Thursday, April 2, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Cheers! Your Evening Drink May Work As Anti-depressant

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Sep, 2016 01:51 PM
    Can having a few drinks help people with clinical depression feel better and behave normally?
     
    Yes, at least in terms of biochemistry. Researchers have found that alcohol produces the same neural and molecular changes as drugs that have proven to be rapidly effective anti-depressants.
     
    "Because of the high comorbidity between major depressive disorder and alcoholism, there is the widely recognised self-medication hypothesis, suggesting that depressed individuals may turn to drinking as a means to treat their depression," said principal investigator Kimberly Raab-Graham, associate professor of physiology and pharmacology at Wake Forest School of Medicine, part of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. 
     
    "We now have biochemical and behavioural data to support that hypothesis," he noted, adding that this, however, does not suggest that alcohol can be regarded as an effective treatment for depression.
     
    "There's definitely a danger in self-medicating with alcohol. There's a very fine line between it being helpful and harmful, and at some point during repeated use self-medication turns into addiction," Raab-Graham pointed out in a paper published in the journal Nature Communications. 
     
    In the study using an animal model, Raab-Graham and her colleagues found that a single dose of an intoxicating level of alcohol worked in conjunction with an autism-related protein to transform neurotransmitter GABA from an inhibitor to a stimulator of neural activity. 
     
     
    In addition, the team found that these biochemical changes resulted in non-depressive behaviour, lasting at least 24 hours.
     
    GABA is the most potent depressive neurotransmitter in the human brain. It regulates many of the depressive and sedative actions in brain tissue and is critical for relaxation.
     
    The study demonstrated that alcohol followed the same biochemical pathway as rapid anti-depressants in the animals, while producing behavioural effects comparable to those observed in people. 
     
    "Additional research is needed in this area but our findings do provide a biological basis for the natural human instinct to self-medicate," Raab-Graham said. 
     
    They also define a molecular mechanism that may be a critical contributor to the comorbidity that occurs with alcohol use disorder and major depressive disorder, the authors noted.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds

    B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia court has banned an American man and his medical diagnostic company from providing ultrasounds in the province.

    B.C. Court Bans American Man And His Medical Diagnostic Company From Providing Ultrasounds

    Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing

    Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing
    Naveen Jain, the founder of Moon Express, called the US government OK on Wednesday for the MX1-E moon lander "another giant leap for humanity".

    Indian American Entrepreneur’s Company Approved For Moon Landing

    India Was Part Of Antarctica Billion Years Ago

    India Was Part Of Antarctica Billion Years Ago
    Geologists have found evidence supporting the hypothesis that Indian subcontinent was part of Antarctica a billion years ago but were separated and re-united several times due to tectonic movement of plates before the evolution of mankind.

    India Was Part Of Antarctica Billion Years Ago

    Birds Can Sleep In Flight: Study

    Birds Can Sleep In Flight: Study
    For the first time, researchers have found that birds can sleep in flight without colliding with obstacles or falling from the sky.

    Birds Can Sleep In Flight: Study

    Watch: Pakistani Fruit-Seller Wows The Internet With His Rendition Of Arijit Singh's Song

    Watch: Pakistani Fruit-Seller Wows The Internet With His Rendition Of Arijit Singh's Song
    This video of a fruit-seller singing Arijit Singh's popular song 'Baate ye Kabhi na' from movie Khamoshiyan is winning hearts across the Internet.

    Watch: Pakistani Fruit-Seller Wows The Internet With His Rendition Of Arijit Singh's Song

    Canadian Duo's Latest Single Looks Uncannily Like The 'Kuch Kuch Hota Hai' Poster

    Canadian Duo's Latest Single Looks Uncannily Like The 'Kuch Kuch Hota Hai' Poster
    As a recent tweet "noticed", the cover of the latest single from a Canadian brother-sister production duo Tennyson seems uncannily similar to a much loved poster of the film Kuch Kuch Hota Hai.

    Canadian Duo's Latest Single Looks Uncannily Like The 'Kuch Kuch Hota Hai' Poster