighting depression. Only now they are stuck on medication that causes even worse moods and other symptoms if they try to halt drug treatment. Realistically, don’t you notice that mental health clinics are filled with clients in awful depression who also happen to be taking 3 or 4 or 5 medications? If pharmaceutical therapy works so well, why are there so many people like this? For acute depressions, especially prolonged situational depression, psychoactive agents can really help. They may also give those with more chronic problems a bit of relief while they learn better ways of dealing with their moods. But as a sustained strategy: medication just does not work. If long term antidepressants were often effective, I would be in favor of them; I am not reflexively anti-medication. But they are not.

The psychiatrist who claims he has “seen a few BP2 people who do not have deep depression make it [without medications], but they are the rare exception” is a psychiatrist who loses his patients after they realize they can find ways to deal with recurrent depression and hypomania without drugs. The only ones he sees are those who come back asking to be restarted on pharmaceuticals. Not only that, but once established on long-term drug treatment, it is all-too-true that patients find it exceedingly difficult to stop. But to say that bipolar II patients can’t come off drugs is very different from saying they are better off than if they had never been established on longterm treatment in the first place. And how hard does he work to very slowly taper his patients while providing behavioral means to manage their moods? A close family member required a 2-year taper off prozac, and she was just on the one drug. Imagine how much patience it would take for a psychiatrist to help patients get off 4 or 5 medications. Does he work that hard to achieve something he obviously does not believe in?

Therapy and counselling are indeed helpful. Not always those based on opening up (though for clients coming from traumatic backgrounds, as many with bipolar II diagnoses have, it may be vital), but especially those that provide behavioral advice (including promoting exercise) and cognitive training, along with something like meditation or spiritual support. And peer interaction can be lifesaving. But meds? They are not a rock opposing a hard place. They are just an ineffective pebble (with crushing, boulder-like side effects and dependence potential) opposing a condition that can often be ameliorated without longterm drugs. Unfortunately, those who have difficulty succeeding with behavioral/cognitive changes are unlikely to be helped by ongoing medications. Instead, they will just have drug dependence, with attendant adverse effects, added to their list of woes.

(I modified this post in several places on 2009 August 3, c. 12:00 PDT. I did not introduce any changes in the opinion expressed, or examples cited.)

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Mind, Moods, and an Organic God

dnasculpture

My last post wore me out, emotionally and physically, so I’ve needed a break. But here I sit again, ready to write. The prior essay centered on structural changes in synapses, and how those relate to difficulties with changes in either behavior or medications. Loss of serotonin receptors with SSRI antidepressant use (e.g. Prozac), leads to a dependence on the medication. When SSRIs are withdrawn, the brain no longer has the receptor capacity to work with the lowered serotonin level which follows. So we get depressed. I have experienced this repeatedly in my efforts to lower my antidepressant load.

The brain gets used to certain inputs. Many pleasurable activities, and drugs of abuse, increase dopamine. Like serotonin, dopamine is a neurotransmitter used by a minute fraction of the brain’s neurons. When the nucleus accumbens, or ‘pleasure center’, gets flushed with this chemical, one feels deep satisfaction, sensual gratification, or even euphoria. Later, when dopamine levels drop, one may develop a desperate craving to get another burst of it. Hence: addiction. Possibly behaviors that lead to unpleasant moods, like isolating or ruminating on worries and problems, provide short term release of neurotransmitters that our brains ‘like’, even though the end result is depression. This portrayal simplifies the situation, like describing an epic film with one paragraph. But my point is just that on some level much of how we feel, and what we think or do, comes from shifting movements in the symphony of chemical interactions in the brain.

So what does this all say about human nature? Are we ‘nothing’ but conglomerations of proteins, neurotransmitters, and other biological molecules? In the last post I also mentioned Jeffrey Schwartz, MD, and his hypothesis that in addition to neurons and associated brain cells, our minds consist of something non-material, which he calls ‘mental force’. This entity could just as well be called our ‘soul’, since he believes it determines our decisions under the principle of free will.

I don’t accept this proposal. Not because I think free will is an illusion, or because I don’t believe in souls. I have conviction that both exist and are the vital organs of human life. My opinion, however, is that both human ‘spirit’ and ‘will’ arise from the matrix of matter itself. The intricate and finely woven fabric of our brains makes freely determined decisions, and houses our divine spark. Humans look for miracles, yet all the time we seek them we are living in their midst. Not only that, but each one of us is divine in every sense of the word. We don’t need to postulate some ethereal force that exists detached from the trillions of cells, each a tiny universe of activity, which have grown in unison and become the mysteries we call bodies. God does not need to speak outside of matter, because our atoms and molecules already sing God’s song.

pieta

To those who have faith in a different sort of deity: Maybe we aren’t of such opposing opinions. If you can accept that whatever God is, we don’t really understand it, then there is no disagreement. In that case, every sculpture humans carve of God or spirit must be incomplete. So who is to say whether we are looking at completely different icons, or just viewing the same monument from different vantages? If, on the other hand, your belief system is more fundamentalist and inflexible, and you cannot accept that other views might also carry a little truth, then you are probably not even reading this. But if you are, I hope you will just ignore my attempt at spirituality. Go ahead and consider me morally misguided, but still listen to the basic message: We have more power to improve our minds and lives than an industry based on selling psychoactive chemicals wants us to believe.

Even with the above proviso, I suspect that my spiritual ideas do not particularly interest those who visit this blog. So I’ll stop here with the philosophy. I only want to convince readers that by taking medications, or changing our behaviors, we are tinkering with the intimate particles of our being. However, the two approaches, drugs and action, differ as coal differs from diamonds. They may be the same thing on some basic level, but they diverge in beauty and endurance. Ingesting a chemical to improve one’s experience is akin to to reshaping an ice sculpture with a blow torch. The tool carries too much power, and acts too crudely to result in anything fine. “If you can’t feel better, drugs at least make you feel different.” At the price of (possibly) lifelong dependence on psychiatric chemicals, one (typically) gains a few months of relief from pain. Then, all too often, the pain returns. Only now depression comes encumbered with an addiction (what else to call it?) to drugs that no longer work. Stopping medications takes one from depression into the pounding heart of hell.

ice_torch

Much better to work on meditating, improving spiritual sensitivity, exercising, and adjusting thought habits. Maybe drugs can help for a little while. If so, doctors should remain ever-vigilant for the first opportunity to start withdrawing them. Let us use finesse to chip and carve the ice that encases our moods. Take our time and work hard, and we can sculpt our depression into tragic but nonetheless beautiful memories.

I guess this is a repeat of my last message. Hopefully, since it is (a little) shorter, it will be more widely read. I further yearn for it to help someone. This kind of thinking comes too late for me. I am already addicted to psychiatric medications, and must struggle my way free. This writing project would fulfill both my spirit and my will if a recently diagnosed reader found it useful, and if it bolstered a non-medicated regimen of mood care. If you are that reader, I pray that the uncountable molecules of your brain begin to dance in harmony. I have faith that you will choreograph a lasting peace.

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Prozac & other Bad Habits: how they affect neurotransmitters and brain circuit paths, and why they are hard to quit.

neurons

Today, my decision about topics comes down to two choices, both born of recent posts or replies to comments: 1) Bad Thought and Behavior Habits and how hard it is to change them; or 2) Discontinuing Psychiatric Drugs and how it is made difficult by receptor downregulation. The first has to do with why I often ignore the things that have been taught to me about how to be healthy. The second is about why I get so depressed when I try to stop (e.g.) Cymbalta. Then I realized that the two are related. They both have to do with fixed patterns of response in the brain. So this essay deals with both those issues. It is long (despite my resolution to keep posts under 500 words), and involves some physiology. But I think the connection between habits, drugs, and changes in the brain lies at the heart of many difficult emotional problems.

Of course, science understands drugs better than habits. When a negative behavior becomes habitual, so that we repeatedly cave in to it rather than do the harder thing that will make us feel better in the long run, millions (or billions) of cells across the brain may get involved. Many complicated neural centers of thought and action determine such bad habits. On the other hand, when our brains become habituated to the effects of psychiatric medications, the problem largely can be explained by changes in the levels of one or a few proteins. Since I know little about the psychology behind habits and resistance to change, most of this post will focus on receptors. I will try to draw (hopefully not make up) parallels between the brain’s adjustment to pharmaceuticals and its development of habits.

Many people on psychiatric medications have found that a drug may improve ‘symptoms’ after a few weeks, but then gradually works less and less well. This happens, in part, because the body reduces the number of receptor-proteins that respond to that drug, or to one of the natural chemicals the drug increases.

I started my medication odyssey with Prozac (fluoxetine). This drug blocks the removal (reuptake) of serotonin from the synapses in parts of the brain that use serotonin as a signalling molecule. The synapse is the small area that separates the pre-synaptic cell that sends a signal, in this case one carried by serotonin, from the post-synaptic cell that receives it. Removing the released serotonin from the space between the cells–the synapse–attenuates the message, so that it is time-limited, and doesn’t just go on ‘forever’. Since compared to earlier antidepressants Prozac is relatively selective in blocking reuptake of serotonin–but not other transmitters, it is an example of the SSRI class: Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors.

Under normal circumstances, the pre-synaptic cell releases serotonin, but then sucks it back out of the synapse using ‘reuptake’ proteins. Without the reuptake mechanism, serotonin would persist in the cleft for much longer times, and at higher concentrations, than normal. In fact, Prozac accomplishes exactly that: it blocks the reuptake protein and so causes an increase in synaptic serotonin.

serotonin necklace

As an aside, only about one-thousandth of one percent of brain nerve cells use serotonin to send signals. Despite their small numbers, serotonin neurons affect many different parts of the brain. That explains, in part, why they have unwanted side effects: areas of the nervous system we’d rather not mess with (like parts mediating sexual response) are modulated by serotonin, just like the parts that alter moods. Another important point is that to date there is no evidence that depression results from an actual deficiency in serotonin levels, even though increasing serotonin activity does elevate moods.

So why does Prozac often quit working over time? In part, it may be because the cells respond to abnormal increases in serotonin by reducing the number of post-synaptic receptors for that transmitter. It’s kind of like what happens with noise. If you want to hear something really faint, like a soft whisper, you cup your hand behind your ear to increase your ability to make out the words. As the person speaks louder, you remove your hand because it’s not so hard to detect their voice anymore. If they start yelling, you might even plug your ears to tone down the volume. The post-synaptic neuron that detects the serotonin signal no longer has to listen so hard. So it reduces the number of proteins in its cell membrane that ‘hear’ the serotonin molecule. And the drug that increases serotonin, and that once had terrific effectiveness, now has less.

Naturally, there are complicating factors. For instance, Prozac may have an immediate stimulating effect, but much of its antidepressant activity is delayed by several weeks. This is thought to be due to changes in receptor numbers on the pre-synaptic cell. I won’t go into this wrinkle, because it does not change the basic fact that eventually serotonin levels increase, and that soon after the system adjusts to the elevated transmitter levels. Regardless of the details, the end result is that the brain settles back toward its natural state. It adapts to the increase in transmitter by reducing its sensitivity.

What happens when you stop the Prozac? At this point, your neurons are accustomed to increased serotonin levels. What was once abnormally high is now, according to your brain, the right amount. When you take the (reuptake inhibiting) drug away, reuptake goes back up, which (probably along with other changes) reduces synaptic serotonin. Since the brain has adapted to high serotonin, this reduction (back to levels that once were normal) feels like a deficiency. The serotonin system is under-stimulated, and you feel depressed. And because serotonin neurons are so widespread, other withdrawal symptoms are not uncommon. You might even be more depressed than when you first started Prozac. If you can weather the depression without killing yourself, there is a pretty good chance that your neurons will return to their original condition. Or maybe not. There is also a risk that not all of the changes are reversible. One line of evidence that suggests receptor downregulation may sometimes be irreversible comes from the fact that some people have long-term sexual dysfunction that continues after SSRI agents have been discontinued.

Either way, the habituation of your brain to the presence of Prozac (and other SSRIs) makes it a difficult drug to stop. The same thing happens with heroin users: the number of opiate receptors drops, and the addict feels horrible if her or she can’t get enough heroin. (In the brain, ‘opiate’ receptors normally detect peptides called endorphins; heroin and related drugs stimulate those receptors and thereby promote analgesia and euphoria.) Hence they have trouble springing back from ‘receptor downregulation’ just like Prozac users. A common name for this is ‘addiction’. For obvious reasons, drug companies and psychiatrists resist applying this term to the withdrawal symptoms people have when psychiatric drugs like SSRIs are stopped.

Now, back to habits. Could it be that similar adaptations to signal strength, protein levels, and other features in various parts of the brain account for why habits are so hard to break? When we try to alter our behavior away from the established pattern, do we experience a seeming deficit in some chemical important to feelings of well-being? This mechanism must be operative in bad habits involving substance abuse, like cigarette addiction. But would it be extending the analogy too far to suggest it explains my habit of retreating into depression after minor setbacks? Or how I avoid doing the things that I know will gradually lead to less depression (e.g., distraction, exercise, positive self-talk), and instead curl up in a darkened room because it somehow feels better at that moment?


To answer that, one confronts the question of whether all of our decisions result from neuronal activity. Surprisingly (to me) not all scientists agree with that notion, or at least not entirely. Jeffrey Schwartz, MD, published a book in 2002 with reporter Sharon Begley called, The Mind and Brain: Neuroplasticity and the Power of Mental Force. In it, he uses obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) as a model for how the mind and brain interact. On the one hand, he reports that PET imaging data imply that OCD results from faulty action patterns in the frontal lobe. he goes on to show how entraining OCD patients (via CBT techniques) with new behaviors changes those circuits, and that the better the patients become, the ‘better’ the circuits look. This supports the idea that bad habits can result from changes in neuronal circuitry (note that OCD behaviors are particularly bad and pernicious; I want to reassure OCD sufferers that I am not saying their condition is something you can just ‘quit’ like cigarette smoking–hard as that is).

OCDPETOCDPET improved

(Note: these images taken from the site linked by clicking on them. They were not obtained via CC license. Since they are promotional pictures on an OCD clinic’s website, and this is a mental health blog, I assume the developers would not mind. I do not have any affiliation with that organization, by the way.)

Schwartz also conveys the optimistic message that with training and intention we can change cellular connections. In other words, we can physically alter our brains to improve our lives (which brings up the giant topic of neuroplasticity, a subject for another blog). So Schwartz agrees that structural and functional elements in the brain determine habits, and that changing those elements is the key to improvement.

On the other hand, however, he argues that the intention to change behavior (and hence the brain), originates from something outside the physical structure of the nervous system: a so-called ‘mental force’. He is doing nothing less than postulating a new physical entity to add to the nuclear strong, nuclear weak, electromagnetic and gravitational forces already known by physicists. His argument is well-constructed, though it fails to convince me. (That does not mean I don’t believe in forces outside of matter, only that his reasoning and supporting data are insufficient to establish non-material forces acting in this instance.)

Whether intention originates in neuronal tissue or outside of it, it is nevertheless clear that behavior is grounded in the brain, that we can and often do change our behavior, and that doing so probably involves changing the structure and/or function of neural circuits. My whole reason for this long discussion is to make the point that while drugs quickly and efficiently change synapses and brain circuits, we can do the same thing (more slowly) with willpower, training, and practice. Breaking the habits that promote depression is then not all that different from recovering from long-term use of psychiatric drugs, although it is probably easier. In both instances we need to readjust synaptic activity.

Cognitive research has shown that to some extent persistent depression is about bad habits of thought and action. If we can break those habits, we can reduce depression. It may even be that improving thought and behavior increases brain serotonin activity, just like Prozac. However, unlike using a synthetic drug, in this case the neurotransmitter gets increased in just the right locations, not the whole brain. There is no problem with, for instance, anorgasmia or weight gain. We can accomplish the same thing as drugs, but without the side effects. It just takes the desire to change, and enough motivation to step off the easy and well-worn path. One needs to muster the courage to forge new trails and conquer new horizons. But drugs are not required.

Medications all-too-often only provide temporary relief. In some cases, a period of drug-mediated improvement in depression can give one the solid ground needed to step in a new direction. After that, the ideal decision would be to withdraw the drug in short order. I believe medications can play a useful, even vital role. But pharmaceutical agents can not, and should not be the only compass used to find a new way to live. Lifelong treatment with psychiatric medications is questionable, and despite what we are led to believe, most pharmaceutical agents lack scientific evidence of usefulness over long term treatment. So if drugs are used at all, they should be used in the lowest number, at the lowest doses, and for the shortest time possible. It takes much effort and time to change neural pathways without drugs, but the improvement is longer lasting, without side effects, and far more natural.

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Medications are not all bad

I really don’t think they are (all bad). They get over-prescribed. I also think psychiatrists turn to new drugs that have little track record, rather than using older, less flashy drugs that are at least known quantities. One reason for turning to novel substances is that the old medications don’t work that well; usually, however, the new ones don’t either. The more pernicious reason for prescribing the recently released chemicals is the drug company demand for profit margin.

Anyone who spends time in a psychiatric ward as clinician or observer rather than a patient (I’ve been on the ward in all three capacities at different times), can see that medications really are necessary in some cases. There is a perception that the meds are just to control behavior, and they do get used that way; more often, however, there is genuine suffering going on, and the drugs help.

The same is true in outpatient settings. Sometimes people are in such pain that more conservative measures have no chance of success. Medications are needed to bring the symptoms down to a level where a person can engage his or her recovery. The problems come up when too much medication is prescribed for too long a time. In particular, I suspect that many people could eventually be weaned off most (not necessarily all) medications over time. However, there is little incentive to try. The drug companies discourage the loss of sales; the doctors don’t want the extra work of handling patients who might decompensate, and often the patient (or family) is frightened of setbacks. It takes time, work and commitment to get someone off medications. It is so much easier to just leave them as-is: heavily medicated.

So my message is not that drugs are bad. Just that new ones should be used cautiously, and all drugs should be used in the lowest dose for the shortest time possible.

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