Study: Exercise Has Long-Lasting Effect on Depression
Friday, September 22, 2000
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After demonstrating that 30 minutes of brisk exercise three times a
week is just as effective as drug therapy in relieving the symptoms
of major depression in the short term, medical center researchers
have now shown that continued exercise greatly reduces the chances
of the depression returning.
The new study, which followed the same participants for an
additional six months, found that patients who continued to
exercise after completing the initial trial were much less likely
to see their depression return than the other patients. Only 8
percent of patients in the exercise group had their depression
return, while 38 percent of the drug-only group and 31 percent of
the exercise-plus-drug group relapsed.
The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health (NIH). The researchers are now using a new $3 million NIH
grant to better understand the subtle factors that may explain the
positive effects of exercise in a new trial that begins enrolling
patients this month.
"Findings from these studies indicate that a modest exercise
program is an effective and robust treatment for patients with
major depression," he continued. "And if these motivated patients
continue with their exercise, they have a much better chance of not
seeing their depression return."
Researchers were surprised that the group of patients who took the
medication and exercised did not respond as well as those who only
exercised.
"We had assumed that exercise and medication together would have
had an additive effect, but this turned out not to be the case,"
Blumenthal said. "While we don't know the reasons for this, some of
the participants were disappointed when they found out they were
randomized to the exercise and medication group. To some extent,
this 'anti-medication' sentiment may have played a role by making
patients less excited or enthused about their combined exercise and
medication program."
He suggested that exercise may be beneficial because patients are
actually taking an active role in trying to get better.
"Simply taking a pill is very passive," he said. "Patients who
exercised may have felt a greater sense of mastery over their
condition and gained a greater sense of accomplishment. They may
have felt more self-confident and competent because they were able
to do it themselves, and attributed their improvement to their
ability to exercise."
Once patients start feeling better, they tend to exercise more,
which makes them feel even better, Blumenthal said. The greatest
risk for these patients, since they are older, would be to suffer
an injury or illness that would interrupt their exercise routine,
he added.
While the researchers enrolled middle-aged and elderly people in
their study, Blumenthal said it is logical to assume that the
results would hold true for the general population, since older
people tend to have additional medical problems or infirmities that
might make regular exercise more difficult than for younger
patients.
Researchers used the anti-depressant sertraline (trade name
Zoloft), which is a member of a class of commonly used
anti-depressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
(SSRI).
Blumenthal cautioned that the study did not include patients who
were acutely suicidal or had what is termed psychotic depression.
Also, since patients were recruited by advertisements, these
patients were motivated to get better and interested in
exercise.
The research team included, from Duke, Michael Babyak, Steve
Herman, Parinda Khatri, Dr. Murali Doraiswamy, Kathleen Moore, Teri
Baldewicz and Dr. Ranga Krishnan. Edward Craighead, from the
University of Colorado at Boulder also participated.