ASK
DR LAURO
Regarding my article
last week, which addressed
the recent scare concerning the antidepressant Paxil, I received
several comments from readers. Some
were very thought provoking and I have chosen two of these
to serve as the basis for my article this week.
Letter #1:
Dr. Lauro: This is the type of thinking
that pushes the ever increasing use of Ritalin and other
medications used to control behavior in children and adults
when all many (patients) are missing is self-discipline. John.
Letter #2:
Dr. Lauro: I agree with your article regarding the low suicide risk of
Paxil used with depression. But I also think there are other things that
contribute to whether a patient should be "afraid" of Paxil. I
am under the impression that Paxil, and other serotonin-type antidepressants,
have been tested only for temporary usage, and are to be used along
with other treatments, such as counseling.
It seems that these meds are prescribed for long-term usage without a need
to get a patient to work toward getting off of them. I understand the
importance of treating depression, but I know these meds are also used long-term
by patients for anxiety. I know there are extreme cases where patients
must use these meds their whole life, but it seems to me that if one is not
careful, they can become a kind of crutch. Vicki.
Dr. Lauro responds:
The use of antidepressant medications, in my opinion,
really is not that controversial. The
medications are generally safe, effective, non-addicting,
and have very few side effects in most people. I wish those readers, who
are “up in arms” over my suggesting that antidepressant meds
are useful and safe, could listen to so many of my patients
for whom these meds have literally been life-savers. And
I am just a family doc; I am not a psychiatrist who, in his
practice, would see 10 times the depressed patients I see!
In my original article on depression I made a
point that I would like to reiterate because both of the
above letters tend to address it. The
clinical syndrome of major depression is thought by most
experts to be a neurotransmitter imbalance in certain areas
of the brain, which control our emotions. This “chemical imbalance” results in deficiencies
in neurotransmitters like serotonin and norepinephrine. In these patients it is simply not true that
they are lacking self-discipline, as the first letter suggests. Patients who are depressed already carry the
stigma that they are somehow “weak” and that they should
address their disease not by giving in and taking medication
but rather by simply “gutting it out” or by simply developing
greater self discipline.
I liken this situation to a diabetic who lacks
insulin. Could those
patients cause their pancreas to secrete more insulin by
developing more self-discipline, by thinking positively,
by telling themselves that they don’t really have diabetes? This
is the situation that patients with major depression face
every day as the ill-informed public looks down their noses
at them for being “weak.”
By the way, if you want to make a depressed patient
sicker and push him to suicide, don’t give him Paxil, just
tell him (or subtly imply) that he is just a big baby and
that he could control his depression if he really wanted
to by developing more self discipline!
The second letter is very thoughtful. It makes several good points, which I want
to address. First
of all, the treatment of major depression with antidepressant
medications should never be “short term”. The
medications can produce a significant rebound depression
if only taken for a few weeks or months. Most psychiatrists I know like to use these
meds for 9-12 months and then, if the patient is doing well
and consents to stopping the meds, tapering the patient very
slowly off of them, watching for rebound depression.
Studies that I have seen indicate that even with
this slow titration off the antidepressant, many (as much
as half) of the patients will not feel as well off the meds
and will need to reinitiate them. This,
by the way, is not addiction! It is simply a return to the pretreatment
levels of neurotransmitters, which were low in the first
place. There is no
withdrawal syndrome (if you taper the meds slowly over a
few weeks), and thus we do not call this a withdrawal or
addictive effect.
Many patients will take their meds for 9-12 months
and then be able to discontinue them and never have significant
depression again. Somehow
the brain seems to have been able to heal itself and start
producing more neurotransmitters on its own. Why
this happens to some patients, but not all, is a mystery. It is my opinion, and studies seem to support this, that a patient
who takes the medications and gets better is more likely
to be permanently improved versus those patients who simply
try to “tough out” their depression and never get back to
feeling well. This
latter group of patients may go on for years with significant
depression.
Do some patients need these medications for life? Yes,
they do, and if you talk to them they will tell you that
life is not worth living without them. These patients are not weak, they are not
faithless, they are not wicked, and they are not “big babies”. They have a true clinical disease. Thank heavens it responds to medication in
most cases.
Regarding counseling, it is true that patients
who take meds and receive counseling have a slightly higher
rate of success. However,
the meds are so effective in some patients that the results
are almost miraculous and the need for counseling just isn’t
necessary. And besides,
many insurance companies unfortunately do not cover ongoing
psychotherapy.
You might find it interesting that studies show
that counseling alone, without medication, is not
as effective as medication alone for major depression
unless the counselor is specifically trained in the discipline
known as “cognitive behavioral therapy”, which can be quite
effective in treating depression.
A final thought: one reader accused me (and
all doctors) of simply being puppets of the big pharmaceutical
companies and being more interested in lining our pockets
by making patients drug dependent for years and years by
prescribing these meds while never trying to just get them
better. Let me assure
you that I am no longer even practicing medicine (bad back—call
me “weak”), I don’t get paid by any pharmaceutical companies
(now or in the past), and I (as well as most physicians
I know) really care about our patients. Best wishes. Dr.
Lauro.
Last Weeks Article : Should Patients be Afraid of Paxil?