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7 Ways Hidden Depression Changes Your Brain

User Profile: Jenna
Jenna January 30th, 2018

Depression is a serious mental illness and, if left untreated, can have terrible effects on the sufferers overall health and mental well being. Many people know that depression changes the way a person sees themselves and the world around them, but they may not know that depression actually changes the physiology of the brain. Untreated, or especially hidden depression, can create long-lasting changes inside of the brain and can bring about other mental illnesses such as generalized anxiety disorder and suicidal thoughts and behaviors. The aim of this article is to examine 7 ways that hidden and how untreated depression can change the brain.

1. Risky Behaviors

Depression alone can cause the sufferer to engage in risky behaviors, or at least have an indifferent approach to looking at certain situations. Untreated or hidden depression can cause an extra large spike in this line of thinking and acting. Without understanding where the indifference is coming from the sufferer might be more apt to adopt the use of drugs or alcohol to combat the side effects from their hidden depression. This in turn can cause them to be at a higher risk of dependency and addiction which not only changes how the brain works but how the entire body works as well.

2. Suicidal Thoughts

According to Scientific America, two-thirds of those that commit suicide were first afflicted by depression. This may be due to the fact that those with depression have a lower amount of the chemical receptors for GABA within their frontopolar cortex. GABA inhibits neuron activity, it slows down the activity within the brain and having fewer receptors doesnt allow it to do its job properly. Within the Canadian study referenced by Scientific America it was found that there was a methyl group attached to the GABA-A receptor. This causes the receptors to essentially be invisible to GABA and unable to receive the input necessary to slow the neural activity. While the scientists arent entirely sure as to why this abnormality occurs, they have narrowed it down to being influenced by something within the persons environment, and that it is not a mutation occurring organically within the brain itself.

3. Shrinking of the Hippocampus

The hippocampus is the part of the brain that stores memories of events and responds to stress hormones that are released into our bloodstream. Depression can put undue stress on the body and mind causing the hippocampus to shrink. This can cause the area of the brain to be less effective in dealing with stressors and can slow down the rate at which the dentate gyrus creates new brain cells.

4. Shrinking of the Prefrontal Cortex

The prefrontal cortex is an important part of the brain that controls emotional regulation, decision making, and helps with memory. Depression can shrink this area of the brain as well, which can lead to being emotionally unregulated and can in turn cause the sufferer to have emotional outbursts. It also may affect how the person remembers things and can cause them to become stressed and indecisive or have trouble taking the time to think out all possibilities before making large decisions in life.

5. Enlarged Amygdala

The amygdala is where the brain stores emotional memories and becomes overactive in those that suffer from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Having an overactive amygdala can lead to sleep disturbances, many of those suffering from depression report insomnia or wanting to sleep non-stop, and issues with physical activity. This can also lead to abnormal hormone secretions that can reek havoc on other areas of the body and systems that keep a persons body up and running.

6. Changes in Cortisol Levels

Every persons brain secretes cortisol. The normal elevations of the cortisol are highest during the morning and diminish at night, but for someone with depression the levels vary significantly. With depression, the level of cortisol is always high, no matter what time of day, and can lead to a lowered immune system as well as issues with memory and learning. Cortisol is known as the stress hormone and heightened levels of it can lead to depression as well as a host of other mental illnesses.

7. A Decrease in Serotonin

It has long been believed that there is a link between decreased serotonin inside of the brain and depression. One study found that participants who were not at risk for depression who ate a diet to intentionally manipulate the amino acid tryptophan did not have any marked difference in their mood. Those that had a history of depression exhibited short bursts of depressive episodes on the same diet. This along with the fact that medications known as SSRIs are used in the treatment of depression help strengthen the hypothesis that the two are linked in some way. It isnt known if the lower levels of serotonin are what contribute to depression or if they are there because of the depression.

While all of these things are found within the brains of those that suffer from depression, it is important to note that untreated or hidden depression can cause these effects to last weeks, months, years or even over an entire lifetime. The longer depression is hidden and untreated, the worse these symptoms can become. Leaving depression to chance can cause the sufferer to lose connection with family and friends, can cause them to isolate themselves from others, and can cause any number of other severe mental illnesses. The comorbidity of depression and anxiety is high, as it is between depression and PTSD, and prolonged exposure to the stressors from these conditions can have an even larger list of side effects and brain changes.

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User Profile: Booklover95
Booklover95 January 30th, 2018

@Jenna

I relate to all of them, specially "The hippocampus is the part of the brain that stores memories of events". Makes alot of sense now

Thank you so much for posting this. I'm sure will help many people :)

1 reply
User Profile: Jenna
Jenna OP February 1st, 2018

@Booklover95

I'm sorry that you can relate to all of these, but I'm glad you've found this post helpful. ♥

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User Profile: Phthalo
Phthalo January 31st, 2018

I wonder if these are reversible or if it's "permanent damage"

1 reply
User Profile: Jenna
Jenna OP February 1st, 2018

@Phthalo

In accordance with the hippocampus, I found this "Is stress-linked brain damage permanent? Sapolsky said that in rats, short-term exposure to glucocorticoids causes neurons to shrink, but they rebound when levels of the hormones return to normal. ... However, rats lose some of their neurons" permanently if they are exposed to the stress hormones over a long time."

The best we can do is research if any of these can be permanent and/or irreversible.

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User Profile: AutumnBreeze92
AutumnBreeze92 February 1st, 2018

This is a very helpful post to me, Thank you so much @Jenna smileyheartyes

1 reply
User Profile: Jenna
Jenna OP February 1st, 2018

@kindPoetry91

I'm glad you've found it helpful. ♥

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User Profile: wontwakewontsleep
wontwakewontsleep February 1st, 2018

@Jenna - Thank you so much for sharing some of the science behind my depressed brain. I think it's fascinating.

User Profile: MarshmaIIows
MarshmaIIows February 1st, 2018

@Jenna :o thanks for this, learnt new things :D

User Profile: Darkpelt11
Darkpelt11 February 2nd, 2018

@Jenna

This was really helpful, mainly for the parr about emotional out burst. I have these often, a almost a entire different Me just comes out. I have a very active imagination; we all talk to ourselves, just a little bit. For me though, I gave my emotions names, almost like the inside out movie. It helps me deal with my emotions better, having them almost like people I talk to. One I call Nightmare, being my more angry side, telling me others don't care about me and that if I just stayed and talked with her forever, it be all better. The other one is Casey; she's like this crazy, happy hyper one. The one that makes me want to draw scary stuff, stuff I'd normally never ever show anyone, that even scares me. But both calm me.

Sorry, went a weird long monologue there, oops..

User Profile: astuteScorpius
astuteScorpius April 19th, 2018

""5. Enlarged Amygdala

The amygdala is where the brain stores emotional memories and becomes overactive in those that suffer from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Having an overactive amygdala can lead to sleep disturbances, many of those suffering from depression report insomnia or wanting to sleep non-stop, and issues with physical activity. This can also lead to abnormal hormone secretions that can reek havoc on other areas of the body and systems that keep a persons body up and running.""

If you're ready for a nap the moment you wake up every day clap your hands!

It would be nice to know if there were ways to shrink this specific area of the brain..