Huberman Lab - Essentials: Understanding & Conquering Depression
Episode Date: July 3, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explore major depression, including its underlying biology and discuss science-based approaches to alleviate symptoms and improve mood. I describe the wide-...ranging symptoms of depression and explain how key neurotransmitters, hormones, stress, genetics and inflammation contribute to its development and persistence. I also cover treatment options, from traditional classes of antidepressant medications to emerging therapies such as ketamine and psilocybin. Finally, I highlight lifestyle-based tools, including exercise, supplementation and dietary strategies that can help manage depressive symptoms and promote mental well-being. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/huberman Our Place: https://fromourplace.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00:00 Major Depression 00:01:10 Depression Symptoms 00:06:14 Sponsor: BetterHelp 00:07:33 Pharmaceuticals for Depression, SSRIs; Norepinephrine, Dopamine & Serotonin 00:14:33 Thyroid Hormone, Cortisol, Stress & Depression, Menstrual Cycle, Genetics 00:17:43 Sponsor: AG1 00:19:20 Increase Norepinephrine, Tools: Deliberate Cold Exposure & Exercise 00:21:40 Chronic Inflammation & Depression, Tools: Omega-3s (EPA) & Exercise 00:26:49 Sponsor: Our Place 00:28:41 Tool: Creatine Monohydrate Supplementation & Improving Depression 00:30:20 Novel Depression Therapies, Ketamine, Psilocybin 00:35:29 Ketogenic Diet & Refractory Depression, GABA 00:37:57 Recap & Key Takeaways Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials,
where we revisit past episodes
for the most potent and actionable science-based tools
for mental health, physical health, and performance.
I'm Andrew Huberman,
and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today, we're discussing depression.
In particular, we're going to talk about major depression.
The phrase major depression is used to distinguish
one form of depression from the other,
the other one being bipolar depression.
Major depression impacts 5% of the population.
That is an enormous number.
That means if you're in a class of a hundred people,
five of them are dealing with major depression
or have at some point.
Look around you in any environment
and you can be sure that a good portion of the people
that you're surrounded by is impacted by depression
or will be at some point.
So this is something we really have to take seriously
and that we want to understand.
It is the number four cause of disability.
A lot of people miss work, miss school
and before then likely perform poorly in work or school
due to major depression.
So let's talk about the things that are present
in somebody that has major depression.
First of all, there tends to be a lot of grief.
There tends to be a lot of sadness.
That's no surprise.
There's also this thing that we call anhedonia,
a general lack of ability to enjoy things.
For the time being, we want to frame up anhedonia,
this lack of ability to achieve or experience pleasure,
a kind of a flat affect as it's called.
Sometimes even delusional thinking,
negative delusional thinking,
and in particular, anti-self confabulation.
What is anti-self confabulation?
Well, first of all, confabulation is an incredible aspect
of our mind and our nervous system.
You sometimes see other forms of confabulation
in people who have memory deficits,
either because they have brain damage
or they have age-related dementia.
A good example of this would be
someone with age-related dementia sometimes will good example of this would be someone with age-related dementia
sometimes will find themselves in a location in the house
and not know how they got there.
And if you ask them, oh, what are you doing here?
They will create these elaborate stories.
Oh, you know, I was thinking about going to the shopping
today and I was, you know, and I was going to take the bus
and then I was going to do that.
They create these elaborate stories.
They confabulate.
It's as if a brain circuit that writes stories
just starts generating content.
In major depression, there's often a state
of delusional anti-self confabulation
where the confabulations are not directly
or completely linked to reality,
but they are ones that make the self,
the person describing them seem sick
or in some way not well.
A good example would be somebody
who experiences a physical injury perhaps.
Maybe they break their ankle, maybe it's an athlete
and they also happen to become depressed.
And you'll talk to them and say, how are things going?
How's your rehab?
And they'll be like, oh, it's okay.
And I don't know, I'm just,
I feel like I'm getting weaker and weaker by the day.
I'm just not performing well.
And then you'll talk to the person that they're working with,
their kinesiologist or whoever the physical therapist is,
and they'll say, no, they're actually really improving.
And I tell them they're improving,
but somehow they're not,
they're not seeing that improvement.
They're not registering that improvement.
They are viewing themselves
and they are confabulating
according to a view that is very self-deprecating
to the point where it doesn't match up with reality.
The other common symptomology of major depression
is what they call vegetative symptoms, okay?
So vegetative symptoms are symptoms that occur
without any thinking, without any doing
or without any confabulation.
These are things that are related to our core physiology,
things like constantly being exhausted.
The person just feels exhausted.
They don't have the energy they once had.
So it's not in their heads.
Something is disrupted in the autonomic
or so-called vegetative nervous system.
And one of the most common symptoms
of people with major depression,
one of the signs of major depression is early waking
and not being able to fall back to sleep
despite being exhausted.
So waking up at 3 a.m. or 4 a.m. or 5 a.m.
just spontaneously and not being able to go back to sleep.
It's well known that the architecture of sleep
is disrupted in depression.
What's the architecture of sleep?
Early in the night, you tend to have slow wave sleep
more than REM sleep or rapid eye movement sleep.
As the night goes on,
you tend to have more rapid eye movement sleep.
That architecture of slow wave sleep
preceding rapid eye movement sleep
is radically disrupted in major depression.
In addition, the pattern of activity in the brain
during particular phases of sleep is disrupted.
And then there are some other things that relate
to the autonomic nervous system,
but that we normally think of as more voluntary in nature.
And these are things like decreased appetite.
So you could imagine that one could have decreased appetite
because of the anhedonia, the lack of pleasure from food.
So you can see that the symptomology of major depression
impacts us at multiple levels.
There's the conscious level
of how excited we are generally.
Well, that's reduced.
There's grief, there's guilt, there's crying.
But then there's also these vegetative things.
There's disruptions in sleep,
which of course make everything more challenging
when we're awake.
We know that sleep is so vital for resetting.
You're waking up early, you can't get back to sleep.
That's going to adjust your affect,
your emotions in negative ways.
We know this.
And appetite is off.
And there are hormones that get disrupted.
So cortisol levels are increased.
In particular, there's a signature pattern of depression
whereby cortisol, this stress hormone
that normally is released in a healthy way
only in the early part of the day
is shifted to late in the day.
In fact, a 9 p.m. peak in cortisol
is one of the physiological signatures
of depressive-like states.
It's not the only one, but it is an important one.
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So let's just take a few minutes
and talk about some of the underlying biology
that creates this cloud or this constellation
of symptomology.
One of the most important early findings
in the search for a biological basis of depression
was this finding that there are drugs
that relieve some of the symptoms of depression.
Those drugs generally fall into three major categories,
but the first set of ones that were discovered
were the so-called tricyclic antidepressants
and the MAO inhibitors, the monoamine oxidase inhibitors.
And these tricyclic antidepressants
and the MAO inhibitors largely worked
by increasing levels of norepinephrine in the brain,
as well as in the body in some cases.
They were discovered because of the exploration
for drugs that alter blood pressure.
Norepinephrine impacts blood pressure
and drugs that lower blood pressure
reduce levels of norepinephrine.
And that in many cases was shown to lead to depression
or depressive like symptoms.
These tricyclic drugs and the MAO inhibitors
actually increase norepinephrine.
And frankly, they do quite a good job of relieving some,
if not all of the symptoms of major depression.
However, they carry with them many side effects.
Some of those side effects are side effects
related to blood pressure itself.
By increasing noradrenaline,
norepinephrine as it's called, you raise blood pressure.
That can be dangerous.
But they also have a lot of other side effects.
The reason they have other side effects
is because they impact systems in the brain
and in the body that impact things like libido,
appetite, digestion, and others.
They made some people so uncomfortable
that they preferred not to take them,
even though when they didn't take them,
they had a worsening or a maintenance
of their depressive symptoms.
A decade or so later,
there was the discovery of the so-called
pleasure pathways in the brain.
This pleasure pathway, as it's sometimes called,
involves areas like the nucleus accumbens
and the ventral tegmental area.
These are areas of the brain
that are rich with neurons that make dopamine.
And if you think to the symptoms of depression,
of anhedonia, lack of pleasure,
a lack of ability to experience pleasure,
well, that was a smoking gun
that there's something wrong
with the dopamine pathway in depression.
So it's not just norepinephrine,
it's also the dopamine or pleasure pathway
is somehow disrupted.
And then in the 1980s,
there was the discovery of the so-called SSRIs.
Most people are now familiar with the SSRIs,
the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
The SSRIs worked by distinct mechanisms
from the tricyclic antidepressants and the MAO inhibitors.
As their name suggests, SSRI,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors,
prevent serotonin from being wiped up from the synapse
after two neurons talk to one another.
What do I mean by that?
Well, here's some very basic neurobiology 101.
If you don't know any neurobiology,
you're going to know some in about 15 seconds.
Neurons communicate with one another
by spitting out chemicals into the little gap between them.
The little gap between them is called the synapse.
Those chemicals bind to the neuron on the opposite side
and cause changes in the electrical activity
of that neuron on the other side of the synapse.
Serotonin is one such neurotransmitter,
or more specifically, it's a neuromodulator.
It can change the activity of large groups of neurons
in very meaningful ways.
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor means
when a person takes this drug,
some of those drugs include things like Prozac or Zoloft,
the more typical names or more generic names
are things like fluoxetine.
When people take those, more serotonin hangs out
in the synapse and is able to be taken up
by the neuron on the opposite side
because of this selective reuptake inhibition.
It prevents the clearance of serotonin from the synapse
and thereby more serotonin can have an effect.
So SSRIs don't increase the total amount of serotonin from the synapse and thereby more serotonin can have an effect. So SSRIs don't increase the total amount
of serotonin in the brain.
They change how effective the serotonin
that's already in the brain is
at changing the activity of neurons.
About a third of people that take SSRIs
don't derive any benefit.
It doesn't relieve their symptoms of depression.
However, for the other two thirds,
there's often a relief of some, if not all
of the symptoms of major depression.
The problem is the side effects that accompany those SSRIs.
And so these days SSRIs are a complicated topic.
It's sort of what I would call a barbed wire topic,
but these drugs also have saved a lot of lives.
They've also improved a lot of lives.
The issue is that they tend to have varying effects
on different individuals
and sometimes varying effects over time.
So they'll work for a while,
then they won't work for a while.
There are also a lot of mysteries about the SSRIs
and those mysteries bother people.
SSRIs increase the amount of serotonin
or more specifically,
they increase the efficacy of serotonin at the synapse.
That happens immediately,
or very soon after people start taking SSRIs,
but people generally don't start experiencing any relief
from their symptoms of depression,
if they're going to experience them at all,
until about two weeks after they start taking these drugs.
So it's very clear that there are at least three
major chemical systems in the brain,
norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin
that relate to and can adjust the symptoms of depression.
And those actually can be divided into separate categories.
So for instance, epinephrine is,
or norepinephrine is thought to relate
to the so-called psychomotor defects.
This is the lethargy.
This is the exhaustion.
This is the inability to get out of bed in the morning.
Dopamine is thought to relate to the anhedonia
or I should say lack of dopamine in depressive patients
is thought to lead to the anhedonia,
the lack of ability to experience pleasure.
And serotonin is thought to relate to the grief, the guilt,
some of the more cognitive
or more emotional aspects of depression.
So we've got the norepinephrine system related
to activity and alertness,
the dopamine system relating to motivation, pleasure,
and the ability to seek and experience pleasure.
And then the serotonin system that's related to grief.
And unfortunately, brains and organisms don't work
in a simple mathematical way where you just say,
oh, well, this person's experiencing a lot of grief,
but they don't have any problems with, you know, lethargy.
And so let's just boost up their serotonin.
On paper, it works,
but oftentimes it doesn't work clinically.
A really good psychiatrist will work with someone
to try and pull and push on these various systems
to find the combination of drugs that may be
or may not be correct for them.
So next I'd like to talk about hormones
and how they relate to depression.
And I'd also like to talk about stress
and how it relates to depression,
as well as talk about some of the genetics
or the predispositions to depression.
20% of people that have major depression
have low thyroid hormone.
And that leads to low energy,
low metabolism in the brain and body.
Sometimes a psychiatrist will prescribe thyroid medication
to increase thyroid output in people that are depressed
and that will work to relieve the symptoms.
So there are certain situations or conditions
that can impact the thyroid hormone system
and make people more susceptible to depression
or make a preexisting depression worse.
And those are things like childbirth.
So it's well known that women who give birth
can often undergo what's called postpartum depression.
And that's thought to be hormonally related,
either directly to the thyroid system
or perhaps to the cortisol system as well.
We'll talk about cortisol in a moment.
As well, certain women during certain phases
of their menstrual cycle experience symptoms
that are very much like clinical depression
and oftentimes are diagnosed
with clinical depression appropriately.
And of course the menstrual cycle is associated
with shifts in hormone levels.
As well menopause and post-menopausal women
are more susceptible to major depression,
regardless of whether or not they've had
that major depression earlier in their life.
So these are things to be on the lookout for
and to definitely talk to a doctor and get a blood panel
that hopefully includes measures of thyroid hormone
and cortisol hormone.
Why cortisol hormone?
Well, more stress is correlated with more bouts
of major depression across the lifespan.
How many bouts?
Well, it turns out that as you go
from having one to two to three,
well, when you hit four to five bouts
of really intense stressful episodes in life,
these tend to be long-term stressful episodes,
your risk for major depression goes way up.
And that's because the stress system is associated
with the release of cortisol.
The cortisol system can dramatically impact the way
that these different neuromodulators,
dopamine, norepinephrine and serotonin function.
One of the more important reasons
for learning how to counter stress
in order to offset depression
is that there is a genetic predisposition
that certain people carry to become depressed.
How do we know?
Well, in what are called concordant monozygotic twins.
So these will be identical twins
for which one of those twins goes on
to have major depression.
There's a 50% probability that the other one
will have major depression.
So it's not 100%, it's not 100% inherited.
It's not 100% genetic, as you might say,
but there's a much higher predisposition for depression.
Whereas in fraternal twins, that number drops,
and in siblings, that number drops to about 25%,
and in half siblings, it's about 10%.
Basically, the more closely related you are to somebody
who has major depression, the more likely it is
that you will also get major depression.
And therefore, if you haven't gotten major depression,
the more likely it is that you should take steps
to learn to mitigate stress,
because stress is the major factor
that can trigger one of these depressive episodes.
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So next I'd like to talk about some of the tools that people who both have depression
or who are prone to depression,
as well as people who don't have depression
and simply want to maintain a good mood,
who want to maintain a positive affect
and pursuit of things in life,
what are the things that you can do?
Any behavioral tool that adjusts the levels
of a particular chemical ought to perhaps provide some relief
for some of the symptoms of major depression.
Let's take an example that I've talked about before
on the podcast, which is if you get into a very cold shower,
you take an ice bath, you will release norepinephrine
and epinephrine in your brain and body.
There's no question about that.
If some aspects of depression are related to low levels
of norepinephrine, will taking cold showers
relieve your depression?
Perhaps it might even relieve certain aspects
of that depression.
Will exercise help?
Well, if you go out for a run,
you're going to increase the amount of norepinephrine
in your body.
If you enjoy that run,
it's likely that you'll increase the levels of dopamine
and probably serotonin in your brain and body as well.
Will that cure your depression?
Well, there are a lot of studies exploring
how exercise can impact depression.
And indeed, regular exercise is known to be
a protective behavior against depression,
but it also can help relieve some of the symptoms
of depression.
So you may ask yourself, why would you need drugs at all?
Why would there be prescription drugs
or the need for supplementation or other things
to alleviate the symptoms of depression?
Ah, well, that's the diabolical nature of depression,
which is if people are far enough along in this thing,
sometimes called disease, sometimes called disorder,
but major depression, oftentimes they can't get the energy
to even get up and take a bath or a shower.
They have no motivation to do it.
They have no desire to go for a run.
But it's very important to highlight the fact
that these circuits that are accessible to some of us,
the circuits for happiness, for pursuit of pleasure,
for exercise, for getting in a cold shower,
if that's your thing,
that those circuits are present in all people.
But for certain people that are experiencing
major depression and are really in the depths
of their depression, they can't really access those circuits
in the same way that people who are not suffering
from depression can.
But let's look at depression from the standpoint
of a deeper biological phenomenon,
which is inflammation and the immune system.
There's growing evidence now
that many forms of major depression,
if not all of them, relate to excessive inflammation.
Now, inflammation plays an important role,
and wound healing is that it is a positive aspect
of our immune system, our ability to combat wounds,
combat illnesses, et cetera,
but inflammation gone unchecked,
inflammation that lasts too long
or is of too high amplitude,
meaning too many cytokines and things of that sort
in the body is bad.
And there's decent evidence now
that inflammation can lead to or exacerbate depression.
And that if we want to control depression
or limit or eliminate depression,
that focusing on reducing inflammation
and its associated pathways is a really good thing to do.
And I think this is a really good thing
for everybody to do regardless of whether or not
you suffer from depression or not.
So first of all, who are the major players
in creating chronic inflammation in the brain and body?
They are the inflammatory cytokines,
things like IL-6, interleukin-6,
things like tumor necrosis alpha, TNF alpha,
things like C reactive protein.
When we are stressed, chronically stressed,
we get inflamed, our brain and various locations
in the brain become inflamed because certain classes
of cells, in particular those glial cells,
the cells that are typically thought
to just be support cells, those cells
and their biochemistry and their dialogue
with the neurons of the brain and body
starts to become disrupted.
It turns out there is a set of actions
that we can take
in order to limit inflammation.
One of those approaches is to increase our intake
of so-called EPAs or essential fatty acids.
Increasing our intake of these essential fatty acids
and in particular the EPA variety of omega-3s
can lower the effective dose
of things like SSRIs.
The threshold level seems to be about one gram,
a thousand milligrams of EPA.
So you will sometimes see on a bottle of krill oil
or fish oil or any other source,
even plant source or other source of EPA
that it's a thousand milligrams or 1200 milligrams.
But what's really important to look at is whether or not
there's more than a thousand milligrams of EPA
because the EPA in particular is what's important here.
So how would this work?
These inflammatory cytokines act in a variety
of different ways, but they mainly act to inhibit
the release of serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine or the synthesis of ser serotonin norepinephrine and dopamine
or the synthesis of serotonin norepinephrine and dopamine.
Dopamine, also called 5-HT,
essentially derives from a precursor called tryptophan.
Tryptophan arrives into our system through our diet.
Okay, tryptophan is an amino acid.
Tryptophan is eventually converted into serotonin.
However, if there's excessive amounts of inflammation,
these inflammatory cytokines cause tryptophan
to be diverted down a different pathway.
The pathway involves something called IDO, endolamine,
which converts tryptophan into chynurine.
Chynurine actually acts as a neurotoxin
by way of converting into something called quinolinic acid.
Okay, and quinolinic acid is pro depressive.
So if that seems like a complicated biochemical pathway,
what's basically happening here is that the tryptophan
that normally would be made into serotonin
under conditions of inflammation is being diverted
into a neurotoxic pathway.
And ingestion of EPAs,
because it limits these inflammatory cytokines,
things like IL-6, C-reactive protein, et cetera,
can cause more of the tryptophan that one ingests
or has in their body to be diverted
towards the serotonergic pathway.
Exercise, it turns out, also has a positive effect
on the tryptophan to serotonin conversion pathway.
The activation of the muscles
through rhythmic repeated use,
in particular aerobic exercise,
but also resistance training has been shown
to do this to some extent,
tends to sequester or shuttle the chynurine into the muscle
so that it isn't converted into this neurotoxin
that is pro depression.
From the data that are published
in quality peer review journals,
it really appears that this inflammation pathway
does function to increase depression through these pathways.
And so knowing that there are behavioral steps
and supplementation-based steps,
or if you prefer getting your EPAs from typical food,
from nutritional approaches,
I find that very reassuring
that the mechanisms all converge
on a common pathway, serotonin.
There's a common biochemical pathway
that can explain why these things not just work,
but why they should work.
They should work because they operate
in the very same biochemical pathways
that antidepressants that are prescribed to people do.
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Now I want to talk about something that at least for me
was quite surprising when I first learned about it
for sake of treatment of mood disorders.
And that's creatine.
Creatine has a number of very important functions
throughout the body.
For those of you that are into resistance training
and actually for those of you that are
into endurance training as well,
creatine has achieved a lot of popularity in recent years
because supplementation with creatine
can draw more water into muscles
and can increase power output from muscles.
However, there's also a so-called phosphocreatine system
in the brain and that phosphocreatine system
has everything to do with the dialogue between neurons
and these other cell types called glia.
But the phosphocreatine system in the forebrain
in particular, in the front of our brain,
has been shown to be involved in regulation of mood
and some of the reward pathways, as well as in depression.
The American Journal of Psychiatry in 2012
published a study, which was a randomized double-blind placebo control trial
of oral creatine monohydrate.
And what it found is that it could augment
or enhance the response
to a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor,
in particular in women with major depressive disorder.
So like EPA, creatine supplementation seems to either
lower the required dose of SSRI that's required
to treat depression or can improve the effectiveness
of a given dose of SSRI.
However, there are other studies that have looked directly
at creatine supplementation in the absence of SSRIs.
And those are interesting as well.
So let's talk a little bit more
about novel therapeutic compounds
for the treatment of major depression.
One is ketamine, which is getting increasing interest
in psychiatric clinics,
in various experimental and clinical studies.
They create dissociative anesthetic states.
So dissociative states where people don't feel
as closely meshed with their emotions
and their perceptions.
Clinically, what's described in the trials for ketamine
and things like it, that people who are depressed
will take ketamine, will experience a kind of separateness
from their grief and from their emotions.
And that possibly there's plasticity,
there are actually shifts in the neural circuitry
such that their emotions don't weigh on them so heavily.
It's not always about just getting people peppy
and excited and happy.
There also seems to be a requirement
for getting them distanced from their own grief.
And this brings us back to something that we talked about
way back at the beginning of this episode,
which was this particular feature
of the anti-self confabulation,
that everything that happens is a reflection
that I should say for the depressed person,
that everything that happens is a reflection
of how life is bad and their experiences just point
to the fact that nothing is going to get better.
This is the common language of depression.
If this is very depressing to hear me talk about,
it is heavy.
And that's what it's like to hear these things.
It's even heavier, of course,
for somebody to experience them.
And those beliefs, those patterns of guilt and grief
and anhedonia and delusional anti-self confabulations,
those are the things that eventually,
if they get severe enough,
start to convert into things like self-harm, mutilation,
and in the most tragic of cases, of course, suicide.
And so I think we can look to these treatments
such as ketamine and its use in the clinic
as ways for people to get distanced
from the negative affect that they feel
isn't just inside them or overwhelms them,
but that for the very severely depressed person,
they feel is them.
Another category of treatments
that's being actively explored now in laboratories
and in the psychiatry realm are the psychedelics.
And that's a huge category of compounds.
However, one in particular psilocybin is one
that's being most intensely and actively pursued
for its capacity to treat major depressive disorder.
But let's focus on psilocybin for its capacity
to rewire neural circuits and alleviate depression.
There have been anecdotal data or evidence over the years
that psilocybin has this capacity.
How does psilocybin work?
Well, psilocybin engages or increases serotonin transmission,
meaning it increases the amount of serotonin,
mainly by acting at these 5H2A receptors.
But where in the brain does it happen
and what are the major effects?
First, let's talk about the major effects,
because I think that's what people are interested in.
The study that I'd like to highlight
is a fairly recent one.
It was published in May of 2021
in Journal, excuse me,
of the American Medical Association Psychiatry,
so JAMA Psychiatry,
and it's entitled,
Effects of Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy
on Major Depressive Disorder,
a Randomized Clinical Trial.
Basically, what they did was they screened for patients
to come into the clinic.
These were people that suffered
from major depressive disorder
and administered either one or two rounds of psilocybin.
Typically it was 20 milligrams per kilogram of body weight.
So it depends on body weight.
What's really striking about this study
is that there was a very significant improvement
in mood and affect and relief from depressive symptoms
in anywhere from 50 to 70% of the people
that were subjects in the study
who received the psilocybin treatment.
These are really enormous and significant effects.
What's really interesting is there are some common themes
to psilocybin administration and experience
that lead to relief from depressive symptoms,
but they are subjectively, excuse me,
subjectively very varied,
meaning that whether or not people feel
they had a good experience or a bad experience,
whether or not people thought about their parents
or thought about the color of the ceiling
doesn't seem to have too much of an impact
on whether or not they receive relief
during these studies, in these clinical studies.
It seems like different people
can have lots
of different experiences and still receive benefit.
It's somehow rewiring associations between events,
emotional events, past events, current events,
and future events in ways that allow people
to get some sort of relief or distance
from these narratives, these depressive stories
about their past and present,
and allow them to see new opportunity
and optimism in the future.
One of the most common questions I get for this podcast
is about different diets, different regimes,
different nutritional plans,
things like keto, ketogenic diet, or vegan diets,
or intermittent fasting, or the all meat diet,
the so-called lion diet, et cetera.
There are actually really interesting data
relating nutrition and diet to major depressive disorder.
There have been some explorations
of whether or not a vegan diet
can improve symptoms of depression.
Not a lot of data, not impressive data.
There have been very few controlled studies
looking at the carnivore all meat diet.
However, the ketogenic diet has been explored
for its ability to relieve certain symptoms of depression,
in particular to what's called maintain euthymia.
Euthymia is the kind of state of equilibrium
between a manic episode and a depressive episode
in a manic bipolar person.
Euthymia is that kind of place in the middle
where people feel neither too high nor too low.
And there are some interesting studies
looking at the ketogenic diet for maintaining euthymia
in manic depressives,
but also in people with major depressive disorder.
The ketogenic diet by way of increasing ketone metabolism
or shifting brain's metabolism over to ketones
tends to modulate GABA such that GABA is more active
and adjust the so-called GABA glutamate balance.
This is getting technical,
but glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter.
GABA is inhibitory neurotransmitter,
and their balance is vital for neuroplasticity,
for maintaining healthy levels of activity
in the brain, et cetera.
And so there is decent evidence
that people with major depressive disorders,
in particular, the people with major depressive disorders
that are refractory,
meaning they don't respond to classical antidepressants can benefit it seems from the ketogenic diet.
It's really interesting that eating in a particular way, lowering carbohydrates to the point where
you rely on ketogenic metabolism in the brain, increases GABA and can provide some relief
for depressive symptoms.
And that in particular, that seems to have positive effects
in people that are refractory or don't respond
to classic antidepressants.
So today we've covered what at least feels to me
like a tremendous amount of material.
This topic of depression is indeed an enormous topic
to try and get our arms around.
We talked about the symptomology,
we talked about some of the underlying
neurochemistry and biology,
and then we talked about approaches to deal with it
that are really grounded in the neurochemistry and biology.
I just want to recap a few of those tools
and what those things are.
So number one, don't overwhelm your pleasure centers
either through activities or compounds.
It might seem counterintuitive,
but you're setting yourself up for anhedonia and depression
if you do that.
Second of all, talked about the norepinephrine system
and how the norepinephrine system is really deficient
in many forms of major depression and in depression.
There is now more deliberate pursuit
of norepinephrine inducing activities that are healthy,
that aren't adrenaline seeking per se,
things like exercise that will increase
our levels of noradrenaline.
I'd be remiss if I said that these activities
could completely eliminate depressive symptoms
in people with major depressive disorder.
I don't think that's the case.
And again, I want to acknowledge that people with major depressive symptoms in people with major depressive disorder. I don't think that's the case. And again, I want to acknowledge that people
with major depressive symptoms often don't have the energy,
the willingness or the capacity to engage
in some of these activities, but things like cold showers,
deliberate cold showers, things like regular exercise,
they aren't just feel good activities.
They actually engage the norepinephrine system
and keep that system tuned up and allow us to increase our norepinephrine system and keep that system tuned up and allow us to increase
our norepinephrine levels at will on a regular basis.
And their mood enhancing effects are real effects
that at the level of neurochemistry.
Then we talked about EPAs, these essential fatty acids.
And it's clear that for most people getting above
a thousand milligrams and probably even closer
to 2000 milligrams per day of EPAs can be beneficial for mood,
especially in attempts to treat
or offset major depressive disorder.
We also talked about exercise and how EPA and exercise
on a regular basis can offset these inflammatory pathways.
And then we talked about the prescription compounds
and the compounds that are being used
mainly in the course of studies
and of psychiatry and depression,
things like ketamine, psilocybin and related compounds.
And then lastly, we talked about ketosis,
which may not be right for everybody,
but might be right for certain individuals out there
who are grappling with this.
I want to thank you for embarking on this journey
of trying to understand what is depression,
how does it work and how to treat it.
And thank you for your interest in science.
And as mentioned at the beginning of today's episode, and how to treat it. And thank you for your interest in science.
And as mentioned at the beginning of today's episode, we are now partnered with Momentous Supplements
because they make single ingredient formulations
that are of the absolute highest quality
and they ship international.
If you go to livemomentous.com slash Huberman,
you will find many of the supplements
that have been discussed on various episodes
of the Huberman Lab Podcast,
and you will find various protocols
related to those supplements.