Dealing with
Depression Naturally
online conference
transcript
Syd
Baumel, our guest and author of Dealing With Depression Naturally, joined us to discuss
natural remedies for treating depression, stress, and PMS, from vitamins and
herbs (such as St. John's Wort, Gingko, and more) to maintaining a healthy
diet, and exercise.
To find out more about natural treatments for
depression, read the transcript below.
David Roberts
is the HealthyPlace.com moderator.
The people in green are audience members.
David: Good
Evening. I'm David Roberts. I'm the moderator for tonight's conference. I want
to welcome everyone to HealthyPlace.com. Our topic tonight is "Dealing
With Depression Naturally." Our guest is Syd Baumel.
First though, I want to mention that our new
Depression bulletin board is up. You can reach it by
clicking on
this link or by just clicking the "forums/bulletin
boards" button at our
chat login page. You
can't miss it because it's hot pink. We're hoping this area will become another
great support area where you can share your stories, information and
experiences with others. About once a month, we will also be doing a special
event in the bulletin boards area. So, keep your eyes out for that in the
newsletter.
Our topic tonight is "Dealing With
Depression Naturally." Our guest is Syd Baumel, author of a book by the
same name. Mr. Baumel wrote Dealing With Depression Naturally after researching and
using alternative therapies to treat his own
depression. It covers many
alternatives to treating
depression, most of which employ readily obtainable vitamins and herbs, or
feature cognitive therapy or exercise programs.
Mr. Baumel maintains that there are natural
antidepressant therapies which can restore emotional health, from vitamins and
dietary adjustments to visualization exercises and sleep therapy. Good evening,
Syd, and welcome to HealthyPlace.com. To start with maybe you can tell us a bit
about yourself and your history of depression?
Syd Baumel:
Well, the depression bug first bit me in my teens about 30 years ago. It hit me
like a ton of bricks. It took until my mid-twenties for me to find some lasting
solutions - first drugs, then natural treatments, which I continue to use as
needed to this day.
David: What
lead you to start exploring natural remedies for depression?
Syd Baumel:
I'm just one of those people who is drawn to natural approaches to solving
problems. Ironically, the effectiveness of drugs helped me try harder to find
natural chemical help.
David: What
do you mean by that?
Syd Baumel:
In my case, an amino acid called phenylalanine, which is a precursor to a few
mood regulating neurochemicals, made the most dramatic and lasting
difference.
David: If
the pharmaceutical medications were effective, why would you turn to natural
treatments?
Syd Baumel:
They had very obvious and varyingly unpleasant side effects. Also, there was
and always is the concern that a "xenobiotic" (foreign to the body)
chemical could do harm if used chronically.
David:
There is one thing I'd like you to clarify for everyone here. When you talk
about "natural treatments," what exactly are you referring
to?
Syd Baumel:
It's a very wide spectrum that excludes artificial/human-made drugs and
includes such things as diet,
exercise, meditation, psychotherapy, herbs, and preventative/therapeutic
lifestyle changes, such as identifying and avoiding depressing toxic
chemicals.
I better clarify that I'm not against
"unnatural;
antidepressants" in addition to the natural
approaches.
David: Yes,
in fact, I believe you mention that some of the natural treatments can be used
in addition to taking pharmaceutical antidepressants.
Syd Baumel:
And only a few of them - notably the natural chemical ones, including herbs -
need to be taken with much caution when combining with drugs.
David:
Before we get into the herbs and other substances, I'd like you to talk about
how diet and
exercise can impact a person's level of depression.
Syd Baumel:
Exercise is the easiest one to answer, because there has been such a huge
amount of research. Basically, it says that being physically active and
being depressed are
very largely mutually incompatible.
David: And
so how much exercise is recommended?
Syd Baumel:
Early research suggested that a typical aerobic conditioning regime - around 20
or 30 minutes of fairly intense aerobic exercise three times a week - would
usually be very helpful. In the last decade or so, just as more moderate
physical activity has been linked to better health in general, evidence that it
too can be anti-depressive has begun to appear.
There also has been a parallel thread of
research suggesting that non-aerobic exercise - especially of the
weight-training type, but also perhaps things like yoga and tai chi - can work
too.
David: And
what about
diet and depression?
Syd Baumel:
There the research is mostly indirect. For example, study after study has found
that depressed people tend
to be deficient - mildly or severely - in nutrients known to be
key to good mental
health. Some research has gone further, suggesting that some of these
vitamins and minerals can be therapeutic for depression.
David: Can
you give us a short list of nutrients that would be helpful to
reducing
depression?
Syd Baumel:
The important thing is to cover all bases by taking a well-rounded,
moderate/high dosage multivitamin and mineral supplement. Then one can focus on
higher doses of nutrients with a high profile as antidepressants, at least for
some people. The B vitamin folic acid is probably at the top of the list right
now, based on current evidence. Other contenders include vitamins B1, B6, and
B12, vitamin C, and the mineral selenium.
It's hard to generalize, because a combination
of testing people for specific deficiencies and using nutrients as if they were
drugs - in high or mega doses - is the "art" and science that's
involved here.
David: Mr.
Baumel is coming to us from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He dealt with
depression for a long time and actually started researching, then using,
natural remedies to treat his own depression.
Mr. Baumel's website is here:
http://www.escape.ca/~sgb
We have a lot of audience questions. I want to
get to a few, then get into a discussion of some of the herbs that might be
helpful in treating depression. Here's the first question:
donotknow: What foods should we avoid?
Syd Baumel:
There are two general answers to that question. The first one has to do with
what kinds of food everyone would be best off avoiding, the second has to do
with individual sensitivities, intolerances, or allergies that can cause some
people - some research and much anecdotal evidence suggest - to be more
susceptible to depression.
Regarding the first consideration: In general,
as far as the evidence has been able to show us so far, the same kind of diets
that help prevent cancer, heart disease, etc. also are good for the brain and
the mind and one's mood. This means avoiding things like a diet over endowed
with processed grains, sugar, and an evolutionarily unnatural balance of fatty
acids.
On the latter point, what I mean is: avoid too
much saturated and hydrogenated fat, and also attempt to concentrate on fats
and oils that are unrefined and that have a higher balance of omega-3 fatty
acids to omega-6 fatty acids than modern diets typically have.
Omega 3s abound in the fat of wild animals -
especially cold-water fish - and in vegetable crops from temperate or northern
climates, especially dark leafy greens, beans, and (above all) flax and
hemp.
David:
Here's an interesting comment from one audience member, which has to do more
with the stigma of having depression or a mental illness:
WildWindTeesha:
There is a stigma attached to taking prescribed
anti-depressants. In my
case, I have found it almost shameful to admit that I am taking
anti-depressants, but if I were to tell my family and friends I am on NATURAL
remedies, well, that means that their relative or friend (me) is not so MAD
after all.
Syd Baumel:
That's interesting. In some circles, I think being on
Prozac et al is almost considered normal. It is nice,
though, to see that using natural treatments has become kind of
"cool," where years ago it was rather... dorky <g>.
David:
Before we get into the herbs, do you see herbal remedies as being as effective
as pharmaceutical antidepressants? And secondly, I'm wondering if natural
treatments work as well for
clinical
depression (brain chemical depression) as non-clinical depression?
Syd Baumel:
The evidence - research and anecdote both - suggest that natural
antidepressants (NAs) can be as effective or more effective than drugs for some
people and that some NAs are generally about as effective as any drug for mild,
moderate, or even severe
major
depression. I'm thinking of
St John's
Wort (SJW), for example.
David: So
what herbs have you found to be the most effective in treating depression and
in what dosages?
Syd Baumel:
St Johns Wort (SJW)
is, so far, the star here. The most commonly used and recommended dosage is 300
mg of a standardized extract (0.3% hypericin) three times a day. But if you
actually look at the studies and what people say, you find that people can
apparently respond to as little as 300 mg and as much as 2700 mg a day.
I believe, if memory serves, it was 2700 mg
that was used in a recent study which found SJW about equal to
imipramine
(the gold standard tricyclic) for severe
major depression, but with far fewer side effects. The
current NIMH-sponsored trial is supposedly allowing research psychiatrists to
administer up to 2700 mg also.
Other herbs that show varying degrees of
effectiveness or promise include
Ginkgo biloba (at least as an adjunct to drugs) and several
herbs for "women's problems" (traditionally) that appear to work for
PMS and/or perimenopausal depression, e.g. Vitex agnus-castus and black
cohosh.
David:
Here's an audience question on St. John's Wort:
MsPisces:
I've read that St John's Wort only helps mild depression... Is this
true? Will it help with clinical depression?
Syd Baumel:
The "rap" on SJW that it only helps for
mild
depression is based on the fact that most clinical trials have used only
patients with mild to moderate depression (major or dysthymic are undefined).
But at least one or two have successfully used it for severe
major depressive disorder. By "successfully" I
mean that the response rate was significantly better than a placebo and/or not
significantly different from an adequate dosage of an effective
antidepressant
drug.
It's really hard to say just how effective SJW
might truly be for severe depression. The large NIMH study should help answer
that question. For now, it's very much a trial and error, your mileage may vary
thing. But then that's true of any
antidepressant drug when it comes down to the
individual.
donotknow:
What about the side effects of St. Johns Wort?
Syd Baumel:
The more SJW has been used, the more people have reported side effects. The
studies, overall, suggest SJW has a net side effect rate that's little
different than a placebo, but some studies suggest worse. And there's always
the concern that - as probably happens with drugs in some studies - the
researchers are biased against reporting the full extent of SJW's adverse
effects.
All in all, I think St Johns Wort has a much
lower side effect profile than the average drug (probably any drug) and that
most people don't notice any side effects, but there is good reason to use SJW
and other supplements knowledgeably and cautiously. Most books and websites
that write about SJW et al. in any depth are very forthcoming about known side
effects, drug interactions, precautions, etc.
Gattaca:
Would you recommend combining SJW with gingko? I have read the
increased blood flow is beneficial in itself from the gingko and also helps
deliver the SJW more effectively. I have seen combined tablets at 300mg SJW
with 60mg gingko, 3 times a day. What range of doses would you recommend for
the gingko?
Syd Baumel:
Not being a clinician, I hesitate to recommend, but the dosage you cite is
right in the pocket as far as average therapeutic dosages for the two herbs are
concerned. Also, because at least one placebo-controlled study has found that
Ginkgo can augment antidepressant drugs it stands to reason that it might do
the same for herbs like SJW which appear to work via identical or very similar
mechanisms. In general, combos are both potentially riskier and potentially
more likely to help.
David: Here
are a few audience comments on what's been said, so far, tonight, then we'll
continue with the questions:
ronnie@tnni.net:
I have been
bipolar all my life. I found out 13 years ago I was
manic
depressive and have been on medicines for 13 years. I also do fitness 4
times a week. It has helped me in so many ways. I'm not 100 percent but I can
deal with a lot more in my life.
WildWindTeesha:
Who feels like doing aerobics when they are depressed!?
finngirl:
Cardiovascular exercise 3 times a week increases endorphins and natural
chemicals.
bladedemon:
I'm willing to try anything right now. Nothing works as far as a
meds.
finngirl:
Natural is closer to not having any depression - if you can take an over
the counter herb you're not all that depressed. It is just what the people
perceive of their own reality.
Syd Baumel:
I love the comment about not feeling like doing aerobics when you're depressed.
How true, but it's true of many things that go together with depression in
either a vicious cycle or a healing cycle. That is:
depression disturbs your sleep, makes you lazy, makes you
withdraw from people and from activities, makes you less assertive, makes you
get sloppy about eating well, makes you question your spiritual values and
beliefs, and on and on and on. Yet, if you can - with a little help from your
friends, a "professional," or your own bootstraps - go against the
grain on these depressive tugs, there is so much evidence that you can reverse
the tide.
Of course, the milder the depression, the easier
it is to perform this reversal, but even in hospitalized depressives with
severe depression, exercise on the side (for example) has been found to
significantly improve their response to standard therapies.
David:
Here's an audience member's comment which addresses just that point,
Syd:
ddoubelD: I
decided recently that I am going to do everything I can think of to take care
of my physical, mental, and emotional health, and just that decision has made
me feel better cause I am taking charge.
Syd Baumel:
Talk about hitting a nail right on the head. Feeling out of control - helpless,
hopeless - is one of the defining
hallmarks of depression. But again, if you can do anything
that makes you feel even just a little bit in control again, you will almost
certainly feel that much better.
David:
Here's the next audience question:
finngirl:
How do the natural approaches affect levels of
serotonin?
Syd Baumel:
Many if not most natural approaches have been shown to have a positive effect
on brain levels of serotonin. This is true not only of chemical approaches like
tryptiophan and 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), which the brain make serotonin
FROM, but also of other chemical approaches that facilitate either serotonin's
synthesis or that, like most antidepressant drugs, increase its potency in the
brain (e.g. SJW, Ginkgo). The interesting thing is that several lifestyle or
non-chemical antidepressants (e.g. exercise, acupuncture) have also been shown
to increase brain serotonin.
There are a
few books that deal with natural serotonin boosters,
including my own (Serotonin) and a good one by psychiatrist Michael Norden,
entitled Beyond Prozac.
David: We
have several excellent sites that deal with many aspects of Depression,
including "The Apocalypse Suicide Page" and "Good Mood: The New Psychology For Overcoming
Depression," and there are other sites too.
Also, if you haven't been to any of our
Depression support groups, I
encourage you to join in. We have trained hosts who run each group. They do a
great job and we get lots of email from our visitors talking about what a great
experience it is. The schedule for the
Depression Support Groups is here.
Of course, we have hosted support groups on our
site for many other mental health topics. For more details and the schedule of
all support groups at HealthyPlace.com,
click here.
Here's the link to the
HealthyPlace.com Depression Community. You can click on
this link and sign up for the mail list at the top of the page so you can keep
up with events like this.
You can read the journals and post your
comments on the
journalers' bulletin boards.
Here's the next question:
Kellijohn:
Can you give maximum dosage on the PMS herbs? How quickly can persons see
results?
Syd Baumel:
I've just rather frantically checked my book, but to no avail as far as Vitex
is concerned. Black cohosh, which may also alleviate PMS, is usually taken at a
dose of 40 to 200 mg per day. Vitamin B6 - an old standby - usually seems to
work in the 50-200 mg range, if memory serves. I'm honestly, offhand, not sure
of how long it tends to take to see a response, but these things tend to take
weeks rather than days.
David:
Several of our audience members want to know what natural treatments you take
and what effect have they had on your depression and well-being?
Syd Baumel:
I've had the most bang for buck from L-phenylalanine - a low dose of (usually)
400 or 500 mg every morning on a "protein-free stomach" for optimal
absorption by the brain. I've also - much more recently - noticed a kind of
"stress guard" effect from a modest dosage of St Johns Wort. This is
on top of a nutritious, low junk-food vegetarian (vegan, since last summer)
diet and a few other odds and ends. The effect has been that - for the last
twenty or so years - when I get down, it's a) not nearly as frequent as before,
b) typically very mild, and c) also very short-lived. If I had to quantify it,
I'd estimate that my degree of suffering and impairment from depression has
been about 15% of what it was prior to my breakthrough with
phenylalanine.
David: What
do you mean by "stress guard" effect?
Syd Baumel:
About the stress guard effect: What I mean is that I noticed, after I first
began using a properly standardized St Johns Wort product, that I wasn't
getting as perturbed, bothered, disturbed etc. as I expected I would be by the
great amount of stress in my life at the time.
David:
Thank you, Syd, for being our guest tonight and for sharing this information
with us. And to those in the audience, thank you for coming and participating.
I hope you found it helpful. We have a very large and active community here at
HealthyPlace.com.
You will always find people in the chatrooms and interacting with various
sites.
Also, if you found our site beneficial, I hope
you'll pass our URL around to your friends, mail list buddies, and others.
http://www.healthyplace.com
David:
Thank you again Syd for being our guest tonight.
Syd Baumel:
It was my pleasure and privilege to be your guest. Thanks to everyone who came
to listen and participate.
David: Good
night everyone and I hope you have a pleasant weekend.
Disclaimer: We are not recommending or
endorsing any of the suggestions of our guest. In fact, we strongly encourage
you to talk over any therapies, remedies or suggestions with your doctor BEFORE
you implement them or make any changes in your treatment.
We hold topical mental health chat conferences
every Wed. and Thurs. nights. The schedule, and transcripts from previous
chats,
are
here.
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