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Old Apr 19, 2013, 03:29 PM
MattMVS7 MattMVS7 is offline
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This question I have is in regards to what happens when a person experiences chronic major depression. Stress hormones (which are called glucocorticoids) rush to the brain and overwork the neurons and overwork the neurons responsible for pleasure to death, causing loss of pleasure activity in the brain.

Now just from using common sense, if someone has chronic major depression in which those glucocorticoids are uncontrolled (in other words, the hypothalamus--a brain region responsible for regulating those glucocorticoids, has failed in terms of regulating the glucocorticoids) and they are overworking and overworking a vast number of those pleasure neurons to death, wouldn't that mean that the rate of activity that the failing hypothalamus is using (gaining) in an attempt to regulate (stop) the glucocorticoids is less than the rate of loss of pleasure activity due to the glucocorticoids overworking and overworking a vast number of those pleasure neurons to death during chronic major depression (since the failing hypothalamus is using less activity in trying to stop the glucocorticoids)? Again, just from using common sense, wouldn't the loss of pleasure activity be greater?

So which answer would you choose: “yes, it does,” or “no, it does not work that way and we don't even know if there are moments (brief, a second or less or more or even for longer periods) during chronic major depression where the rate of loss of pleasure activity just due to the glucocorticoids overworking and overworking those pleasure neurons to death is greater than the rate of activity that the failing hypothalamus gains in an attempt to stop the glucocorticoids.”

Again, do we even know if there are moments (brief, a second or less or more or even for longer periods) during chronic major depression where the rate of loss of pleasure activity just due to the glucocorticoids overworking and overworking those pleasure neurons to death is greater than the rate of activity that the failing hypothalamus gains in an attempt to stop the glucocorticoids?

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  #2  
Old Apr 20, 2013, 09:24 AM
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CharactorAssassin CharactorAssassin is offline
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Posts: 446
You seem to have a very good question. You should email one of those neurologists.
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