Title: Complementary%20and%20Alternative%20Therapies%20for%20Depression
1Complementary and Alternative Therapies for
Depression
- Sudha Prathikanti, MD
- University of California, San Francisco
- www.prathikanti.com/teaching
2MAJOR DEPRESSION
- Most disabling medical condition in U.S.
- Chronic / recurrent course is common
- Significant medical / psych co-morbidity
- Contribution to mortality
- Suicide
- ? risk of death in med conditions
3COMMON CONVENTIONAL TREATMENTS
Psychotherapy Anti-depressant Medication
- Some Limitations
- ? Disappointing remission rates
- ? High rates of non-adherence due to
- Expense duration of treatment
- Social / cultural stigma
- Medication side effects
4 COMPLEMENTARY ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE (CAM)
NIH DEFINITION
- Healthcare systems, practices, and products not
presently considered to be part of conventional
medicine. - Complementary along with
- conventional care
- Alternative in place of
- conventional care
-
5USE OF CAM THERAPIES FOR DEPRESSION
- CAM use is high
- among people with depression
-
- CAM use may even exceed
- conventional care
-
- CAM use is often combined
- with conventional care
6CAM THERAPIES COMMONLY USED IN DEPRESSION
- Mind-Body Therapies
- Yoga
- Meditation
- Relaxation Techniques
- Biologically-Based Therapies
- Botanicals and Herbs
- Diet and Nutritional Supplements
- Spiritual Therapies
- Prayer
- Healing rituals
- Manual Therapies
- Massage
- Chiropractic
- Exercise
- Aerobic
- Weight-training / resistance
7THE APPEAL OF CAM THERAPIES
- Acknowledge body, mind, and spirit
- Emphasis on preventing disease
- Treatment is specific to the person
- Knowing cause of illness less criticaL
-
- Physician activates self-healing capacity
-
8SOME LIMITATIONS OF CAM
- Quality of Care often unregulated practice
- Quality of Product no stringent monitoring
- Quality of Science often unverified efficacy
9SOME UNIVERSITY-BASEDINTEGRATIVE MEDICINE
CENTERSIN THE UNITED STATES
- Columbia
- Cornell
- Duke
- George Washington
- Harvard
- Stanford
- Thomas Jefferson
- Tufts
- University of Arizona
- University of Maryland
- University of Miami
- University of Michigan
- University of Pittsburg
- University of Texas
- University of Washington
University of California, San Francisco
10EVIDENCE BASE FOR CAM THERAPIES IN DEPRESSION
- MEDITATION
-
- HATHA YOGA
-
- ACUPUNCTURE
- HERBS SUPPLEMENTS
- EXERCISE
11MEDITATION
- Concentration Practice (TM, RR)
- Mindfulness Practice (MBSR, MBCT)
- Some indications
- Recurrent Depression (MBCT)
- Chronic anxiety (TM, MBSR)
- Chronic insomnia (RR)
- Overall emotional well-being (RR, MBSR)
12HATHA YOGA
- Most common yoga practice in U.S.
-
- Includes asanas (body postures)
- pranayama (breathing exercises)
- Randomized controlled trials
- Pranayama asana reduces symptoms in depressed
college students - Pranayama comparable to tricyclic in
treating depressed psych inpatients - Asanas superior to wait-list
in reducing depressive symptoms - Short-term antidepressant effects of pranayama
asana comparable to PMR and superior to
control
13ACUPUNCTURE
- Electro-acupuncture
- Manual acupuncture
- Laser acupuncture
- Randomized controlled trials
- Luo et al EA equivalent to tricyclic in
depression (unipolar bipolar subjects) - Allen et al EA group only marginally better
than wait-list control - Roschke et al EA no better than sham EA
- as adjuvant to antidepressant
- Quah-Smith et al Laser acupuncture superior to
sham in treating depressive symptoms
14HERBAL REMEDIES
- St. Johns Wort
-
- Equivalent to low-dose tricyclic in
mild-mod depression - Three large negative studies compared to
SSRI/placebo - Typical dose 900-1800 mg/day (in three
divided doses) - Watch for photo-toxicity and herb-drug
interactions - NIH Minor Depression study pending
Hypericum perforatum
15HERBAL REMEDIES
- Rhodiola
- Many classified Russian studies during Cold war
- Enhances cognitive performance under stress
- Reduces mental fatigue
- Improves sexual function
- Improves overall well-being
- 300-900 mg/day for depression
- Caution with bipolar and post-MI patients
Rhodiola Rosea
16HERBAL REMEDIES
- Valerian Root
- Used for hundreds of years for anxiety /
insomnia - Seven placebo-controlled trials (400-900
mg/day) - 6 of 7 studies found statistically significant,
dose-related sedative effects - Not benzodiazapine,
so little abuse potential - Avoid if liver dysfunction
- Avoid concurrent use with benzo
Valeriana officinalis
17DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
- Omega-3 Fatty Acids
- Worldwide, lower serum omega-3 fatty acids
significantly correlate with depression - Double-blind, placebo-controlled studies show
efficacy of omega 3 (from fish oil) in unipolar
and bipolar depression - Eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) more critical omega-3
fatty acid than docosahexanoic acid (DHA) - Typical EPA dose 2.5 gm/day
- Flaxseed oil also source for omega-3 fatty acids,
- but no controlled studies to date
- re use in psych conditions
- Food increases omega-3 absorption
- Do not heat fish oil
- Vitamin E may help in vivo potency
- Caution with anti-coagulants and hi-dose NSAIDS
18DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
- Folic Acid
- Folate deficiency appears significantly
correlated with - higher rates of depression
- Data suggest low serum folate may hinder
antidepressant response - Folate (0.5 mg/day) may be important adjuvant in
treating women - (but not men) with resistant depression
- Folate may help prevent relapse during after
depression tx - Watch for reduced efficacy of concurrent
phenobarb/phenytoin
19DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
- S-Adenosyl-Methionine (SAMe)
- Several placebo-controlled trials
- for use in depression
- Meta-analysis shows SAMe
- (400mg-1600 mg by mouth)
may be equivalent to tricyclics - No data on comparison to SSRIs
- Risk of mania, serotonin syndrome
20EXERCISE
- Aerobic exercise most studied
-
- Adherence rates in exercise studies comparable
to those in medication trials -
- Randomized controlled trials
- ? Antidepressant effects
- comparable to CBT
- ? Feasible in older subjects
- ? Total caloric expenditure/wk more
critical than frequency/wk
21DUTY TO PROTECT
- ? Proven danger with specific CAM use
- ? No proven benefit with CAM use and
clear benefit with conventional treatment
22DUTY TO PROMOTE
- ? Likely benefit with specific CAM use
- ? Low risk of harm
23DUTY TO PARTNER
- ? Conventional diagnosis / treatment inadequate
- ? Symptoms fit CAM healing paradigm
- ? Risk- Benefit of CAM therapy unknown
per scientific studies - ? Competent CAM practitioner / product available
- ? Optimistic patient / healer expectation
- ? Co-monitor patient undergoing CAM therapy trial
24RESOURCES FOR CAM EDUCATION
- CAM on PubMed
- Cochrane Collaboration
- NCCAM Website
- NIH Office of Dietary Supplements
- Herb Research Foundation
- American Botanical Council
- Consumer Lab
- Journals
- Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
- Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine
- Integrative Medicine
- Evidence Based Complementary and Alternative
Medicine
25INTEGRATIVE MEDICINETHE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS
- Integrative Medicine might restore the soul to
medicine - the soul being that part of us that is most
important but the least easy to delineate. - Richard Smith
- British Medical Journal
- January 2001