Why Do Depression and Anxiety Go Together?
Depression and Anxiety Go Together?
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If you’ve ever experienced anxiety
and depression — in the clinical sense, I mean — you’ll know that they can feel
really different. With anxiety, you’re all ramped up.
And with depression, you’re very,
very down. Yet they tend to go together. And a lot of medications, especially
certain types of antidepressants, can be used to treat both.
We still don’t know a ton about how
exactly anxiety and depression work in the brain — or how antidepressants work
to treat them.
But over time, psychologists have
come to realize that the two types of conditions are surprisingly similar. They
may feel very different in the moment. But they actually have a lot of symptoms
in common, and involve some very similar thought patterns.
They might even have similar brain chemistries.
So if you’re looking to understand a little more about how anxiety and
depression manifest themselves — whether for yourself or for someone else in
your life — those connections are a good place to start. Depression and anxiety
aren’t really specific disorders — they’re generic terms for types of disorders.
But the most common, and most closely linked, are major depressive disorder, or
MDD, and generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD.
In any given year in the U.S., where
it’s easiest to find detailed statistics, about
7% of the population will have MDD,
and about 3% will have GAD. Lots of those people have both: About 2/3 of people
with major depression also have some kind of anxiety disorder and about 2/3 of
people with generalized anxiety disorder
Also, have major depression. And whether you have one or the other or both,
the same medications are often at the top of the list to help treat it —
usually antidepressants.
Unsurprisingly, psychologists have
noticed these statistics.
But for a long time, we’ve thought
of generalized anxiety and major depression as very different things, and
understandably so.
Probably the most noticeable symptom
of anxiety is arousal, which in psychology is a technical term rather than a
specifically sexual thing.It basically just means being on high alert — whether
psychologically, with increased awareness, or physically, with things like a
racing heart and sweaty palms.
Arousal isn’t part of major
depression, though.And there’s a key symptom of MDD that doesn’t usually show
up in generalized anxiety: low positive affect, which is the technical term for
not getting much pleasure out of life and feeling lethargic and just kind of …
blah. So there are important differences between anxiety and depression, which
is part of why they’re still considered separate classes of disorders. But when
you look at the other symptoms, you start to realize that major depression and generalized
anxiety have almost everything else in common. There’s restlessness, fatigue,
irritability, problems with concentration, sleep disturbances … the list goes
on. And that’s just in the official
diagnostic criteria. So for decades, psychologists have been examining the
models they use to describe anxiety and depression in the brain to see if they
point to a similar source for both types of disorders.
They’ve come up with lots of
different ideas, as researchers do, but the most common ones tend to center
around the fight or flight response to stress. Fight or flight kicks in when
you’re confronted with something your mind sees as a threat,
and it automatically prepares you to
either fight or run away. And when you think about it, anxiety and depression
are just different types of flight. Psychologists often characterize anxiety as
a sense of helplessness, at its core, and depression as a sense of
hopelessness. Anxiety might feel like you’re looking for ways to fight back.
But part of what makes it a disorder
is that it’s not a short-lived feeling that’s easily resolved once you have a plan.
Of course, as with all things mental health, anxiety disorders can be deeply
personal and
Won’t feel the same for
everybody.But clinical anxiety does tend to be more pervasive. The worry sticks
around and starts to take over your life because it doesn’t feel like something
you can conquer.
So anxiety and depression might just
be slightly different ways of expressing the same flight response: helplessness or hopelessness. And maybe that’s
part of why they so often go together. That connection also shows up on the
biochemical side of the stress response. There are a lot of hormones involved
in this response, and their effects interact in super complex ways that
scientists still don’t fully understand. But both depressive and anxiety
disorders are closely associated with an oversensitive
Stress response system. Researchers
think that’s one reason both of these types of disorders are so much more common
in people who’ve experienced major stresses like trauma or childhood abuse. Those
stressors could make their stress response system more sensitive. The main
hormones involved aren’t always the same, but the changes can cause some of the
same symptoms — problems with sleep, for example. So anxiety and depression
seem to be two sides of a similar reaction to stress, in term of both thought
processes and hormones. Still, that doesn’t really explain why some
antidepressants can treat both anxiety and depression. Because those
medications primarily affect neurotransmitters, the molecules your brain
Cells use to send messages to each
other. If you thought we had a lot left to learn about how the stress response
works, we know
Even less about what the brain
chemistry of anxiety and depression looks like, or how
Antidepressants help. But if the
thought processes and physical responses that go along with these disorders aren’t
quite as different as they seem on the surface, it makes sense that the brain chemistry
would be similar, too. And that’s exactly what scientists have found. More
specifically, lots of studies have pointed to lower levels of the
neurotransmitter known as serotonin as a major factor in both anxiety and
depression.
Researchers have even identified
some more specific cellular receptors that seem to be involved in both. There’s
also some evidence that the way the brain handles another neurotransmitter, norepinephrine, can be similar in both anxiety and depression. Since most antidepressants work by increasing
serotonin levels, and some of them also affect norepinephrine, that could
explain why they’re so helpful for both anxiety and depression. Although again,
there’s a lot we don’t know about their exact mechanisms. Ultimately, there’s
no denying that at the moment, anxiety and depression can seem like very
different feelings.
And if someone has both types of
disorders — well, it’s easy to see how that could feel overwhelming. Like, it’s
hard enough treating generalized anxiety or major depression on their own. And it’s true that it is often harder to
treat these conditions when someone has both. But maybe not twice as hard. After
all, anxiety and depressive disorders have a lot in common, from their symptoms
to the basic brain chemistry behind them to some of the treatments that can
help. The fact that they often go together can be really tough. But
understanding more about why that is has also pointed us toward better
treatments and more effective therapies, that really can help.


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