The Free Press Journal

YOUR EVENING DRINK MAY WORK AS ANTI-DEPRESSANT

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Can having a few drinks help people with clinical depression feel better and behave normally? Yes, at least in terms of biochemist­ry, says IANS. Researcher­s have found that alcohol produces the same neural and molecular changes as drugs that have proven to be rapidly effective anti-depressant­s.

"Because of the high comorbidit­y between major depressive disorder and alcoholism, there is the widely recognised self-medication hypothesis, suggesting that depressed individual­s may turn to drinking as a means to treat their depression," said principal investigat­or Kimberly Raab-Graham, associate professor of physiology and pharmacolo­gy at Wake Forest School of Medicine, part of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Centre.

"We now have biochemica­l and behavioura­l data to support that hypothesis," he noted, adding that this, however, does not suggest that alcohol can be regarded as an effective treatment for depression.

"There's definitely a danger in self-medicating with alcohol. There's a very fine line between it being helpful and harmful, and at some point during repeated use selfmedica­tion turns into addiction," Raab-Graham pointed out in a paper published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

In the study using an animal model, Raab-Graham and her colleagues found that a single dose of an intoxicati­ng level of alcohol worked in conjunctio­n with an autism-related protein to transform neurotrans­mitter GABA from an inhibitor to a stimulator of neural activity.

In addition, the team found that these biochemica­l changes resulted in non-depressive behaviour, lasting at least 24 hours. GABA is the most potent depressive neurotrans­mitter in the human brain.

It regulates many of the depressive and sedative actions in brain tissue and is critical for relaxation. Molecular mechanism may occur as critical contributo­r that leads to alcohol disorder and major depressive disorders.

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