N&PD Moderators: Skorpio
You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.How come certain drugs (i.e. antidepressants) take days/weeks before they work?
tweex
Bluelighter
Some don't, notably Tianeptine.ebola?
Bluelight Crew
ebolaZalo
Bluelighter
Here's the link for 5-HT1A receptors if you want to read more on it, or if I didn't explain it well enough.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5-HT1A_receptor
There's also another theory or hypothesis on how SSRIs work. The monoamine hypothesis talks about how neurological disorders, such as depression, are due to an imbalance in neurochemicals. Another idea, for depression that is, is that the hippocampus of depressed/anxious individuals are atrophied. The HPA-axis (hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis) regulates cortisol production, the stress hormone. The HPA-axis is controlled by the hippocampus through a negative feedback loop. Too much cortisol triggers the hippocampus to tell the HPA-axis to stop producing cortisol. The silly thing about our brains is that too much cortisol will actually cause the cells in the hippocampus to die, too little also causes cells to die as well. If the hippocampus is damaged its no longer as efficient at shutting down the production of cortisol, which would cause an increase in cortisol production killing more hippocampal cells. This loop continues and your hippocampus continues to atrophy. Your hippocampal cells do regenerate, but the damage exceeds the gains. The thing with cortisol is that it helps us wake up/sleep normally, and depressed individuals usually have problems with sleep. They have irregular cortisol spikes throughout the night causing them to wake up at random times and preventing sleep. This may also explain the difficulties depressed/anxious individuals have with dealing with stress because their brains are no longer capable of dealing with it. Now back to how SSRIs may work. I'm not quite sure about the mechanism behind this but the idea is that the SSRIs help with the growth of neurons in the hippocampus so that there's a surplus of cell growth instead of cell death. The regeneration of the hippocampus is possibly why there's a delay before the therapeutic effects of SSRIs are noticed.ebola?
Bluelight Crew
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8384945
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC181142/#i1523-5998-002-06-0205-b15
I've only been under that impression because many times I've read things like this:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC181142/#i1523-5998-002-06-0205-b15endotropic
Bluelight Crew
When Fluoxetine was the only SSRI around, this was in fact the leading hypothesis. Fluoxetine and it's active metabolite have crazy long half lives, and they inhibit their own metabolism, meaning that their levels increase in the blood during the first few weeks of treatment. That led people to think that the slow increase in drug level was causing the slow onset of therapeutic action. Years later we know that's not the case.
Actually this isn't entirely true, for the reason that Zalo posted above. 5-HT1A autoreceptors initially limit synaptic 5-HT. The first few doses of SSRI hardly increase 5-HT over baseline, maybe only 10-30%. Over the first few weeks of treatment the autoreceptors will desensitize. Synaptic 5-HT levels increase dramatically once that process is completed.ebola?
Bluelight Crew
ebola
Thanks for clarifying.The God
Greenlighter
Manchurian
Greenlighter
But I digress, I don't know if there is research indicating why buproprion takes effect more quickly but I would hypothesize that it's antidepressant effects are more directly related to enhancing norepinephrine and dopamine activity in the synapses themselves, leading to a more immediate effect, similarly to how amphetamines, when used as ADHD medications take effect when they reach effective blood plasma concentrations.
All that being said buproprion does increase in effectiveness with consistent use over the course of 2-8 weeks much like the SSRIs. I'm not sure if that is due to a leveling out of blood plasma concentrations of the drug, or a receptor downregulation situation similar to what is seen in the SSRIs. Possibly both.
An interesting addendum to this is that the older tricyclic (and tetracyclic) antidepressants also work on Serotonin, as well as a number of other neurotransmitters (Norepinephrine, dopamine, histamine, etc.) but have been reported to take effect more rapidly than SSRIs by some sources.The God
Greenlighter
But I digress, I don't know if there is research indicating why buproprion takes effect more quickly but I would hypothesize that it's antidepressant effects are more directly related to enhancing norepinephrine and dopamine activity in the synapses themselves, leading to a more immediate effect, similarly to how amphetamines, when used as ADHD medications take effect when they reach effective blood plasma concentrations.
All that being said buproprion does increase in effectiveness with consistent use over the course of 2-8 weeks much like the SSRIs. I'm not sure if that is due to a leveling out of blood plasma concentrations of the drug, or a receptor downregulation situation similar to what is seen in the SSRIs. Possibly both.
An interesting addendum to this is that the older tricyclic (and tetracyclic) antidepressants also work on Serotonin, as well as a number of other neurotransmitters (Norepinephrine, dopamine, histamine, etc.) but have been reported to take effect more rapidly than SSRIs by some sources.
Informative and in line with my assumtions.
Thanks.
Increased synaptic serotonin has downstream effects on Brain-derived Neurotrophic Factor, causing neuroplasticity and neural adaptation. This also goes some way to explain the delayed effect (if any) they seem to exhibit.MichelJacques
Greenlighter
Increased synaptic serotonin has downstream effects on Brain-derived Neurotrophic Factor, causing neuroplasticity and neural adaptation. This also goes some way to explain the delayed effect (if any) they seem to exhibit.
This is related to sigma receptor agonism, is it not?WSH
Bluelighter
Moclobemide takes about as long as SSRIs:
link
I guess the mechanism is the same for both SSRIs and MAOIs:
They increase serotonin, but they have to desensitize presynaptic 5-ht1a autoreceptors first (which takes about 2 weeks) before they can activate postsynaptic 5-ht1a heteroreceptors.endotropic
Bluelight Crew
link
I guess the mechanism is the same for both SSRIs and MAOIs:
They increase serotonin, but they have to desensitize presynaptic 5-ht1a autoreceptors first (which takes about 2 weeks) before they can activate postsynaptic 5-ht1a heteroreceptors.
5-HT1A heteroreceptor activation can then stimulate neuro/synaptogenesis, another slow process. I think when you consider both processes as complementary actions, rather than competing hypotheses, the whole phenomenon makes a lot more sense.