• 1What Is Depression? (VIDEO)
  • 2Treating Depression
  • 3What Makes You Unique?
  • 4Your Brain Is Electric
  • 5Depression and Neurotransmitters
  • 6Emotions and Your Brain
  • 7Losing Your Balance
  • 8Forms of Depression
  • 9Symptoms and Diagnosis
  • 10Causes of Depression
  • 11Depression and Pain
  • 12Depression Changes the Brain
  • 13The Depression Cascade
  • 14Finding Balance
  • 15Talk Therapy
  • 16Movement as Medicine
  • 17Managing Stress and Making Choices
  • 18Food for a Better Mood
  • 19Get Some Sleep
  • 20Treatment: Antidepressants
  • 21Treatment: ECT and VNS
  • 22There Is Hope
CHAPTER 5

Depression and Neurotransmitters

PART 1

How Emotions Are Regulated

Neurotransmitters, the chemicals released by axons at the neural synapses, are an important key to how emotions may be regulated in your brain. About 50 neurotransmitters have been identified. READ MORE

It’s thought that in certain disease states the flow of these neurotransmitters between neurons may be faulty. Researchers have discovered associations between depression and three primary neurotransmitters: serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine. Associations have also been found between depression and a less-common neurotransmitter, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). LESS
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PART 2

Serotonin

Of all the neurotransmitters, serotonin is perhaps the most implicated in the cause and treatment of major psychological and physiological disorders. These disorders include depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, schizophrenia, stroke, obesity, hypertension, and vascular disorders. READ MORE

Many studies have found that the flow of the neurotransmitter serotonin is defective in people with depression. The serotonin molecules flow back to their originating site on the axon, instead of to receptors on the dendrite. This means the electrical impulse isn’t transmitted properly along the neural pathway. That's why many antidepressant medications aim at enhancing serotonin activity at the nerve synapse. LESS
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