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Neurotransmitter-based diagnosis and treatment: A hypothesis (Part 3)

Current Psychiatry. 2022 July;21(7):34-40 | doi: 10.12788/cp.0260
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Recognizing symptoms associated with GABA and glutamate dysfunction.

The most studied neurotransmitter in depression and anxiety is serotonin, and for many years psychiatrists have paid too much attention to it. Similarly, pain physicians have been overly focused on the opioid system. Excessive attention to these neurochemicals has overshadowed multiple other (no less impactful) neuro­transmitters. Dopamine is frequently not attended to by many physicians who treat chronic pain. Psychiatrists also may overlook underlying endorphin or glutamate dysfunction in patients with psychiatric illness.

Nonpharmacologic approaches can affect neurotransmitters

With all the emphasis on pharmacologic treatments, it is important to remember that nonpharmacologic modalities such as exercise, diet, hydrotherapy, acupuncture, and psychotherapy can help normalize neurotransmitter function in the brain and ultimately help patients with chronic conditions. Careful use of nutritional supplements and vitamins may also be beneficial.

A hypothesis for future research

Multiple peripheral and central mechanisms define various chronic pain and psychiatric symptoms and disorders, including depression, anxiety, and fibromyalgia. The variety of mechanisms of pathologic mood and pain perception may be expressed to a different extent and in countless combinations in individual patients. This, in part, explains the variable responses to the same treatment observed in similar patients, or even in the same patient.

Clinicians should always remember that depression and anxiety as well as chronic pain (including fibromyalgia and chronic headache) are not a representation of a single condition but are the result of an assembly of different syndromes; therefore, 1 treatment does not fit all patients. Pain is ultimately recognized and comprehended centrally, making it very much a neuropsychiatric field. The optimal treatment for 2 patients with similar pain or psychiatric symptoms may be drastically different due to different underlying mechanisms that can be distinguished by looking at the symptoms other than “pain” or “depression.”

Remembering that every neurotransmitter deficiency or excess has an identifiable clinical correlation is important. Basing a treatment approach on a specific clinical presentation in a particular depressed or chronic pain patient would assure a more successful and reliable outcome.

Continue to: This 3-part series...