Antidepressants and
Phototherapy
by Marcello
Lanares
zone3
Antidepressants are used commonly in medical and psychiatric practice.
As a class, antidepressants have in common their ability to treat major
depressive illness. Most antidepressants are also effective in the
treatment of panic disorder and other anxiety disorders. Some
antidepressants effectively treat obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and
a variety of other conditions (see indications below).
The most commonly prescribed antidepressants are listed in Table 12-1.
Antidepressants are subdivided into groups based on structure or prominent
functional activity: selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRls),
tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOls),
and other antidepressant compounds with a variety of mechanisms of action.
Antidepressants are typically thought to act on either the serotonin or
norepinephrine systems, or both. Choice of medications typically depends
on diagnosis, history of response (in patient or relative), and the
side-effect profile of the medication. Antidepressant effects are
typically not seen until 2 to 4 weeks into treatment. Side effects must be
carefully monitored, especially for TCAs and MAOls.
Indications
Table 12-2 lists the indications for antidepressants. The main
indication for antidepressant medications is major depressive disorder as
defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th
edition (DSM-IV). Antidepressants are used in the treatment of all
subtypes of depression, including depressed phase of bipolar disorder,
psychotic depression (in combination with an antipsychotic medication),
atypical depression, and seasonal depression. Antidepressants also are
indicated for the prevention of recurrent depressive episodes.
Antidepressant medications may be effective in the treatment of
patients with dysthymic disorder, especially when there are clear
neurovegetative signs or a history of response to antidepressants.
Panic disorder with or without agoraphobia has been shown to respond to
SSRls, MAOls, TCAs, and high-potency benzodiazepines (alprazolam and
clonazepam).
OCD has been shown to respond to the serotonin-selective tricyclic
clomipramine (Anafranil) and to SSRIs at high doses (e.g., fluoxetine at
60-80mg/ day). Obsessions tend to be more responsive to pharmacotherapy
than compulsions. Symptoms of OCD respond more slowly than symptoms of
major depression. Trials of 12 weeks or more are needed before a
medication can be ruled a failure for an OCD patient.
The binging and purging behavior of bulimia has been shown to respond
to SSRls, TCAs, and MAOls in several open and controlled trials. Because
SSRIs have the most benign side-effect profile of these medications, they
are often the first-line psychopharmacologic treatment.
Mechanisms of Action
Antidepressants are thought to exert their effects at particular
subsets of neuronal synapses throughout the brain. Their major interaction
is with the monoamine neurotransmitter systems (dopamine, norepinephrine,
and serotonin). Dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin are released
throughout the brain by neurons that originate in the ventral brainstem,
locus ceruleus and the raphe nuclei, respectively. These neurotransmitters
interact with numerous receptor subtypes in the brain that are associated
with the regulation of global state functions including appetite, mood
states, arousal, vigilance, attention, and sensory processing.
SSRls act by binding to presynaptic serotonin reuptake proteins,
thereby inhibiting reuptake and increasing the levels of serotonin in the
synaptic cleft.
TCAs act by blocking presynaptic reuptake of both serotonin and
norepinephrine. MAOls act by inhibiting the presynaptic enzyme (monoamine
oxidase) that catabolizes norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin, thereby
increasing the levels of these neurotransmitters presynaptically.
These immediate mechanisms of action are not sufficient to explain the
delayed antidepressant effects (typically 2 to 4 weeks). Other unknown
mechanisms must play a role in the successful psychopharmacologic
treatment of depression.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Marcello Lanares, MD, PhD, is a program manager and adjunct associate
professor at the University of Tel Aviv, Clinical and Experimental
Medicine For more information on depression and other mental health issues
please visit out website http://www.health.am/
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