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The mind, as it evolves - Depression as a survival tool?
Some
new treatments assume so.
By Julia M. Klein
IN the fall of 2005, psychiatrist J. Anderson Thomson Jr. was treating
an 18-year-old college freshman whom he describes as "intensely
depressed, feeling suicidal and doing self-cutting."
A few years before, Thomson says, he would have interpreted her
depression as anger turned inward. But instead he decided that her
symptoms might be a way of signaling her unhappiness to people close to
her.
He discovered that his client's parents had pressured her to attend the
university and major in science, even though her real interest lay in
the arts.
In the
course of therapy, he helped her become more assertive about her goals.
When she transferred to another school and changed majors, he says, her
depression lifted.
Thomson based his approach on the idea that depression is not simply a
disease to be eliminated, but a way of eliciting support from family
and friends.
It's a
concept derived from evolutionary psychology, a burgeoning field that
is starting to influence psychotherapy.
Evolutionary psychology sees the mind as a set of evolved mechanisms,
or adaptations, that have promoted survival and reproduction.
Evolutionary
psychopathology — abnormal psychology through an evolutionary lens —
looks at what has gone wrong.
The discipline is so new that "some people would say it hasn't started
yet," jokes Randolph M. Nesse, a professor of psychiatry at the
University of Michigan, and one of its pioneers.
No one
paradigm has won universal acceptance. Evolution-based therapies rely
on an eclectic mix of techniques, and their effectiveness is still
being tested.
Some evolutionary psychologists emphasize the benefits of what we label
as disorders.
For
example, Edward H. Hagen, a research scientist at Humboldt University
in Berlin, with whom Thomson has collaborated, has argued that
depression, suicide attempts and deliberate self-harm are rational
bargaining tactics to manipulate others into providing support they
might otherwise withhold.
Stephen S. Ilardi, an associate professor of psychology at the
University of Kansas, suggests that depression results from a
"mismatch" between human beings adapted for hunter-gatherer societies
and the contemporary world.
His
therapy — which he calls "therapeutic lifestyle change" — emphasizes
behavioral remedies, including getting more sleep, consuming more
omega-3 fatty acids and increasing social interaction.
A third school of evolutionary thought sees mental disorders as the
result of an accumulation of harmful genetic mutations — flaws in the
system.
Many clinical psychologists remain skeptical of all these divergent
evolutionary approaches, as well as efforts to devise treatments based
on them.
"The idea that evolution is an important determinant of who we are as
human beings is unquestionable," says Laurence J. Kirmayer, director of
the division of social and transcultural psychiatry at McGill
University in Montreal.
"The
question is, what does our evolutionary history or our theories of
evolution tell us specifically about the nature of human problems or
about their potential solutions?"
Robert A. Neimeyer, a professor of psychology at the University of
Memphis, suggests that evolutionary psychology is better at dealing
with typical human behavior than with individual variations.
He
points out, for example, that while we are "evolutionarily wired for
attachment," people grieve losses in ways that vary across cultures and
individuals. And treatments must take account of those differences, he
says.
Helpful perspective
The recurrence of mental disorders despite the pressures of natural
selection is "really a technical question that none of us have a good
answer to," says psychiatry professor Nesse, who has written widely on
mood disorders.
"We're
not at a point where every discovery leads to another discovery. We're
at a point where a bunch of people are trying to think hard about it."
In an article in the November issue of the journal Behavioral and Brain
Sciences, Matthew C. Keller, a postdoctoral fellow at the Virginia
Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, and Geoffrey Miller,
assistant professor of psychology at the University of New Mexico,
address why diseases such as depression and schizophrenia persist.
The
answer, they say, is that they reflect the accumulation of harmful
mutations.
"There are so many genes that are involved in growing a brain, and each
of the genes is vulnerable to mutation in every generation," says
Miller, author of "The Mating Mind: How Sexual Choice Shaped the
Evolution of Human Nature." When too many coincide, illnesses result.
One critic, Joseph Polimeni of the University of Manitoba, in Canada,
points out that because so many psychiatric disorders have strong
environmental triggers, no single explanation can account for all of
them.
Daniel Nettle, a psychology professor at the University of Newcastle,
in England, says he finds the mutation theory persuasive for major
disorders such as schizophrenia.
But he
suggests that other problems, such as addictions, may be outgrowths of
the changing social environment — including modern distractions such as
bars and casinos.
"For
our ancestors, it was quite useful to follow impulses strongly and
spontaneously," he says, while today, with temptations to indulge at
every turn, "suddenly, [these people] have a disorder."
Depression, the most common mental illness, has inspired several
theories on its own.
"Rank theory," proposed by psychiatrist John Price, sees depression as
an adaptation that originally caused losers to withdraw from conflict,
avoid further aggression and accept their subordinate status.
Hagen
has concentrated on the link between depression and social support,
while Paul Andrews, a postdoctoral fellow at the Virginia Institute for
Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, proposes that depression evolved
to help people analyze their problems after a failure.
In the August issue of the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, Keller and Nesse present studies backing both the Hagen and
Andrews hypotheses.
They
show that depressions triggered by different stresses result in
different symptom patterns, suggesting that each developed as a
separate adaptation For instance, Keller says, "failures of effort"
lead to what he calls a "despondent type of depression," with symptoms
such as fatigue, pessimism, guilt, rumination and excessive sleep.
"The
point is really to quit wasting effort and to conserve energy when the
situation has proven itself unpropitious," he says.
By contrast, social losses, including bereavement and failed romances,
lead to emotional pain, crying and the desire to be with loved ones.
Crying may serve as a way of attracting social support, Keller says,
and the desire to avoid emotional pain may provide an incentive to care
for family members.
If we're blocking the depressive symptoms — through medication for
example — we could be hamstringing the body's defenses, Keller says.
New therapies
As the theoretical debate continues, some researchers are developing
evolution-based therapies.
The backdrop to therapeutic lifestyle change, or TLC, is an increase in
depressive illness since World War II, Ilardi says. "There's increasing
evidence that we were never designed for our sedentary, socially
isolated, indoor, sleep-deprived, frenzied, poorly nourished
lifestyle," he says.
Ilardi combines group therapy sessions with a set of lifestyle changes,
each of which has proven effective against depression: aerobic
exercise; ingestion of omega-3 fatty acids; light; positive social
interaction; substituting activity for rumination; and increased sleep.
The
goal is for patients to live more like their Paleolithic ancestors.
The results of the 14-week regimen so far have been encouraging. In an
ongoing study of 79 patients, with two-thirds assigned to his therapy
and the rest to a control group treated mainly with antidepressant
medication or traditional psychotherapy, Ilardi reports a 74% favorable
response, compared with 16% for the controls.
Rebecca Ann Foerschler, a 49-year-old homemaker in Lawrence, Kan., with
three teenage children, entered the study after friends noticed that
she was withdrawing from social and volunteer activities. She says she
also experienced chronic fatigue.
During the therapy, she says, she "relearned how to walk my dog … in a
more aerobic manner," and now on mild winter days she can "get my
sunlight, get my aerobic exercise, and get my dog walked." At the end
of the treatment, Foerschler reported an increase in energy and "a
feeling of my brain being more clear." She describes herself now as
virtually depression-free.
Two other new therapies rely on the common-sense notion that normal,
adaptive functioning can go awry because of unfavorable life
circumstances, including abuse and trauma.
Paul Gilbert, professor of clinical psychology at the University of
Derby and former president of the British Assn. for Behavioral and
Cognitive Psychotherapies, is developing a regimen he calls
"compassionate mind training." Its aim is to help patients who are
highly self-critical learn techniques for soothing themselves.
The therapy draws on both evolutionary psychology and attachment
theory. Certain systems in the mind trigger anxiety and depression,
while others soothe and provide feelings of safety — a capacity that
may not develop in people from abusive or neglectful families, Gilbert
says.
For a pilot study published in December in the journal Clinical
Psychology and Psychotherapy, Gilbert recruited nine volunteers already
undergoing cognitive behavioral therapy for personality disorders or
chronic mood disorders.
Therapists explained the evolutionary significance of attachments to
the participants and helped them analyze the origins of their
self-critical feelings. Participants were taught to feel empathy for
their own distress, and then practiced imagining an "ideal of caring
and compassion."
They kept weekly diaries of their progress. The paper reports "a
significant impact on depression, anxiety, self-attacking, feelings of
inferiority, submissive behavior and shame" among the six who completed
the regimen.
In Toronto, Leslie Greenberg, professor of psychology at York
University, is testing "emotion-focused therapy," which seeks to
replace unhealthy, or maladaptive, emotions with healthy ones.
In an article in the summer issue of the Journal of Contemporary
Psychotherapy, Greenberg offers a case study of a woman suffering from
major depression, anxiety disorder and interpersonal problems after
having been raised by emotionally and physically abusive parents.
Greenberg encouraged the woman to engage in imaginary conversations
with her parents in which she expressed her feelings about their
sadistic behavior.
In therapy, the anger she felt, an adaptive emotion, eventually
replaced her fear and feelings of worthlessness. "She began to create a
new identity narrative," writes Greenberg, "one in which she was worthy
and had unfairly suffered abuse at the hands of cruel parents." That
emotional rewiring left her "open to learn to love" again, he writes.
Shani Robins, president of the Institute for Wisdom Therapy in San
Diego, also draws on evolutionary psychology in his therapy — a
combination of cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness meditation,
training in humility, and psycho-education.
Understanding the evolutionary origin of problems can help patients put
them in perspective, he says. Fear of heights, snakes and open spaces
may have been useful to our ancestors, for example, even if such
phobias seem excessive today.
Explaining these mechanisms "normalizes the reaction itself, and that's
huge," Robins says. "When patients come in, they not only have symptoms
— they're feeling pretty bad about it." In time, they learn to
"self-judge a lot less."
'Paradigm shift'
Despite some progress in research, Leif Edward Ottesen Kennair,
associate professor of psychology at the Norwegian University of
Science and Technology, says that not enough evolutionary psychologists
are investigating mental illness, and not enough clinical psychologists
"are working on developing procedures based on evolutionary
understandings … and testing these out in clinical trials." Much more
such testing needs to be done, he says.
Thomson, of the University of Virginia, agrees that psychiatry has been
slow to adopt evolutionary models. But the situation is changing, he
says, as young clinicians are trained in evolutionary psychology.
"This is a marvelous paradigm shift," he says. "I think it's affecting
very few now, but in time it will affect everybody."
Copyright February 12, 2007 Los
Angeles Times
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