1. Clarifying the Mechanisms of Antidepressants
- Author
-
Don M. Tucker
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychotherapist ,Mechanism (biology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Mirtazapine ,Drug action ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Focus Paper ,Neuropsychopharmacology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mood disorders ,medicine ,Antidepressant ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug ,Psychopathology ,media_common - Abstract
Commentary on Domschke, et al., Magnetoencephalographic correlates of emotionalprocessing in major depression before and after pharmacological treatment. Understanding the therapeutic effects of psychotropic medication has typically been approached, reasonably enough, with an analysis of the effects on brain chemistry. For example, the effective antidepressant mirtazapine is thought to affect both norepinephrine and serotonin neuromodulators, both of which are important to mood disorders such as major depression. However, understanding the full neuropsychopharmacology of a therapeutic agent requires an analysis of the multiple levels of neural self-regulation that are involved in the disorder and that are affected by the drug. It has long been apparent that if the mechanism of drug action were simply a correction of a biochemical imbalance, then the therapeutic effect would be rapid, limited only by the pharmacokinetics (Cooper et al., 2002). Instead, antidepressants typically require weeks of continued administration before they achieve a therapeutic effect. Although the complexity of drug action is familiar to most psychopathology researchers, clinicians are typically provided with only a superficial training on the neurophysiological and neuropsychological mechanisms for both psychopathology itself and the therapeutic effects of drugs. The result of this limited training is that a patient with depression, for example, is often told by the physician they have a “biochemical imbalance” that will be corrected by drug therapy. Not only is this explanation scientifically incorrect, …
- Published
- 2015