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Current time: November 23, 2024, 11:28 pm

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Neuroscience, neurology, mental disorders
#11
RE: Neuroscience, neurology, mental disorders
IMHO self-regulation of the brain goes beyond its internal workings and includes the willingness and mindfulness to take your medications. I do not know if your distinction between treatment and diagnosis is all that important. Yes it is helpful to isolate specific mechanisms but many effective treatments can work without actually knowing how they work. Until recently no one knew how aspirin worked, much less lithium.

It seems to me that hybrid approaches work well. From what I understand, the combination of medication and talk therapy is more effective than either alone. For extreme cases with clear distinct symptoms Western medicine is by far the best. However, I would not discount Eastern medicine, particularly for more mild and diffuse symptoms. The brain is also part of the overall system of the body. While chemical balances in the brain are critical, a lack of balance in the rest of the bodily systems will undermine any attempt restore 'normal' brain function.

Even still, we must remember that the definition of normal is a cultural artifact. Normative behavior falls with a range found acceptable within typical social settings. In many royal courts the jesters included not only comedic midgets. Many had people with a variety of mental handicaps and were believed to speak the truths others dared not. In such cases the mentally unstable served a useful social function. Shamans are probably not the most sane of the crop. And how many social malcontents, unable to deal with civil society became explorers and traveling merchants. Even today, the lines between true depression, melancholy and thoughtful pensiveness are not very sharp.
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#12
RE: Neuroscience, neurology, mental disorders
I might've said this before, but seriously, Chad, can we please PLEASE get more people like you on this forum?? You are quite correct; multiple approaches to the problem helps solve it much more effectively, and why should it not? One person working on a problem can fix it but ten working on it can fix it a hell of a lot faster. Of course some of the people don't know what they're talking about [referring to certain alternative medicines here], but if you get the ones who do know what they're doing all working together...

I was supposed to post more, but today was hectic and I was doing too much on too little sleep. Didn't help I got called into the RCC around noon, either. So another delay, sorry.
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#13
RE: Neuroscience, neurology, mental disorders
(May 1, 2013 at 1:30 am)Creed of Heresy Wrote: What causes schizophrenia? We don't know. I know I sure don't, the whole "not being a neurologist" hindering my understanding of course, but even if I were, in all likelihood, I still probably would not know.

To say "we don't know" is misleading. The currently accepted model for the cause of schizophrenia is the "dopamine hypothesis". The vast majority of typical and atypical antipsychotics are primarily dopamine receptor (D2) antagonists. It is thought that over activity of dopamine D2 neurotransmission results in "positive" symptoms such as delusions and hallucinations.

(May 1, 2013 at 1:30 am)Creed of Heresy Wrote: If you ask a chemist, a neurologist, a pharmacologist, a psychologist, or psychiatrist: Medication.

Psychologists typically do not advise medication because they are not trained in the field of medicine (unless they are both a psychiatrist and a psychologist). Where I live, the first port of call for suspected mental illness is the GP. The GP might refer to a psychiatrist (who are trained medical doctors, and go through over a decade of medical training) if it is serious enough. If a psychiatrist believes that the person does not require medication, they may be referred to a psychologist (not a medical doctor) who might advise psychological treatments like Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) or Exposure & Response Prevention (ERP).
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