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Doctors Are Now Fighting Depression by Targeting the Brain's Wiring, Not Its Chemical

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  • Doctors Are Now Fighting Depression by Targeting the Brain's Wiring, Not Its Chemical

    The Damage of Depression

    Depression is becoming an epidemic that is damaging individuals, society, and the economy. Its has become*the leading source of disability*and of*ill health*in the U.S. It affects more than 15 million adults in total, including 1.5 percent of the U.S. population over the age of 18 in a given year. Depression is especially on the rise in young people, with its rates in teenage girls jumping by 37 percent over the last decade.

    Currently, the main form of treatment is medication, but drugs can be*ineffective and have undesirable side effects. Some form of consistently effective and less invasive treatment needs to be developed in order to spare millions of people the pain and loneliness the disease causes.

    Scientists have recently discovered the*physical seat of depression*in the brain, as well as*finding particular*genes*that cause it. This establishes depression as a largely physical disease, which has led to a number of treatments that seek to treat depression not as a chemical issue, but a physiological one.

    Rewiring the Mind

    One of the methods being developed is *transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which targets specific areas of the brain with magnetic pulses.*Ian Cook, director of the UCLA Depression Research and Clinic Program,*said in a UCLA press release that they*“are actually changing how the brain circuits are arranged, how they talk to each other.”

    For the treatment, patients sit back in a chair while a technician positions a magnetic stimulator at a specific location on their head which is determined by brain calibrations. Patients undergo the procedure a few days a week over the course of six weeks.

    Andrew Leuchter, director of the Semel Institute’s TMS clinical and research service, said in the press release “TMS is a revolutionary kind of treatment”*— this is because it interacts with the brain as an electrical organ instead of as a chemical one. While medication aims to re-balance neurological chemicals, TMS targets the electrical formation of the brain.

    TMS has only been clinically applied to depression, but the treatment could potentially be applied to a number of other mental disorders, including schizophrenia, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, and chronic pain by changing how the neural network functions.


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  • #2
    The VA currently uses electroconvulsive therapy therapy. The only problem is you have to have many treatments and you are anesthetized for them.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by AvidFisherman View Post
      The VA currently uses electroconvulsive therapy therapy. The only problem is you have to have many treatments and you are anesthetized for them.

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      That sounds like the kind of shit they used to use on retards or insane people in the 1920's up into the 1960's. Im hoping it's actually based on real scientific facts now instead of just electrocuting the shit of people in the hopes that they emerge a different person.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Bouncer View Post
        That sounds like the kind of shit they used to use on retards or insane people in the 1920's up into the 1960's. Im hoping it's actually based on real scientific facts now instead of just electrocuting the shit of people in the hopes that they emerge a different person.
        Or how about this one https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin_shock_therapy

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        • #5
          Originally posted by boricuarage79 View Post
          Or how about this one https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin_shock_therapy

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          says it all..

          In the US, Deborah Doroshow wrote that insulin coma therapy secured its foothold in psychiatry not because of scientific evidence or knowledge of any mechanism of therapeutic action, but due to the impressions it made on the minds of the medical practitioners within the local world in which it was administered and the dramatic recoveries observed in some patients. Today, she writes, those who were involved are often ashamed, recalling it as unscientific and inhumane. Administering insulin coma therapy made psychiatry seem a more legitimate medical field. Harold Bourne, who questioned the treatment at the time, said: "It meant that psychiatrists had something to do. It made them feel like real doctors instead of just institutional attendants".

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          • #6
            Anyone is crazy to do such a thing, but they were probably so fucked up in the head.. they went against there own free will..450 fucking units!!???

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