Putting serotonin in its place—again
Beyond discrediting the idea that depression is caused by a deficiency of serotonin amenable to “correction” by antidepressants, the review by Moncrieff et al1 mentioned by Kendrick and Collinson2 goes further in challenging the role of biology in mood disorders. Their dismantling of the serotonin “chemical imbalance” theory and its shameless promotion by the drug industry is justified, but the same cannot be said of their more general critiques of drug treatments in psychiatry.As is often the case with high profile articles, there are risks of over interpreting the review’s findings. Firstly, they don’t prove that serotonergic antidepressants are ineffective (efficacy doubts already abound, notably for severe depression) but rather that their mechanism, when they do work, does not depend on a pre-existing serotonergic abnormality.3Secondly, the review downplays evidence that people with personal or family histories are differentially sensitive to serotonin depletion4 and neglects a key subgroup more likely to…
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