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How doctors prescribe antidepressants to teens

February 23, 2016 By Kay Walker

Finding the right antidepressant medication requires a trial and error approach. Currently, there exists no test to accurately measure symptoms. So the doctor doesn’t really know what to prescribe. They select one from a list, prescribe it and monitor your teen over 4-12 weeks (this is how long it takes to see benefits and qualify a medication) to see if what they’ve chosen works. If not, they try another medication. This process continues until they find what works.

How doctors prescribe antidepressants:

There are approximately 22 antidepressant medications on the market that have been approved by the American Federal Drug Association (FDA). They fall under four categories, labeled for the brain chemical they target. (each variety is explained below).

For teens you’ll need to be aware of the following – information take from NIMH.com (National Institute of Mental Health):

Recently, there has been some concern that the use of antidepressant medications themselves may induce suicidal behavior in youths. Following a thorough and comprehensive review of all the available published and unpublished controlled clinical trials of antidepressants in children and adolescents, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public warning  in October 2004 about an increased risk of suicidal thoughts or behavior (suicidality) in children and adolescents treated with SSRI antidepressant medications. In 2006, an advisory committee to the FDA recommended that the agency extend the warning to include young adults up to age 25.

In order to choose an appropriate medication for your teen, your doctor may consider these factors:

  • Your teen’s situation. Each case of depression is different, which means so are the symptoms. The doctor will like assess your  teen’s situation and choose an antidepressant that is likely not to amplify a negative issue they are dealing with. For example, if they are severely overweight or have an eating disorder a doctor will try and prescribe a medication that does not have a side effects of weight gain because that will only make the situation worse.
  • Your teen’s lifestyle. Antidepressants have side effects that can unobstrusive but annoying (ie. dry mouth). A doctor may ask you some lifestyle questions to help him discover what a good medication would be. For example, if you are a man trying to have a baby with your wife, taking a low sex drive medication may not be helpful. 
  • Your teen’s current physiology. The doctor will evaluate your teen’s current physiology, this includes taking into account other health conditions you may have.
  • Your teen’s genetics. If you have a family members that take antidepressants the doctor may prescribe the same treatment to your teen. Often genes play a role in how a patient reacts to a medication. If it work for a family member with a similar genetic predisposition then it may be effective for you.
  • Your financial capabilities. If you do not have medical coverage antidepressants can cost up to $350/month.  Some antidepressants are cheaper than others.
  • Your teen’s other medications. Is your teen taking other supplements and/or medications? This will be considered as some medications work negatively together.

How do anti-depressants work?:

The basic premise of an antidepressant is that once you take it the drug passes through your body via your blood and into your brain.  There, it targets a specific brain chemical (or chemicals) that control your mood.

If you read the word “inhibitor reuptake” what that means is that the drugs stops a process where the chemical does not re-enter the brain cell, which it would normally do.  That means, less of the chemical remains in the nerve cell.

The brain chemicals that are targeted by these drugs are called: Dopamine, Serotonin, and Norepinephrine

Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs)

These medications are safer and generally cause fewer bothersome side effects than other types of antidepressants.

Common SSRIs by drug name include: Prozac, Selfemra, Paxil, Pexeva, Zoloft, Celexa, Lexapro

Serotonin and norepinephrine re-uptake inhibitors (SNRIs)

Common SNRIs by drug name include: Cymbalta, Effexor XR, Pristiq, Khedezl, Fetzima

Norepinephrine and dopamine re-uptake inhibitors (NDRIs)

One of the few antidepressants not frequently associated with sexual side effects.

Common NDRIs by drug name include: Wellbutrin, Aplenzin, Forfivo XL.

Tricyclics

Not many doctors prescribe tricyclics these days, though they are still effective for many people. They are often used after other drugs haven’t work. They’ve been replaced because they tend to have more side effects.

Cyclic antidepressants block the absorption (reuptake) of the neurotransmitters serotonin (ser-o-TOE-nin) and norepinephrine (nor-ep-ih-NEF-rin), making more of these chemicals available in the brain. This seems to help brain cells send and receive messages, which in turn boosts mood.

Norpramin, Tofranil, Pamelor, Vivactil, Trimipramine, Surmontil

MAOIs Using an MAOI requires a strict diet because of dangerous food interactions. Selegiline (Emsam), a newer MAOI that you stick on your skin as a patch, may cause fewer side effects than other MAOIs

Atypical antidepressants

Oleptro, Remeron, Brintellix, Viibryd

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: antidepressants, doctors, prescribe, teens

How do doctors diagnose teen depression?

February 23, 2016 By Kay Walker

The most common diagnostic tool used by doctors to help them decide if a patient with symptoms of depression is actually suffering from the full on illness (and not just a passing state of feeling sad that’s caused by a life event) is a questionnaire.

How do doctors diagnose teen depression? Here are the common tests they use:How do doctors diagnose depression?

Currently the most common ones are:

  1. Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD)
  2. Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS)
  3. Beck Depression Inventory
  4. Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)

The doctor will likely used one of these tests to assess your teen. Questions are similar in nature for each.  They ask you about symptoms your experiencing – such as: Sleep disturbances, issues with fatigue, suicidal thoughts, feeling uninspired or hopeless, loss of motivation, loss of pleasure.  They will also ask your teen questions to help them understand the severity of symptoms.

Here are some examples of the types of questions you may be asked:

  • Have you lost interest in activities you used to find pleasurable?
  • Ae you experiencing changes in appetite such as eating too much or not feeling like you want to eat?
  • Are you having difficulty concentrating?
  • Having you been experiencing thoughts of suicide, death, or wanting to die?

In most cases, if your teen has felt hopeless for a least two weeks or more and it’s so bad it’s affecting their quality of life – they’re having trouble going to school, socializing, enjoying activities they once thought were pleasurable etc. – these are high indications they have depression.

The diagnostic criteria for depression appears in a medical text for mental illness called the DSM-IV.  (Read the diagnostic criteria here).

The doctor will also likely run some basic biological tests to rule out other potential issues that cause depression. The most common ones are the:

  1. Physical exam. The doctor will likely examine your teen to ensure there is nothing notable wrong with their physiology that could be causing depression symptoms.
  2. Blood tests : A blood sample may be taken and a complete blood count (CBC) will be performed. This helps the doctor find out if they have any hormonal issues or a vitamin deficiency.

How doctors “fix depression”: Antidepressants

If the doctor rules out all other medical issues that could be causing your teen’s depressed mood and suggests a diagnosis of major depression they’ll likely treat them by prescribing an antidepressant medication. Doctors are trained to fix medical problems and this is how they cure depression. It’s the only tool available to them, aside from referring your teen to a different type of specialist.

As the parent, you need to be aware that the problem with this route is that they may skip identifying other potential causes for your depression. They will treat the symptoms without curing them. So, you need to investigate therapeutic forms of treatment – especially for teens – that teach your teen how to proactively deal with negative and uncomfortable emotions.

What you need to understand about antidepressant medications:

Finding the right antidepressant for your teens is like finding the perfect wedding dress. They’ll have to “try on” many to find what works for you.  This is because the current diagnostic criteria that doctors use is based on asking you a line of questions, ruling out other illnesses with basic physical tests, and then making an educated assumption.

 

As you can see, this is hardly an effective treatment. But for now, it’s all doctors have. A questionnaire, some basic tests and a lot of trial and error with antidepressants.

It’s important that depressed teens try all other natural alternatives and therapies first before going on an antidepressant. These medications are serious and may make the symptoms more severe in individuals under 18 years of age.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: depression, diagnose, doctors

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