Will physical activity help me with my depression?
THE QUESTION
I
suffer from depression and my doctor has given me a prescription for
antidepressant medication. She says my mood may improve if I also
increase my level of physical activity. But I find it hard enough just
getting out of bed in the morning – not to mention exercising. Can
physical activity really help?
THE ANSWER
Numerous
studies have found that people who regularly exercise are less likely
to develop depression than those who have sedentary lifestyles.
Doctors who treat people with mood disorders have also noticed that exercise can help some of their patients feel better.
These
observations certainly seem promising. But there is a dearth of
large-scale studies that provide clear and definitive guidance on how
exercise might be used to overcome depression.
What
patients are most likely to benefit? What’s the best type of exercise?
What’s the right amount? To answer these questions will require a
substantial investment in more research, says Dr. Benjamin Goldstein,
director of the Centre for Youth Bipolar Disorder at Sunnybrook Health
Sciences Centre.
Of course,
pharmaceutical companies spend billions bringing new drugs to market.
But, unlike a patentable pill, there is not the same profit to be made
from a prescription for exercise. As a result, the money devoted to
exercise research lags far behind the dollars poured into drug
development, Goldstein says.
Even so, a
few things can be said with some certainty. Not every depressed patient
improves with exercise. Similarly, not every patient gets better with
antidepressants.
“We are beginning to
recognize that depression is not just one disease – it may have several
subgroups,” says Dr. Madhukar Trivedi, a professor of psychiatry at the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
And,
in particular, some depressed patients have elevated levels of Tumour
Necrosis Factor alpha (TNFa) – which is a sign of inflammation occurring
in the body.
Trivedi’s research has
found that patients with especially high amount of TNFa tend not to
respond well to antidepressants, but many of them do feel better with
exercise.
Although a lot more work is
needed to explain this finding, it’s possible that exercise counteracts
the inflammatory process, which is somehow linked to depression.
“Exercise
is like a biological sledgehammer that affects many different systems
in the body, whereas medications are limited to a handful of
mechanisms,” Goldstein says.
It’s also possible that exercise may boost the effectiveness of other treatments, including antidepressants and talk therapy.
Goldstein
points out that patients with conditions associated with poor heart
health – such as Type 2 diabetes and obesity – are also less likely to
respond well to antidepressants. By improving their heart health through
exercise, they may be indirectly improving their brain health by
boosting their receptivity to antidepressants.
But
there is a catch. Trivedi’s research suggests that patients must
exercise at a certain level of intensity to experience a meaningful
reduction in their depression symptoms.
“This is not just a leisurely walk in the
park,” says Trivedi, who is considered a leading expert and has authored
multiple studies on exercise as a treatment for depression. “It amounts
to about 45 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise – where you’re
breathing heavily – three or four times a week.
If
his calculations are correct, that amount of exercise may be a daunting
challenge for certain patients who are in the grips of depression,
which is often characterized by low energy levels.
Many
depressed patients are further handicapped by a condition called
anhedonia – in which they no longer derive pleasure from everyday
activities including exercise. They may feel fatigued from a vigorous
workout, but get none of the satisfaction from their accomplishment,
Goldstein says. Anhedonia can undermine their motivation to keep
exercising.
Goldstein suggests that
patients adopt a gradualist approach to exercise, slowly building up the
intensity of their workout. Some patients, he adds, may benefit from
joining a gym or an organized exercise program that includes other
people who may provide moral support and encouragement.
As
part of his psychiatric practice, Goldstein often treats depressed
adolescents who are the offspring of adults with bipolar disorder (manic
depression). He hopes that someday there will be enough evidence to
justify using exercise as part of a prevention package to delay the
onset of depression or to avoid it entirely in people who are
genetically predisposed to the condition.
“It’s
important to understand the biology that underlies depression so that
we can better target treatments,” he says. With hope, that knowledge
will come with more research.
So, what
are depressed patients supposed to do in the meantime? It’s certainly
worthwhile trying an exercise program under the guidance of your doctor.
“After all, it’s good for your heart and may also help your mood,”
Goldstein says.
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