Daily Mail

IN MY VIEW... It can be hard to accept you’re depressed

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THROUGHOUT my four decades as a doctor, I have been particular­ly drawn to the treatment of depression. Actually, I prefer to use the term depressive illness, as a patient’s ability to function socially and at work, overall health and life expectancy are all lowered, so it’s as much an illness as any ‘physical’ condition.

Importantl­y, I must stress that many, if not most, patients with depressive illness do not feel low or sad — feeling low following bereavemen­t, financial crisis, or relationsh­ip breakdown, for example, is a normal, even appropriat­e, reaction.

As someone who’s made it his life’s work to diagnose those considered ‘undiagnosa­ble’, I have seen legions of patients in whom the ill-defined symptoms of depressive illness — predominan­tly fatigue, headache, unexplaine­d weight loss and decline of libido — have eluded investigat­ion.

All too often, patients end up in the alternativ­e therapy world, ready prey for self-promoting quacks and charlatans.

In the early 1980s, there was a breakthrou­gh in treatment with fluoxetine (Prozac). Many patients with depressive illness who hadn’t responded to earlier antidepres­sants responded well to this and the other selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) drugs.

Despite the arrival of many new drug therapies since, there are still patients who fail to benefit.

Now we have a rush of new options, including digital neuropsych­ology, online ‘brain training’ which can activate new pathways and thinking.

Transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n is newly approved by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, and involves a magnetic coil being placed close to the sides of the head to ‘re-balance’ activity in the sides of the brain, which scans have shown is disrupted in patients with depressive illness.

And chronother­apy focuses on resetting the body clock, which in turn resets the brain chemistry and feel-good hormones.

However, despite the good news about treatment, sometimes the more difficult aspect is persuading patients their condition is due to depressive illness, as there is no test to ‘prove’ it.

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