Type of work: peer-reviewed/experimental study/people
The first study to compare effects of antidepressants with running exercises for anxiety, depression and overall health shows that they have about the same benefits for mental health – but a 16-week course of running over the same period scores higher in terms of physical health improvement, whereas antidepressants lead to a slightly worse physical condition, as has been suggested by previous studies. However, the drop-out rate was much higher in the group which initially chose exercise.
Professor Brenda Penninx (Vrije University, Amsterdam) presented the work at the ECNP conference in Barcelona (after recent publication in the Journal of Affective Disorders1) saying:
“We wanted to compare how exercise or antidepressants affect your general health, not just your mental health”.
The researchers studied 141 patients with depression and/or anxiety. They were offered a choice of treatment; SSRI antidepressants for 16 weeks, or group-based running therapy for 16 weeks. 45 chose antidepressants, with 96 participating in running. The members of the group which chose antidepressants were slightly more depressed than the members of the group which chose to take running.
Professor Penninx said “This study gave anxious and depressed people a real-life choice, medication or exercise. Interestingly, the majority opted for exercise, which led to the numbers in the running group being larger than in the medication group”.
Treatment with antidepressants required patients to adhere to their prescribed medication intake but this generally does not directly impact on daily behaviours. In contrast, exercise directly addresses the sedentary lifestyle often found in patients with depressive and anxiety disorders by encouraging persons to go outside, set personal goals, improve their fitness and participate in a group activity.
The antidepressant group took the SSRI Escitalopram for 16 weeks. The running group aimed for two to three closely supervised 45-minute group sessions per week (over 16 weeks). The adherence to the protocol was lower in the running group (52%) than in the antidepressant group (82%), despite the initial preference for running over antidepressants.
At the end of the trial, around 44% % in both groups showed an improvement in depression and anxiety, however the running group also showed improvements in weight, waist circumference, blood pressure, and heart function, whereas the antidepressant group showed a tendency towards a slight deterioration in these metabolic markers.
Brenda Penninx said;
“Both interventions helped with the depression to around the same extent. Antidepressants generally had worse impact on body weight, heart rate variability and blood pressure, whereas running therapy led to improved effect on general fitness and heart rate for instance. We are currently looking in more detail for effects on biological aging and processes of inflammation’.
It is important to say that there is room for both therapies in care for depression. The study shows that lots of people like the idea of exercising, but it can be difficult to carry this through, even though the benefits are significant. We found that most people are compliant in taking antidepressants, whereas around half of the running group adhered to the two-times-a-week exercise therapy. Telling patients to go run is not enough. Changing physical activity behaviour will require adequate supervision and encouragement as we did by implementing exercise therapy in a mental health care institution”.
She added:
“Antidepressants are generally safe and effective. They work for most people. We know that not treating depression at all leads to worse outcomes; so antidepressants are generally a good choice. Nevertheless, we need to extend our treatment arsenal as not all patients respond to antidepressants or are willing to take them. Our results suggest that implementing exercise therapy is something we should take much more seriously, as it could be a good – and maybe even better – choice for some of our patients.
In addition, let’s also face potential side effects our treatments can have. Doctors should be aware of the dysregulation in nervous system activity that certain antidepressants can cause, especially in patients who already have heart problems. This also provides an argument to seriously consider tapering and discontinuing antidepressants when depressed or anxious episodes have remitted. In the end, patients are only truly helped when we are improving their mental health without unnecessarily worsening their physical health”.
This is adapted from a commentary recently published in the journal European Neuropsychopharmacology2.
Commenting, Dr Eric Ruhe (Amsterdam University Medical Centres) said: "These are very interesting results that again show that physical health can influence mental health and that treatment of depression and anxiety can be achieved by exercising, obviously without the adverse effects of antidepressant drugs. However, several remarks are important. First the patients followed their preference, which is common practice, but ideally we should advise patients what will work best. Following this choice is understandable from a pragmatic point of view when patients have strong preferences, which you have to take into account when doing a study like this. The downside is that the comparisons between groups might be biased compared to doing this in a truly randomized study. For example, patients in the antidepressant group were more depressed which might be associated with less chance of persisting engagement in the exercises. So, we have to be careful not to overinterpret the comparisons between groups, which the authors acknowledge properly. Finally, a very important finding is the difference in adherence between the interventions: 52% in the exercise group and 82% in the antidepressant group. This shows that it is more difficult to change a lifestyle habit than taking a pill. This is not exclusively found in psychiatry, indicating that we also have to focus on how to improve compliance to healthy behaviour. This could have tremendous impact on healthcare more generally, but also on psychiatric diseases”.
See conference abstract “Medication and lifestyle interventions in regulating immune function and mental health” at https://tinyurl.com/ysy3bxzu
Notes
1 Antidepressants or running therapy: Comparing effects on mental and physical health in patients with depression and anxiety disorders, Josine E. Verhoeven et al Journal of Affective Disorders 329 (2023) 19–29
2 Awareness of cardiac autonomic dysregulation by antidepressants, Brenda WJH Penninx, European Neuropsychopharmacology (in press)
This work is presented at the 36th ECNP Congress, which takes place in Barcelona and online on 7-10 October 2023, see https://www.ecnp.eu/Congress2023/ECNPcongress. With more than 6,000 participants the ECNP Congress is Europe’s leading platform for the latest research in disease-related neuroscience.
ENDS
END
Antidepressants versus running for depression: is there a winner?
• First trial to directly compare effects of treatments on mental and physical health shows clear benefits of exercise, and slight physical worsening with antidepressants. But can patients stick to the exercise?
2023-10-07
(Press-News.org)
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Wearable bracelet tracks bipolar mood swings: changing electrical signals in skin linked to manic or depressed moods
2023-10-07
Not peer-reviewed/experimental study/people
Researchers have announced preliminary results of using wearable technology to measure electrical impulses in the skin and other physiological biomarkers which might be associated with mood changes in bipolar disorder. The work is at an early stage, but they hope that they will be able to build on these patterns to detect mood swings in bipolar disorder sufferers, so helping in diagnosis and potentially offering more rapid and personalized treatments.
Bipolar disorder (formerly called manic-depressive illness or manic depression) is a mental illness that causes swings in a ...
SUSTAIN Center at UH commemorates five years of combatting AIDS/HIV epidemic in Southern U.S.
2023-10-07
The SUSTAIN Wellbeing COMPASS Coordinating Center of the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work has made a lasting impact in the fight against the HIV epidemic in the Southern U.S. over the past five years, particularly for Black and Latinx-led organizations. The SUSTAIN Center is one of four across the South funded by the Gilead COMPASS Initiative®, an unprecedented 10-year, more than $100 million effort to address the Southern HIV epidemic by collaborating with local community organizations and stakeholders to use evidence-based solutions to meet the needs of people living with and impacted by HIV/AIDS.
Led ...
English faculty, grad students lead initiative to develop open access writing curriculum
2023-10-07
Long before another school year started for K-12 students across Texas, a Texas A&M University-led team has been hard at work behind the scenes to position high school students throughout the Lone Star state for future college writing success.
Leading the college-readiness charge is Dr. Terri Pantuso, an instructional associate professor in the Department of English and associate dean for assessment and curricular matters in the College of Arts and Sciences, who recently received a $1.2 million service contract from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (THECB) aimed at better ...
The currency of conservation
2023-10-06
Governments, nonprofit organizations, and other groups spend roughly $100 billion a year to support conservation. Restrictions on where conservation funds can be spent, however, prevent organizations from focusing on the most promising opportunities to help species. A new study led by researchers at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, suggests a way to improve the situation.
“There are plenty of conservation bargains still available in the United States,” said Paul Armsworth, professor in the UT Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and lead author of the study. “Some ...
ORNL is poised to have a major role in the future of nuclear physics
2023-10-06
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a bastion of nuclear physics research for the past 80 years, is poised to strengthen its programs and service to the United States over the next decade if national recommendations of the Nuclear Science Advisory Committee, or NSAC, are enacted.
“The 2023 Long Range Plan lays out a compelling vision for nuclear science in the United States under multiple budget scenarios,” said Gail Dodge, physicist at Old Dominion University and chair of the NSAC. “Implementation of the Long Range Plan’s ...
UH energy competition focuses on innovation, commercialization and sustainability
2023-10-06
The world is full of good ideas, but only some of them become viable and real.
“You don’t see the full impact of a good idea until someone figures out a way to convert it to a usable product or service that has value, brings it to market and makes money off of it – this is what makes it a sustainable business,” said S. Radhakrishnan, a retired University of Houston business professor and coordinator of UH Energy’s Innovation Commercialization Competition. “To have a successful energy transition, we need many innovative ideas to be commercialized.”
Keeping this in mind, Radhakrishnan worked hard to grow the second annual Energy Innovation Commercialization ...
Remnant of cell division could be responsible for spreading cancer
2023-10-06
Once thought to be the trash can of the cell, a little bubble of cellular stuff called the midbody remnant is actually packing working genetic material with the power to change the fate of other cells — including turning them into cancer.
It’s a surprise to many people, according to Ahna Skop, a University of Wisconsin–Madison genetics professor, that when one cell divides into two, a process called mitosis, the result is not just the two daughter cells.
“One cell divides into three things: two cells and ...
CPR education drive expanded to London during the 2023 NFL London Games
2023-10-06
Photos will be added to the release link as available.
On average worldwide, fewer than one in every ten cardiac arrest victims outside of the hospital survive.[1] Too many people do not survive from cardiac arrest because those around them are not educated on the lifesaving skills of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Knowing CPR can be a lifesaving tactic. On October 7, 2023, the Chasing M’s Foundation - professional football player Damar Hamlin’s charity - the American Heart Association, the British Heart Foundation ...
Possible tool discovered to diagnose common contributor to vascular dementia
2023-10-06
A research team led by the Keck School of Medicine of USC has discovered that a non-invasive eye exam may be a possible tool for screening Black Americans and other people from underdiagnosed and high-risk populations for cerebral small vessel disease, a major contributor to cognitive impairment and dementia. After Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, associated with impaired blood flow to the brain, is the second most common dementia diagnosis.
“Most people with cerebral small vessel disease are not diagnosed until significant brain damage has occurred. Damage to the brain cells is not reversible.” ...
Research reveals disparities in access to quality parks
2023-10-06
In urban areas throughout the United States, it is imperative for all communities to have equal access to high quality parks. These parks can have many benefits for the physical and mental well-being of the residents who live in close proximity to the urban green spaces. For instance, they are a place to socialize and exercise outdoors while also providing vegetation nearby, which can help reduce urban heat.
Yet, in the City of Philadelphia, not all parks are created equal, according to a new study from the University of Delaware.
Using a machine learning algorithm to analyze 285 ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Towards a hydrogen-powered future: highly sensitive hydrogen detection system
Scanning synaptic receptors: A game-changer for understanding psychiatric disorders
High-quality nanomechanical resonators with built-in piezoelectricity
ERC Synergy Grants for 57 teams tackling major scientific challenges
Nordic research team receives €13 million to explore medieval book culture
The origin of writing in Mesopotamia is tied to designs engraved on ancient cylinder seals
Explaining science through dance
Pioneering neuroendocrinologist's century of discovery launches major scientific tribute series
Gendered bilingualism in post-colonial Korea
Structural safety monitoring of buildings with color variations
Bio-based fibers could pose greater threat to the environment than conventional plastics
Bacteria breakthrough could accelerate mosquito control schemes
Argonne to help drive AI revolution in astronomy with new institute led by Northwestern University
Medicaid funding for addiction treatment hasn’t curbed overdose deaths
UVA co-leads $2.9 million NIH investigation into where systems may fail people with disabilities
With the help of AI, UC Berkeley researchers confirm Hollywood is getting more diverse
Weight loss interventions associated with improvements in several symptoms of PCOS
Federal government may be overpaying for veterans’ health care in Medicare Advantage plans
Researchers awarded $2.5 million grant to increase lung cancer screenings in underserved communities
New trigger proposed for record-smashing 2022 Tonga eruption
Lupus Research Alliance announces Lupus Research Highlights at ACR Convergence 2024
Satellite imagery may help protect coastal forests from climate change
The secrets of baseball's magic mud
Toddlers understand concept of possibility
Small reductions to meat production in wealthier countries may help fight climate change, new analysis concludes
Scientists determine why some patients don’t respond well to wet macular degeneration treatment, show how new experimental drug can bridge gap
Did the world's best-preserved dinosaurs really die in 'Pompeii-type' events?
Not the usual suspects: Novel genetic basis of pest resistance to biotech crops
Jill Tarter to receive Inaugural Tarter Award for Innovation in the search for life beyond earth
Survey finds continued declines in HIV clinician workforce
[Press-News.org] Antidepressants versus running for depression: is there a winner?• First trial to directly compare effects of treatments on mental and physical health shows clear benefits of exercise, and slight physical worsening with antidepressants. But can patients stick to the exercise?