Study finds first direct evidence of a link between low serotonin and depression

hinterland

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Study finds first direct evidence of a link between low serotonin and depression

From the Guardian, science correspondent:
Scientists claim to have found the first direct evidence that people with depression have a reduced capacity for releasing serotonin in the brain.

The findings from a brain-imaging study reignite a debate within psychiatry over the so-called serotonin hypothesis of depression and challenge the conclusions of an influential review published in July that found “no clear evidence” that low serotonin levels are responsible. The latest work, led by scientists at Imperial College London, suggested that people with depression have a decreased serotonin response.

Link to the study:
BRAIN SEROTONIN RELEASE IS REDUCED IN PATIENTS WITH DEPRESSION: A [11C]Cimbi-36 PET STUDY WITH A D-AMPHETAMINE CHALLENGE.
 
Which is it?

A decreased serotonin response, in the brain, or a reduced capacity for releasing serotonin, in the brain, as as far as I know these are totally different things, but they seem to think they are the same.

and what about other sources of serotonin such as the gut?
 
Blog critical of the study: https://eiko-fried.com/clear-evidence-for-serotonin-hypothesis-of-depression/

"Overall, sample size and generalizability are the reason why firm conclusions about e.g. “depression” only follow when 1) we draw a large sample from the population we are interested in, and 2) we draw a random sample of depressed patients.

In this particular study, neither is the case. The study has a very small sample size, and generalizability is very low because the depressed group is not representative of people with depression broadly. There are many factors here, but just to list one: 5 of the 17 depressed participants in the study (i.e. 30%) have Parkinsons disease, but this does of course not apply to the population of interest (not every third person with depression has also Parkinsons)."
 
So we're going to get both "no one took the serotonin hypothesis seriously in years" and "we've always known about the serotonin hypothesis" at the same time, uh? Because immediately after the paper people went out of their way to point out that no one has taken it seriously in years, even though it is basically all patients heard about because it sounded credible and sciencey.

And since the definition of depression has essentially become meaningless, who even knows what the patients being studied have in common. It seems even more heterogeneous and arbitrary than even the most generic concept of chronic fatigue.

Looking at it, I'm not even sure anymore which field of research is worse: ME or depression. It seems even more stuck in place and generic.
 
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