What is depression Helen M. Farrell

Depression is the leading cause
of disability in the world.

In the United States,

close to 10% of adults
struggle with depression.

But because it’s a mental illness,

it can be a lot harder to understand
than, say, high cholesterol.

One major source of confusion is
the difference between having depression

and just feeling depressed.

Almost everyone feels down
from time to time.

Getting a bad grade,

losing a job,

having an argument,

even a rainy day can bring on
feelings of sadness.

Sometimes there’s no trigger at all.

It just pops up out of the blue.

Then circumstances change,

and those sad feelings disappear.

Clinical depression is different.

It’s a medical disorder,

and it won’t go away
just because you want it to.

It lingers for at least
two consecutive weeks,

and significantly interferes
with one’s ability to work,

play,

or love.

Depression can have a lot
of different symptoms:

a low mood,

loss of interest in things
you’d normally enjoy,

changes in appetite,

feeling worthless or excessively guilty,

sleeping either too much or too little,

poor concentration,

restlessness or slowness,

loss of energy,

or recurrent thoughts of suicide.

If you have at least five
of those symptoms,

according to psychiatric guidelines,

you qualify for a diagnosis of depression.

And it’s not just behavioral symptoms.

Depression has physical manifestations
inside the brain.

First of all,

there are changes that could be seen
with the naked eye

and X-ray vision.

These include smaller frontal lobes
and hippocampal volumes.

On a more microscale,

depression is associated
with a few things:

the abnormal transmission or depletion
of certain neurotransmitters,

especially serotonin, norepinephrine,
and dopamine,

blunted circadian rhythms,

or specific changes in the REM
and slow-wave parts of your sleep cycle,

and hormone abnormalities,

such as high cortisol and deregulation
of thyroid hormones.

But neuroscientists still don’t have
a complete picture

of what causes depression.

It seems to have to do with a complex
interaction between genes and environment,

but we don’t have a diagnostic tool

that can accurately predict where
or when it will show up.

And because depression symptoms
are intangible,

it’s hard to know who might look fine
but is actually struggling.

According to the National Institute
of Mental Health,

it takes the average person
suffering with a mental illness

over ten years to ask for help.

But there are very effective treatments.

Medications and therapy complement
each other to boost brain chemicals.

In extreme cases,
electroconvulsive therapy,

which is like a controlled seizure
in the patient’s brain,

is also very helpful.

Other promising treatments,

like transcranial magnetic stimulation,

are being investigated, too.

So, if you know someone
struggling with depression,

encourage them, gently, to seek out
some of these options.

You might even offer to help
with specific tasks,

like looking up therapists in the area,

or making a list of questions
to ask a doctor.

To someone with depression,

these first steps can seem insurmountable.

If they feel guilty or ashamed,

point out that depression
is a medical condition,

just like asthma or diabetes.

It’s not a weakness
or a personality trait,

and they shouldn’t expect themselves
to just get over it

anymore than they could will themselves
to get over a broken arm.

If you haven’t experienced
depression yourself,

avoid comparing it to times
you’ve felt down.

Comparing what they’re experiencing
to normal, temporary feelings of sadness

can make them feel guilty for struggling.

Even just talking about
depression openly can help.

For example, research shows that asking
someone about suicidal thoughts

actually reduces their suicide risk.

Open conversations about mental illness
help erode stigma

and make it easier
for people to ask for help.

And the more patients seek treatment,

the more scientists will learn
about depression,

and the better the treatments will get.

抑郁症是世界上
导致残疾的主要原因。

在美国,

接近 10% 的
成年人患有抑郁症。

但因为它是一种精神疾病,

它可能
比高胆固醇更难理解。

混淆的一个主要来源是
抑郁症和只是感到抑郁症之间的区别

几乎每个人都会
时不时地感到沮丧。

成绩不好,

失业

,吵架,

甚至是下雨天都会带来
悲伤的感觉。

有时根本没有触发器。

它只是突然出现。

然后情况发生了变化

,那些悲伤的感觉消失了。

临床抑郁症是不同的。

这是一种医学疾病

,不会
因为你想要它就消失。

它会持续至少
连续两周,

并严重
干扰一个人的工作、

娱乐

或恋爱能力。

抑郁症可能有
许多不同的症状

:情绪低落、


你通常喜欢的事物失去

兴趣、食欲改变、

感觉一文不值或过度内疚、

睡得太多或太少、

注意力不集中、

烦躁或迟钝、

失落 精力,

或反复出现的自杀念头。 根据精神病学指南,

如果您至少有其中
五种症状,

您就有资格被诊断为抑郁症。

这不仅仅是行为症状。

抑郁症
在大脑内部有身体表现。

首先,

有肉眼

和X光视觉可以看到的变化。

这些包括较小的额叶
和海马体积。

在更微观的层面上,

抑郁症
与几件事有关:某些神经递质

的异常传递或
消耗,

尤其是血清素、去甲肾上腺素
和多巴胺、

昼夜节律迟钝

或睡眠周期的快速眼动
和慢波部分的特定变化,

和激素异常,

例如高皮质醇和
甲状腺激素失调。

但是神经科学家仍然
没有完全

了解导致抑郁症的原因。

这似乎与
基因和环境之间复杂的相互作用有关,

但我们没有一种诊断

工具可以准确预测
它会在何时何地出现。

而且由于抑郁症状
是无形的,

很难知道谁看起来很好,
但实际上正在挣扎。

根据美国国家
心理健康研究所的数据,

一般
患有精神疾病

的人需要十年以上的时间才能寻求帮助。

但是有非常有效的治疗方法。

药物和治疗相辅相成,
以增加大脑化学物质。

在极端情况下,
电惊厥疗法

,就像患者大脑中的控制性癫痫发作一样

也很有帮助。

其他有希望的治疗方法,

如经颅磁刺激,

也在研究中。

所以,如果你认识有人
在抑郁症中挣扎

,请温和地鼓励他们寻找
其中的一些选择。

您甚至可以主动提供帮助
完成特定任务,

例如在该地区寻找治疗师,

或列出
要问医生的问题。

对于患有抑郁症的人来说,

这些第一步似乎是不可逾越的。

如果他们感到内疚或羞愧,请

指出抑郁症
是一种疾病,

就像哮喘或糖尿病一样。

这不是弱点
或人格特质

,他们不应该期望
自己克服它,而

不是希望
自己克服断臂。

如果您自己没有经历过
抑郁症,请

避免将其与
您感到沮丧的时候进行比较。

将他们的经历
与正常情况进行比较,暂时的悲伤

感会让他们为挣扎而感到内疚。

即使只是
公开谈论抑郁症也会有所帮助。

例如,研究表明,向
某人询问自杀念头

实际上会降低他们的自杀风险。

关于精神疾病的公开对话
有助于消除污名

,让人们更
容易寻求帮助。

寻求治疗的患者

越多,科学家就越
了解抑郁症

,治疗效果就会越好。