Finding Peaks

Exploring Depression: Therapy, Medication, and Lifestyle Changes


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Episode 54
Exploring Depression: Therapy, Medication, and Lifestyle Changes
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Description

In this exciting episode, we are joined by renowned Dr. Ilardi, to discuss his knowledge on treating Major Depressive Disorder with therapy, medication, and lifestyle changes.

Talking Points
  1. Going over different perspectives on how to treat depression
  2. Reviewing how meds for depression work in the brain 
  3. Explaining some simple lifestyle changes that can help immensely 
  4. Clarifying how the environment that contributed to the depression needs to be changed in a positive manner in order for any treatment to be successful
  5. Quotes
    “I feel like, depression is so much more treacherous than we give it credit for being. It is so much harder to fix, it is fixable, completely fixable, but it is so much harder to get it right and keep somebody well. We do our patients a grave disservice by being very cavalier and saying things like, these meds are like magic. When really, the meds are helpful but they’re not all that for so many patients. But if we are willing to really take it seriously, like you all do at Peaks, that’s what I get really excited about.”
    -Dr. Stephen Ilardi, Ph.D. Professor, Clinical Neuroscientist
    Episode Resources:

    ‘The Depression Cure’ by Stephen S. Ilardi, PhD

    Therapeutic Lifestyle Change (TLC)

    Episode Transcripts
    Episode 54 Transcripts

    empathy is knowing your own darkness

    without that connection you don’t have

    anything what’s the opposite of

    addiction just freedom

    hello everyone

    welcome to

    another special episode of finding peaks

    this is a special episode we got a

    special guest with us today and i’m

    excited

    to be a part of this group dynamic uh

    today and we’re gonna also have an

    additional episode uh coming soon as

    well too or thereafter however it works

    out in the time frame of things but

    again welcome my name is brandon burns

    chief executive officer for peaks

    recovery centers you all know me your

    favorite host trying to disrupt an

    industry provide quality of care vision

    insights for family systems

    seeking treatment so that we can empower

    you all to make best possible decisions

    for your loved one for yourself and so

    forth joined today as always by the

    great clinton nicholson chief operating

    officer great lpclic

    all things clinical

    to join us today the heavy-hitting dr

    ryan md board-certified addictionologist

    with us today uh at peaks recovery

    centers and then our

    what’s that chief medical officer i am

    so sorry chief medical officer wow that

    wouldn’t make any sense

    we’ll rewind the tape we’ll fix it

    special guest today dr stephen elardy

    clinical psychologist researcher

    professor university of kansas and

    author of the depression cure the book

    and joining us here today to talk about

    depression major depressive disorders

    all of its variations some anxiety maybe

    we’ll tackle some sud along the way

    welcome

    hey thank you so much for having me it’s

    a pleasure to be here um

    i i’m in such a gas company i didn’t

    realize the great yeah the great the

    chief medical officer yeah

    favorite podcast host or whatever you

    know it’s like

    i this is like some pretty pretty high

    cotton that is pretty impressive i i so

    i’m honored to be yeah trying to give

    you some highlights too because you run

    your own podcast as well too you know

    that’s a new thing okay it’s it’s i

    dabble i don’t know maybe some folks out

    there could identify with this i get

    bored really easily

    so like you know i’ve done nba

    consulting i’ve

    i’ve written blogs for espn i’ve

    done a podcast now youtube channel

    um

    you know it it this is new train for me

    though so being on camera it’s like

    not nervous at all

    well now you know you can come on and

    say you were the greatest host and mean

    it when you say it and just really give

    yourself all the credit i’m taking notes

    they’re the mental notes right now but

    yeah absolutely absolutely the viewers

    at home are like yeah i think he is the

    best host

    that’s gonna be in my bag

    so yeah thank you for being here excited

    about this group and this bunch that we

    have to really talk about

    major depressive disorder

    the symptomology of it and so forth and

    the potential for the cure for it and

    the remission of symptoms and so forth

    and

    as the viewers know we’ve done some

    episodes with you know for example uh dr

    ashley johnson a do psychiatrist with

    colorado recovery services

    here in town doing tms services and a

    lot of great psychiatric work and what

    the reason for highlighting that is

    because in those episodes we talked

    about medication um the benefits of it

    also its limitations and the excitement

    around new opportunities like tms and

    sitting here with uh you know dr o’lardy

    and certainly uh dr ryan johnson here we

    want to uh i think reintroduce that as a

    topic and highlight it through a

    different lens

    and have a really good conversation

    about it the pros of it the cons of it

    uh in that regard and a little bit more

    of a backdrop and we were talking about

    this earlier as well too you know when

    you go to each and every single

    addiction treatment center’s website it

    says we treat dual diagnosis we can

    treat this thing called major depressive

    disorder

    and generally out of that i think it’s

    something like here’s depression and six

    months ago you know the pot smoking was

    taking place or the drug use and so

    forth and somehow our industry keeps

    trying to make it about this thing over

    here and i think what that’s led to from

    an industry standard is uh limitations

    about how we treat major depression

    major depression so certainly here at

    peaks we’re trying to you know work

    alongside you know individuals like you

    to really advance new insights education

    and

    ultimately see

    as an outcome a reduction in symptoms

    around major depressive disorder and do

    more than just med management certainly

    meds are important but you have a

    great deal of analogies and insights

    into this so i’m just going to let you

    fire away and then we’re just going to

    wrap around and talk about it with you

    okay well thanks yeah so the first thing

    i want to say is somebody earlier this

    morning when i was getting to know the

    staff at peaks

    mentioned you know the common thread

    that runs through

    everything that takes place at peaks

    is you’re dealing first and foremost

    with human suffering

    whether or not somebody is battling

    clinical depression whether they’re

    battling a substance use disorder

    whether they’re battling

    associated anxiety or any of the other

    so-called dual diagnoses

    they’re suffering

    and there’s a through line that really

    connects substance use disorders and

    depression and that is reduced

    activity in the brain’s reward circuits

    and probably a lot of the audience have

    heard of brain chemical dopamine which

    is the go-to signaling molecule in those

    reward circuits

    when we’re depressed

    there’s a syndrome that goes along with

    it our fancy we got a fancy word you

    ready you know it the audience may not

    and had anhedonia from the latin

    no hedonic no no pleasure right

    um

    the dopamine-based reward circuits in

    clinical depression don’t fire so the

    person now doesn’t enjoy their normal

    activities the way they used to they

    don’t have sex drive anymore they don’t

    enjoy food anymore

    and

    the person who is battling substance use

    disorder

    when they stop using what we typically

    find is their dopamine reward circuits

    are very blunted

    they they’ve been kind of kicked into

    artificially high modes of activity with

    whatever they were using

    and now they’re

    in this state maybe they’ve gotten

    through withdrawal

    but they’re they’re in recovery and they

    often have a lot of craving

    and the reward circuits are throbbing in

    anticipation like

    what is out there for me

    and they’re going through day-to-day

    life often feeling like things are kind

    of

    blunted things are kind of dim and pale

    and life doesn’t have the vivid colors

    well guess what that’s exactly what my

    depressed patients say

    and we see the same kinds of underlying

    neurological deficits in both and what

    is exciting to me

    is

    many of the same strategies that can

    help

    with that suffering and loss of pleasure

    and depression can also help in

    addiction so to bring it back around

    full circle

    what about the role of medication what

    about their old drugs well it sounds

    kind of ironic and i don’t know if you

    want to go down this rabbit hole but the

    idea of using drugs to treat substance

    use disorder strikes some people as

    counterintuitive

    right yeah

    and yet there’s a really compelling

    rationale for it in all kinds of ways

    and we can talk about that in a bit but

    one of the things the drugs can do

    is to help those reward circuits that

    have been kind of fried

    in the grip of addiction in the grip of

    substance use disorder to help them

    normalize more quickly so the person can

    enjoy the things respond to the rewards

    that we’re supposed to

    rather than this artificial sort of

    reward

    well when it comes to depression

    you hear a lot about serotonin

    you don’t hear nearly as much about

    dopamine but dopamine function is

    crucial

    in depression well why do we hear so

    much more about serotonin because most

    of the depression drugs target serotonin

    why are the depression drugs not

    as effective as we wish they were i mean

    they certainly help a lot of people

    don’t get me wrong millions of lives

    have been improved

    but they’re not the game changers for

    many people that we need them to be that

    we want them to be why not in part

    because when you give a drug like our

    ssris or sssnris to ramp up serotonin

    signaling very often you’re

    simultaneously pushing down on the

    dopamine system that’s why we have

    sexual side effects it’s one of the

    most common side effects right you’re

    pushing down on the on the reward

    circuitry well that’s not really what we

    want

    in depression so we need to augment that

    effect with other things and you know

    because we’ve talked about it a lot

    that i’m a big big proponent of the idea

    that there is no magic bullet in

    depression there’s no single thing

    fancy word monotherapy there’s no

    monotherapy approach there’s no magic

    drug that’s going to completely cure

    forever a person’s depression most of

    the time there are you know rare

    exceptions but

    um the drugs have a place they have a

    role but we have to augment it we have

    to do all the things we can’t just rely

    on the one thing we can’t rely on the

    monotherapy

    so that’s that’s just the first premise

    i wanted to put out there

    i know there are a lot of different so

    i’m curious now too you know and um

    certainly we’re presenting to the team

    earlier which is so grateful for it was

    so uh informed on educational but why

    why how are we in a situation which i

    mean maybe it’s just speaking science or

    we just don’t have the application for

    it yet but why don’t we have drugs that

    do the dopamine thing rather than the

    serotonin we do okay so the one that

    probably a lot of the audience have

    heard of is is the generic is bupropion

    the the trade name is either depending

    on whether you’re taking it for smoking

    cessation or depression the trade name

    is wellbutrin for depression or or zyban

    for smoking cessation same drug

    um

    and

    the problem is that depression is often

    and by often i mean over half the time

    accompanied by a lot of anxiety

    and if you give a drug like wellbutrin

    it’s like oh okay so we’re going to ramp

    up dopamine that’s good we’re going to

    ramp up rewards signaling that’s good

    occasionally a patient will even have

    spontaneous orgasm

    on wealthy trend okay um side effects of

    podcast

    we will circle back around

    there was a grey’s anatomy episode by

    the way for interesting yeah um

    so

    it’s no joke it can ramp up reward

    signaling

    but it can also ramp up anxiety okay

    because the circuits are kind of

    cross-wired a little bit which it’s a

    long story we don’t have to go into but

    so um well what else can we use well

    stimulants

    right adhd meds like um like adderall

    like methylphenidate ritalin like

    vivants all these drugs also ramp up

    dopamine can they be helpful in

    depression yes

    absolutely

    are they commonly used no why because

    well they’re controlled substances a

    have a high addiction potential or at

    least moderate addiction potential be

    but c they also ramp up anxiety

    and so a lot of prescribers are very

    loath to use them even though we’ve got

    these dopamine deficits

    in depression

    that if anything a lot of times the

    medications that we’re throwing at

    depression can make worse

    so then it’s like all right well what

    can we do that’s non-pharmacological to

    ramp up dopamine

    and it turns out thank god there are

    lots of things like physical activity

    like

    ambient sunlight exposure which is about

    and light is a drug literally photons of

    light are drugs

    that hit specialized receptors in the

    back of the eye in the retina that have

    a broadband connection

    to the center of the brain the

    hypothalamus

    and they

    not only

    renormalize our body clock which gets

    out of sync and depression

    not only regulate our sleep regulate our

    hormones but kick up dopamine signaling

    so we’ve probably all had this

    experience when we go out on a bright

    sunny day like we happen to be enjoying

    today

    if we go on a long hike or something

    regardless of the activity level we feel

    energized we feel stimulated and often

    we have better focus because of that

    sort of stimulant-like effect

    when people are depressed though what do

    they do they they don’t go outside they

    crawl into a cave their brain is giving

    them a signal to shut down pull away

    withdrawal

    and

    part of

    effective clinical work with depressed

    populations is validating for them like

    look

    your brain is telling you that you’re

    sick your brain is telling you just like

    when you have the flu

    get away from everybody crawl into a

    cave lick your wounds

    rest tight for a couple weeks till you

    heal

    and when you have the flu that’s great

    listen to the brain when you have

    depression that’s the last thing in the

    world you want to do because that’s

    going to make it worse

    and so a lot of

    the threading the needle with depressed

    patients is validating yes of course you

    feel like shutting down yes of course

    you don’t want to be around other people

    yes of course you have no energy and you

    have no initiative and you’re suffering

    and you’re hurting

    but we have to partner together to help

    you not listen to these signals from

    your brain that are actually broken

    signals right now

    and if we can

    if we can pull off that particular

    clinical trick then we’re actually

    ramping up dopamine signaling and that’s

    the part that i think so many people

    don’t get they’re like well wait a

    minute if you have a brain chemistry

    problem the only possible way to fix it

    is to throw drugs at it or to you know

    put some powerful magnets on the brain

    and call it tms or you know do

    electroshock there if you’re something

    very somatic

    but what we know from the realm of

    neuroscience the realm that i’m trained

    in is experience changes the brain

    and

    activity changes the brain and the food

    we eat changes the brain and our ambient

    light exposure changes the brain so all

    the things

    we think of as like oh my grandma could

    have told me

    to go get some fresh air my grandma

    could have told me oh go get some oh be

    active

    but grandma didn’t know that this is

    like powerful powerful psychoactive sort

    of intervention

    yeah so what i’m hearing though is that

    at least one of the primary barriers is

    that all of the things that you need or

    at least

    a good um

    a good chunk of the things that you need

    to get better or at least to start to

    overcome depression are things that your

    brain are telling you to not engage in

    exactly right and that’s part of the

    tragedy right of depression absolutely

    and you know just to build on that a

    little bit so imagine i’m depressed

    and my doctor gives me an antidepressant

    let’s say

    um lexapro sure it’s one that a lot of

    people have heard of acetal frame

    and

    um

    one of the things it’s doing

    is it’s eventually going to kick up

    activity in my serotonin circuits what

    does that do well

    it’s going to help put the brakes

    a bit on my stress response circuits

    which is good because they tend to be

    way too active in depression

    but they’re also going to do this really

    cool magical thing called

    neuroplasticity they’re going to

    increase the brain’s ability

    to make new connections and new

    associations and by the way that ability

    is really compromised in the presence so

    when people are depressed they cannot

    easily learn new things they can’t

    easily acquire new

    associations and new parts of their

    repertoire they’re kind of

    closed sure and so you give them a drug

    like lexapro is like oh this is amazing

    this is going to kick up

    the brain’s growth hormone it’s called

    bdnf if folks want to look it up and now

    they’re going to have greater

    neuroplasticity here’s the problem

    most patients with depression who get

    treatment all they get is the drug and

    it’s like here take this drug

    and good luck with that go back to your

    life

    and well in a lot of cases their life

    has some toxic elements to it so we’re

    sending them to an environment that’s

    negative

    or at least that has some prominent

    negative features sometimes by the way

    is a side effect of the depression

    because when we’re depressed we’re not

    at our best and we can actually have a

    sort of corrosive effect on some

    relationships because we’ve been shut

    down because we’ve been withdrawing and

    we’ve been ghosting people and we’ve

    been not responding to them

    and now we give them the drug okay great

    i got more plasticity but i’m going back

    to a life that has a lot of negative

    elements and now i’m

    making those associations so it’s like

    oh

    the drug is making me more responsive to

    my environment and i’ve done nothing to

    fix my environment

    yeah

    hey

    maybe that’s a reason why these drugs

    are not more effective than they

    actually turn out to be maybe these

    drugs have the potential to be a lot

    more effective

    if we could attend to the

    neuroplasticity angle and provide a

    supportive context so provide

    a beautifully healing support of milieu

    yeah this sounds like an ad i love it

    and i’m thinking about going you know

    for the for the viewers out there that

    can’t see you know your slides in your

    presentation right i’m thinking of the

    pie chart right where 76 roughly 76 77

    of the time they’re just getting that

    you know mono therapeutic approach

    through medications most patients with

    depression if they get treatment all

    they’re getting is meds all they’re

    getting is meds that is wild

    when it’s such a complex issue as we’ll

    get into certainly here around your web

    analogy and so forth and then i think

    out of that as well too it’s somewhere

    you know 4.8 to 5.6 percent somewhere

    and they’re just received psychotherapy

    alone

    and then 18 roughly of the popular

    population receives both psychotherapy

    and medication as a management

    at the same time in lieu of that pie

    chart and that incredible data right we

    have more depression anxiety and so

    forth than ever before

    and then we have these medications and

    no wonder we’re arriving at sort of a

    frustration here in american culture

    there’s such

    a belief in

    the med only a sort of approach yet it’s

    not really resolving the problem and

    it’s kind of like you know for me i i

    just i want to shake the tree of

    american culture and say let’s wake up

    to this and let’s put

    all these other benefits like you were

    talking about the light and all of these

    natural things and also how through

    psychotherapy maybe it’s a residential

    program maybe it’s ambulatory you know

    uh you were saying something uh

    wonderful earlier as well too like how

    can we be you know the frontal lobe how

    can we be the how can we do that for you

    as you get well in the process yeah

    should we unpack that a little bit yes

    please so

    so

    i

    that’s like page 9 15 100. it’s all over

    the book so

    yeah please unpack it okay so

    um

    depression hits so many different

    circuits in the brain and takes them

    offline or or just compromises them so

    they don’t work as well and one of the

    most important to me

    is this set of circuits in the frontal

    cortex and they lateralize to the left

    so it’s really cool people are always

    fascinated by left brain right brain and

    a lot of the popular ideas about what

    that is are are off-base but

    one of them to put it gently but one of

    the ways that lateralization matters is

    the left frontal cortex has circuits

    that help us go after the things that we

    want and initiate

    sort of pull the trigger if i can you

    can i use that metaphor yes i’m in

    colorado with that yeah

    pull the trigger on

    our

    um the things we want to do so if i’m

    sitting on the couch i am sitting you

    know if i’m sitting on a couch and i’m

    like oh i should get up

    and i should get out it would help me to

    get up and go for a brisk walk outside

    maybe walk the dog whatever

    um if i’m depressed

    my left frontal cortex takes that

    impulse

    and it’s like

    flatline like oh i should do that i got

    nothing

    it’s like i’ve fallen and i can’t get up

    it’s like i’m sitting and i can i and

    and what our depressed patients tell us

    all the time

    is i know the things that will help me

    and i can’t make myself do

    them when i started crafting the

    therapeutic lifestyle change program for

    depression what several colleagues told

    me is yes we see the research we see the

    science we see the evidence we know

    these things will help but they’re all

    the things people can’t do when they’re

    depressed right

    and and my gentle pushback was

    friendly amendment these are things they

    cannot initiate often when they’re

    depressed but if they have someone to

    partner with them to provide them that

    spark of initiative that their left

    frontal cortex is not giving

    then they can do them so let’s take

    exercise for example so what is the

    antidepressant dose of exercise luckily

    it’s very low

    the the most robustly established

    antidepressant what do i mean by

    antidepressant as effective as the

    average drug for the average patient

    three times a week

    i’ll say it again because it’s low 30

    minutes of brisk aerobic walking three

    times a week

    that’s been tested in head-to-head

    trials against zoloft sertraline

    twice now at my alma mater duke

    university

    and found to be every bit as effective

    in the short term more effective

    at preventing recurrence

    and it’s super low dose but

    patients with depression usually have

    trouble making themselves do it so what

    do we do we partner with them we say you

    know would you let us play the role of

    your left frontal cortex would you let

    us

    schedule the exercise with you

    or with your trainer would you let us

    then give you a little prompt a little

    tickler a little reminder what do you

    call it tickler that’s fine i think that

    works yeah

    i don’t know i’m looking at the

    millennial in the room

    no

    yeah i’m in between is there a cooler

    i’m on the latter end of the millennial

    spectrum right now i’ve got to have a

    cooler word yeah i’m the

    i don’t oh

    i don’t have a cooler word than tickler

    yeah

    um so a little tickler

    a half hour before the workout like hey

    you know we just just took a little

    reminder we you know we’re mrs jones you

    know we’re going to be meeting in a half

    hour

    and it’s like oh now the trainer is

    playing the role of the left frontal

    cortex giving that signal that spark

    that the depressed person is not getting

    on their own so what do we find people

    with depression can exercise people with

    depression can enjoy exercise people

    with depression can benefit enormously

    but they cannot make themselves do it

    usually

    so we have to let go of the judgment we

    have to let go of the nagging we have to

    let go of the self-blame

    and just be freaking realist about it

    it’s like

    let’s validate for people that are

    suffering with depression it’s like yes

    depression is taking you away from your

    best self

    it’s robbing you of capabilities that

    you normally have

    and there’s no judgment

    but we’re going to partner with you

    to help you do the things that you need

    to do

    to get well

    because when you’re well you’ll be able

    to initiate all the things again

    hopefully yeah if you could before you

    you got depressed then you’ll be able to

    again yeah yeah absolutely and i think

    that’s the that’s the that’s a special

    sauce in the tlc model because you know

    at peaks recovery certainly we have an

    opportunity to front line with

    medications and do what we can there and

    i hope that the viewers watching this as

    well too can hear all the things that

    doctors are trying to roll through in

    their heads as prescribers or even

    mid-level providers as they go through

    this because i mean that’s back to my

    point about the dopamine medication it’s

    like don’t we have these things you know

    it was kind of rhetorical right we do

    have these things but why don’t we throw

    that at them you know in that sort of

    way because it comes with all these

    consequences a med and then a med to

    manage the symptoms of the med and you

    know potentially all of this you know

    fallout

    and then on the other side of that we

    have psychotherapy you know but the med

    is going to take time to ramp up and the

    depressed patient is having difficulty

    just sitting in that environment and it

    feels like as the next sensible thing

    and why this tlc model is so fascinating

    uh is because now we can do so much more

    with the time that we have them within

    these residential settings and

    differently than the challenges of your

    you know your research studies where

    they had to kind of go home come back

    report that sort of thing and you’ve got

    them yeah

    and you can provide a level of support

    and a level of for one of the better

    word stress management sure that you

    know is just going to be so

    incredibly beneficial for many patients

    and so with the integration i mean

    when you talk about depression i just

    keep having this

    this idea of like paralysis right it’s

    like almost like a neural paralysis

    where things just are stuck like you

    can’t

    move in any way shape or form

    neurologically to a certain degree and

    then you have something you introduce

    medication which gives you

    neuroplasticity right so you’ve got some

    room to maneuver at that point but then

    that desire to

    to actually make those changes and push

    forward and push through that paralysis

    requires almost like

    neural like a neural partner right like

    somebody to come and partner with you in

    order to push you along and so then you

    have these all of a sudden though you’ve

    got all of the major components

    especially in something like a

    residential program where you can really

    come at it from all these different

    angles and like you said do all the

    things right exactly right and then we

    have iop right where we get to help them

    make those habits lifelong habits and

    and change the environment they’re in

    and i think that’s what’s exciting about

    this yes that’s a really important point

    too right because we were talking about

    this earlier but

    so much of the if we if we zoom out to

    landscape of mental health and treating

    depression what we see

    is it’s challenging to treat depression

    in the short term

    in the first couple months

    but we have the tools if we’re willing

    to do all the things we’ve got the tools

    it’s like we’ve got this in the great

    majority of cases

    the bigger challenge is treating it in

    the long term

    very similar case i would say i think

    you’d agree with substance use disorders

    where absolutely you know the short-term

    outcomes are better generally than the

    long-term outcomes and yet we’re playing

    the long game

    we want our patients to thrive in the

    long term and so that means now how can

    we pivot from this very cocoon like can

    i use that word this oasis like

    environment of 45 days where i’m going

    to be

    really well cared for

    but everything in my environment is

    controlled and now i’ve got to pivot

    back out to the real world my life as it

    exists outside

    how do i take all of these new tools and

    skills and associations and generalize

    them out to my life in the world and

    that that is

    i mean

    it’s like you’re speaking my love

    language now because because i mean i’m

    so excited about this this 45-day

    residential i mean

    that’s miraculous that that exists

    but then to be able to take that and

    take it out into somebody’s you know

    real world life is is so important

    absolutely

    yeah

    um

    yeah so well there are a lot of

    different directions we can go yeah with

    this yeah one of the one of the

    challenges of integrated care and i

    don’t know if uh if there’s you know a

    tone you can put on it or give us some

    insights or just a general conversation

    but you go to integrate the care and

    major depressive patient and sud patient

    are sitting next to each other and say

    i’m not like that person and i’m not

    like that person and why are we in the

    same room together and you’re treating

    something different but it reminds you

    know going back to that you know the the

    dopamine you know uh reward circuits you

    remember reward circuits in scenario

    that’s the that’s the intersection

    that’s the bridge well the two two

    bridges one is profound suffering yeah

    profound suffering

    and you know i i don’t know if you all

    find this but i find that when people

    are suffering

    a lot of the superfluous things in life

    get stripped away and people get very

    real

    because it’s like you know i mean like i

    worked for three months on a brain tumor

    clinic

    with patients that

    for the most part had about a year to

    live

    and it was the most existentially

    profound experience professionally of my

    life because people just get so most

    people not everyone but most people just

    get very dialed in to what’s important

    and what’s not

    and i feel like a lot of sud patients

    get that way

    i mean they’ve been to the brink a lot

    absolutely right they’ve been to the

    brink

    a lot of depressed patients have been

    suicidal they’ve been to the brink some

    of them made a town some of them made

    serious attempts

    and then you know now they’re at this

    moment where they’re like i you know

    i can’t take much more of this i need

    some relief and they’re coming to you

    and they’re desperate

    and your sud patients are coming to you

    and they’re desperate

    so

    they’re experiencing the suffering

    and

    they have

    compromised reward circuits and you know

    for those who want to take the deep dive

    there’s a dopamine receptor subtype that

    helps coordinate

    activity in the these circuits are

    called d2 receptors

    and long story short

    people with sud have low levels of d2

    receptors so the reward circuits don’t

    work correctly they don’t get high on

    life but they get way way way too much

    reward from substances of abuse

    people with depression also low d2

    receptors also wonky reward circuitry so

    they’re kindred

    yeah and by the way there’s a lot of

    overlap because a lot of people with

    depression self-medicate

    and a lot of addicts become depressed

    and a lot of those who are not addicts

    but just sud you know abuse folks get

    depressed so and i think both of those

    worlds those uh people suffering from

    either sud or depression feel isolated

    they feel like they feel completely

    disconnected and brilliant and again

    yeah earlier in the day we talked about

    the idea of you know the opposite of

    addiction being connection and so the i

    and we were talking about the opposite

    of suffering is also connection yeah so

    it’s interesting you get it’s this

    ironic thing again where you have two

    people sitting next to each other who

    feel so far apart but they’re actually

    so close together and one of the actual

    things that would make them feel even

    better was is to find that connection

    with each other and to share that so

    it’s just this kind of i i don’t know i

    think that we we live in a world of

    irony a lot of times in what we do

    there’s so many levels of irony that we

    are dealing with and it’s just really

    interesting to hear them point it out

    that way and uh sort of have a different

    angle and a different lens to look at it

    through that’s a great connection i love

    that

    yeah just this idea that whether

    somebody’s sud or depressed

    they’re experiencing the sense of

    alienation absolutely the sense of

    isolation and

    often just profound disconnection yeah

    often also i hadn’t thought about this

    but profound

    self-loathing

    absolutely that’s literally a symptom of

    depression

    is self-deprecation self-loathing but so

    common in sud as well because people

    have made really bad decisions often and

    they’re beating themselves up and

    they’re seeing the fallout absolutely

    and i think we as a you know peaks we’ve

    really we we work really hard to try to

    get rid of this idea of

    uh substance use disorder and mental

    health disorder being different they are

    so the same you know they are so

    intertwined it’s it’s again it goes it

    goes back to suffering and it goes back

    to this connection it goes back to

    self-loathing it goes back to

    this a sort of neural paralysis that you

    exist in and and the treatment again is

    uh is

    there’s so much overlap and can be so

    similar for both sides exactly and it’s

    um

    yeah so it’s just it’s great to hear i

    don’t know some affirmation for that to

    be quite honest yeah well i get really

    excited about it and you know the other

    thing i just want if it’s okay to circle

    back to something you said earlier just

    about

    um okay so you’ve got 45 days if if

    somebody’s coming residential if they’re

    doing intensive outpatient it’s a little

    bit different but

    when somebody’s suffering they want

    relief immediately

    if we use a standard anti-depressant so

    the typical treatment that the majority

    of patients are going to get one

    antidepressant standard off the shelf

    garden variety anti-depressant they’re

    told usually like two to six weeks

    depending if you’re lucky two weeks if

    you’re not so lucky maybe four to six

    weeks four kicks in and we see anxiety

    three weeks depression four weeks is

    typical okay there you go yeah

    you know and there are exceptions or you

    know uh

    so

    what what are we at that’s faster

    well you know there’s a lot of

    excitement around

    more i think of them maybe you all don’t

    as a little bit more extreme

    interventions um some folks obviously

    have heard for decades about

    electroshock that we now call

    electroconvulsive therapy it’s faster

    has re there are reasons why it’s not a

    go-to intervention for most people but

    it is faster

    tms transcranial magnetic stimulation

    is faster for some people the effects

    are not as robust yet as i would like

    them to be but there’s there’s still it

    can be faster well guess what this is

    where i get super excited

    light therapy bright light therapy not

    just for somebody who has winter onset

    depression not just for somebody who has

    seasonal depression or sad some people

    have heard

    for any depression

    effects can kick in within five to seven

    days

    it’s fast acting

    now i’ve got a nutritional intervention

    that can kick in within seven days

    acetyl l-carnitine

    and acetyl-carnitine is like it’s a

    nutrient

    that

    our bodies mostly have to i say a

    nutrient it’s it’s a a nutrient that our

    bodies make out of substrate that we get

    from our diet how about that and the

    more we age

    the crappier our body isn’t making it so

    if you look at people who are depressed

    in their teens and 20s their levels of

    acetyl-carnitine are usually sort of

    okay they’re lower than we would want

    them to be but they’re okay and and

    what it means is if their levels are low

    the powerhouse the mitochondria of their

    brain cells are not as efficient and so

    literally their brain is getting a bit

    underpowered

    and the circuits that they need

    uh get fatigued more quickly

    so they can’t fire as efficiently okay

    so we can supplement with

    acetyl-l-carnitine and the best research

    is two thousand milligrams a day divided

    dose so a thousand milligrams twice a

    day

    and not only in the best

    meta-analysis studies of studies does

    acetyl-l-carnitine

    outperform placebo

    with an effect size that’s roughly on

    par with medication

    has no common side effects

    and effects kick in typically within

    about a week

    and were you saying that’s more

    important with age more important with

    the thank you right it’s yeah so for

    those of us who are of a certain age

    on the wrong side 40 how about the wrong

    side of 40

    yeah

    there’s some really nice signal in the

    in the research that says that

    middle-aged and older depressed

    individuals really respond right and

    younger individuals are less likely to

    have that i haven’t heard of that before

    so yeah it’s a pretty cool little little

    tidbit

    and there are other things as well but i

    guess my point is

    that

    even if we don’t want to go to something

    as extreme as electro-convulsive therapy

    to get that really fast effect because

    we’re we’re all impatient we’re

    americans

    we’re not saying right of course we’re

    impatient but people are suffering

    people’s lives are hanging in the

    balance of course we’re impatient

    we don’t have to wait four weeks

    we have things already in the toolkit

    that can get this recovery going and get

    it going pretty quickly

    and i think a lot of people don’t

    realize that can i give you one more

    please okay

    we did we did not rehearse this we don’t

    script this i’m totally going off script

    now ladies and gentlemen

    and brandon is he bold

    i’m open to it okay

    martin luther said sin boldly so here we

    go um

    good intro

    it’s a little reformation yeah the

    viewers at home are like

    come on sin boldly where is he taking

    this

    yeah

    you you’ll edit that out yeah um

    there is a

    novel

    integrative intervention

    called

    chronotherapy

    have you heard of it i’m not familiar

    okay it involves three things the first

    of which is going to blow your mind yeah

    you want to know how to get

    an immediate antidepressant effect with

    someone even if they’re severely

    depressed it will warning disclaimer it

    will only last for about 12 hours

    keep the person up for 36 straight hours

    i kid you not

    acute sleep

    deprivation 36 hours of continuous

    wakefulness has a profound acute

    antidepressant effect why do we not use

    it aside from the obvious people don’t

    like staying up 36 hours

    because

    as soon as the person goes to sleep when

    they wake up the next day they’re right

    back where they started there’s zero

    enduring effect

    but proof of concept

    sleep deprivation strategically employed

    antidepressant we can build on that

    second

    component

    circadian

    circuit reset

    most people with depression have a body

    clock that is out of sync with the

    ambient world around them

    the most common form of circadian phase

    shifting

    is the person’s body clock

    thinks that it is a couple hours maybe

    three hours later than it really is

    so we say it’s phase advanced so they

    wake up let’s say they’re wake time

    what’s the wait time in the room here

    six a.m is that yeah say six it’s great

    okay yeah so their wake time is 6 a.m

    but they’re wide awake at 3 a.m because

    their body clock is telling them oh it’s

    we call this by the way terminal

    insomnia because it’s at the terminus of

    their sleep cycle interesting okay

    so we want to phase shift them

    three hours

    right and that will help a lot it will

    help with their sleep which has

    antidepressant therapeutic effects the

    final thing is the use of bright light

    therapy which we’ve talked about before

    so you combine all three

    there is a center for chronotherapy in

    chicago

    that’s a residential

    facility

    we really should talk about this is

    pretty cool because you guys could do

    this

    um where they have

    patients come in and they’re like okay

    we’re going to combine these three

    things

    so we’re going to keep you up 36

    straight hours

    and then we’re going to

    let you sleep for a while

    actually it’ll be more than 36 or eight

    hours it’ll be we’re basically going to

    shift their body clock about four hours

    every day

    until we’ve run all the way through

    the the clock if you think if you do the

    math in your head it’s like five or six

    days

    and we’re going to hit them with a

    massive dose of therapeutic bright light

    as soon as they wake up

    to give a signal of circadian reset to

    be like okay hey you know what

    um it’s now 8 am but your brain thinks

    it’s noon hey it’s now noon or 8 am but

    your brain thinks it’s four in the

    afternoon and then the next day eight

    in the evening and after a week you’ve

    run the entire cycle your back around

    where you started

    and you can get them entrained

    perfectly to the world around them you

    get the acute benefit of sleep

    deprivation it doesn’t go away because

    you’re continually keeping the brain off

    balance and you have the antidepressant

    effect of the bright light

    and you can now connect with people

    because they’re up at the same time

    exactly yeah and at the center for

    chronotherapy in chicago

    they um you know they try to use the

    milieu of it right so they have like

    activities for folks when it’s four in

    the morning and they’re all up and they

    and they shine pretty bright light out

    in the patient day room where they’re

    all hanging out

    so it’s a it’s a but it’s a very fast

    acting

    very powerful oh by the way it’s been

    used in bipolar depression

    and patients with bipolar are

    exquisitely sensitive to light

    exquisitely sensitive to changes in

    circadian rhythm exquisitely sensitive

    to sleep deprivation

    and

    it has a roughly 50 percent acute

    response rate in bipolar depression in a

    week

    which is

    far higher

    than any in a week any current

    therapeutic medication that we have for

    bipolar depression

    so there’s some all kinds of really cool

    exciting potentials i would say

    and not to veer off script here but uh

    on the manic side of bipolar disorder

    wasn’t there a light benefit or an

    anti-light benefit yeah because yeah

    thank you so bipolar patients i don’t

    know if you guys have ever experimented

    with this but bipolar patients

    exquisitely sensitive to light

    and very sensitive to um

    time change

    you know going on and off of daylight

    savings time can often be a trigger for

    depression or mania

    but it’s recently been discovered that

    when a patient with bipolar is manic

    or

    mixed where there’s sort of

    simultaneously manic and some depressive

    symptoms

    if you use polarized wraparound goggles

    or lenses polarized in the sense that

    they’re that deep amber

    okay kind of like if folks know the rock

    star bono of youtube

    he has glaucoma

    and has to filter out that light for

    medical reasons for it’s the same basic

    principle

    um

    patients with mania who filter out

    probably most people know about blocking

    blue light like at night it’s blue light

    is very stimulating

    patients with mania where they block out

    blue light 24 7 and then stay out of

    direct sunlight

    it has enormous potential to break a

    manic episode

    and can be used in tandem with

    anti-manic medication

    to potentiate the effect to quicken the

    effect to speed it up to make it more

    robust

    and in some cases i’m not recommending

    this at all but in some cases it’s been

    used without medication for patients

    as you probably know sometimes when

    patients are manic they they do

    everything against medical advice

    because they have impaired judgment

    and they will not take them in

    but sometimes they will agree to wear

    the cool bono glasses

    right sounds like a fantastic

    alternative

    um

    so i feel like we’re just scratching the

    tip of the iceberg

    on leveraging

    the neurological power

    of lifestyle based intervention

    these things are like drugs and their

    effects on the brain

    absolutely yeah

    powerful stuff so dr ryan yeah you got

    the challenging job we got to keep him

    up for 36 hours

    you get hazardous duty pay for that

    right

    i love the idea i think we need a little

    more robust nursing staff

    you’d have to definitely make some new

    hires for sure

    no but i’m curious dr reddit i mean

    there’s somebody who you know you live

    in the trenches with this right i’ve

    seen i and i’ve

    you know being in rounds with you and um

    with working with the clinical team the

    medical team even our residential team

    and and seeing people struggle and

    really trying to get a hold on what is

    going to be the best approach to help

    stabilize them to help keep them engaged

    to help

    i mean we’re not even at symptom

    reduction yet at that point right but uh

    but listening to this and listening to

    this sort of approach and which does

    feel integrative it actually has a

    genuinely holistic feel to it i’m just

    curious what your response is

    i love it um i mean i think it has the

    potential

    now to fix them while they’re with us

    but more importantly to set them up for

    success in the future um

    when he spoke

    earlier today steve you talked about a

    spider web

    yeah

    do you want to yeah go ahead and talk

    about this

    [Laughter]

    he talked about depression be having a

    lot of different attachments and

    basically every every

    thing you can pull off so a medication

    you’re pulling off a big string you’re

    pulling off another string with light

    therapy with exercise with connectedness

    with nutrition what am i missing

    uh habits of healthy sleep habits of

    healthy sleep i mean you’re just pulling

    more off of that

    brain axis and yeah

    and i think the more we more of those

    strings we can pull off

    the better people are going to do i love

    the analogy i think it’s great for thank

    you yeah

    yeah metaphor metaphor analogy

    yes yes

    so

    yeah i i mean i a patient

    actually actually

    many years ago said to me you know i

    just feel like i’m caught in this web

    um and it always stayed with me that

    that image of like being trapped in this

    web and then when i started thinking

    about how depression involves all these

    different layers of dysregulation

    molecular

    neurochemical

    hormonal

    cognitive affective potential and we

    haven’t even talked about like the

    attentional biases people when they’re

    depressed

    the brain only wants to go to negative

    things people when they’re depressed

    they they don’t want to be around other

    people so there’s the social withdrawal

    piece there’s the i mean there’s so many

    different layers and it’s like this web

    and our typical approach like we talked

    about earlier is monotherapy we’re going

    to do the one thing we’re looking for

    the one magic

    stone that we can throw at the web and

    bring the whole thing down

    and sometimes we get lucky sometimes we

    get lucky and the one thing really does

    bring it down for some people some for

    some time

    but god it just makes so much more sense

    to think about like what if i have a

    whole pocket full of stones or you know

    like a shotgun or something where i can

    just blast this thing

    and i feel like

    how about this

    depression is so much more treacherous

    than we give it credit for being it’s so

    much harder to fix it is fixable

    it’s completely fixable but it’s so much

    harder to to get it well and keep

    somebody well

    and we do our patients a grave

    disservice by

    being very cavalier and very oh yeah

    yeah we got this our these meds are like

    magic these it’s like the meds you know

    they’re helpful but they’re not all that

    for so many patients but if we’re

    willing to really take it seriously like

    you all do at peaks that’s what i get

    really excited about yeah i’m going to

    send you so many patients yeah

    [Laughter]

    love it also would love to figure out a

    you know path forward to you know we

    have a setting in which

    you know it’s a little bit different

    than the ambulatory stylus setting in

    which we could approach you know maybe a

    project of research or something around

    it to really ignite this and

    locate its value proposition because

    this is exciting stuff and

    i don’t want to insist that we’re the

    only treatment center thinking of this

    in america but

    i think our industry is sort of missing

    this opportunity to really

    bring in all of these things at the same

    time but to do that we have to

    responsibly think about integration of

    care we cannot just talk about drugs in

    these settings that’s a really visionary

    a rich genuinely visionary sort of

    approach because i mean here’s what i’m

    thinking and maybe

    you all tell me if i’m too naive about

    this because you know the biz way better

    than i do

    my feeling is

    if you could get

    some sort of

    funding sponsorship

    to pay for the research to

    like legitimately show with a carefully

    controlled conducted research study

    that this kind of multi-pronged

    approach this

    doing all the things approach

    is highly effective

    now you’ve got this

    publication that you can

    take to all the industry people all the

    leaders all the you know and say

    don’t just take our word for it like we

    you know

    we have

    independent verification that what we’re

    doing is working

    and we’d like we’d like to make this the

    gold standard yeah but to do it right

    it’s going to take some money

    some money some time a lot of time

    to get it right why did you point to me

    because

    when i when i hear all the things i

    think that is your

    you are mr all the things that yes wait

    doctor

    he’s director of all things

    chief of all things at peace recovery

    centers there

    there’s so much to expand on to talk

    about to be excited about on this i do

    you know while we got the the sort of

    the medi the met the strict medical lens

    here before we invite the the clinical

    side of things into this you know the

    anti-ruminating you know uh

    psychotherapy psychotherapy approaches

    and so forth into this i i did want to

    touch base you know chris burns one of

    the host president founder of peace

    recovery centers is often talking about

    the vulnerable population

    and what i what i would like to talk

    about is that you know it really uh

    struck me as kind of obvious for myself

    when you were talking about it earlier

    with our team but

    you know i wake up in the morning and i

    get the sunshine i think this is a

    beautiful day look at this mountain

    that’s in front of me pike’s peak

    america’s mountain man so beautiful you

    know we live among nature we get to see

    deer running across the highway we get

    it all here in you know colorado uh in

    that regard and so

    you know you get this high on life sort

    of experience when your dopamine levels

    are up and that’s my common experience

    and why it resonates with me so much

    with those lower dopamine levels that’s

    the vulnerable person we’re talking

    about right because they’re taking the

    drug and they take it and all of a

    sudden it’s the mountain they’re high on

    life this is what this guy brandon was

    experiencing when he was talking to me

    about looking at the mountain that i

    don’t experience

    yeah exactly right so that’s that’s

    that’s one of the real

    under

    appreciated and i think misunderstood

    elements of the

    the brain of the person vulnerable to

    addiction vulnerable to substance use

    disorder is

    they’re very often genetically

    predisposed to those low d2 receptor

    levels so in other words genetically

    predisposed to not

    be able

    as much to get high in life

    and to have the drug be able to hack

    into their reward circuits the drug

    takes over and says

    this is what you’ve been missing yeah

    this is now your home

    now you’re in a space where you feel on

    top of the world

    by the way fun side note psilocybin

    actually does not light up the brain’s

    reward circuit or lsd or any of those

    it really does i didn’t get that message

    when i was doing it

    it could be i mean obviously it could be

    really

    yeah i mean depending on your own

    experience it certainly can have a

    reward component by the way

    a lot of

    folks probably know psilocybin is now

    being actively investigated

    as a

    supercharging agent for effective

    psychotherapy for depression

    so

    you know it increases plasticity it

    opens people up to reconceptualizing

    their stuckness

    and under expert therapeutic guidance it

    can be a

    catalyst

    for a lot of healing for a lot of you

    know sort of rapid response so i think

    it’s been a little bit overhyped

    oversold but i’m not in any way opposed

    to that kind of research and work i just

    want to

    basically i’m just giving like a public

    service announcement for magic mushrooms

    they are being actively investigated at

    some of the leading research centers in

    the world as a

    legitimate psychiatric

    agent

    but they don’t they’re not a drug of

    addiction typically yeah um but yeah

    like alcohol how about i mean there’s a

    very common drug of addiction

    um

    you know

    can i say this we were out to dinner

    last night there may have been a glass

    or two of alcohol consumed

    um in a very responsible manner and

    um

    a little bit of dopaminergic reward

    which you know all drugs of addiction do

    but if somebody has high d2 receptor

    levels they just walk away they’re just

    like oh yeah that was fine whatever

    um

    and so i feel like once we start viewing

    addiction through this lens of these are

    our

    brothers and sisters our fellow

    travelers

    who are laboring right now with the

    burden of reward circuits that don’t get

    lit up the way they’re supposed to

    when they hug a friend when they see the

    beauty of nature when they have an uh a

    professional accomplishment when they

    have sex when they do anything

    except for using and when they’re using

    then it lights everything up and that’s

    a tragedy and you know it’s like if we

    can have that viewpoint for me at least

    i’ll just speak to myself judgment melts

    away

    and compassion

    seems to be the only sane response

    yeah you know um so yeah i just i

    i love the work you’re doing um i i love

    i love the compassion i love the sanity

    i love the

    you know the community absolutely um

    yeah

    so

    well i think that’s beautiful and

    exactly what we’re you know what we’re

    coming to here when we apprecia we can

    all appreciate that decisions are being

    made around alcohol use drug use and so

    forth

    but at the level of decision making

    they

    those who suffer from addiction

    don’t know

    that that is the underlying thing within

    their being right that’s going to get

    ignited and that experience is going to

    happen making them most vulnerable or

    susceptible to

    gosh i want to do that one more time

    just to because that felt really right

    in that moment in displaced this moral

    personal responsibility conundrum thing

    we find ourselves stuck and i think as a

    society to say well they chose right we

    all choose but we’re all kind of

    vulnerable and susceptible in different

    ways within those choices and that

    displaces personal responsibility uh

    in a much different way than i

    experience personal responsibility and

    they’re just like i think that choice

    narrative is actually true for people

    who struggle with depression as well

    because we’re so cavalier with what we

    identify as depression

    there is this idea well then just stop

    being depressed you know like go do

    stuff oh my god yourself feel better

    just snap out of it just absolutely do

    the things that you it’s like stop doing

    the drugs snap out of the get stop being

    so sad all the time you know watch a

    funny movie that it’s it’s all of these

    very like simplistic very misinformed

    kind of perceptions that we have that

    are ingrained culturally and have turned

    what are really debilitating illnesses

    into taboos absolutely and one of the

    really interesting things that happens

    when somebody’s recovering from

    addiction

    is it takes a while and by a while i

    mean like three to 12 months

    for their reward circuits to start

    getting

    normal again near normal

    near normal yeah more normal

    normal enough to be

    to get them past the craving and you

    know

    um

    once they can push through with massive

    support

    and compassion and acceptance

    to get to a place of sustained recovery

    their d2 receptors start to normalize

    their reward circuit starts they start

    to regain the ability to get high on

    life

    why

    because substance use actually changes

    the brain and pushes those d2 receptors

    down

    substance use actually makes the reward

    circuits more blunted

    and

    sobriety

    extended through time

    allows the reward circuits to normalize

    and heal experience changes the brain

    and that’s a profound sort of thought

    yes we may be born genetically more

    vulnerable less vulnerable but guess

    what

    i’ve known lots of people who were born

    genetically not vulnerable to addiction

    never had a problem until they were

    prescribed

    an opiate

    prescribed a benzodiazepine like xanax

    by the way benzodiazepines the number

    one most prescribed class of psychiatric

    meds in the u.s

    party drugs

    possibly

    what could possibly go wrong

    zany

    yeah it’s our most prescribed that’s

    crazy um so anyway i’m not here to bash

    well a little bit yeah

    and so easy to find in the black market

    as well too of course it’s everywhere

    but here’s my point yeah

    i have known people who were as far as i

    know the only person in their very vast

    extended genetic circle that had an

    addiction they were addicted to benzos

    why because they’re

    typically family practice stock 90 of no

    offense 90 of benzos are prescribed by

    general practice

    dogs not psychiatrists psychiatrists

    usually see the danger usually not

    always

    the best the best family practice not

    always the best family practice doctor

    see the danger but a lot don’t right

    okay

    so they’re prescribed the benzo

    as a sleep aid yeah but they take it

    every night yeah after getting their

    ritalin and adderall yeah right yeah so

    but but then after a couple years now

    they are completely addicted

    they did not start off with an addictive

    vulnerability we created the addictive

    vulnerability but now that they’re

    addicted their d2 receptor levels are

    low even though they were born with a

    nice high genetic level you see it so

    regardless of whether if you’re born

    with a low level

    well guess what getting connected with

    people being immersed in community

    exercising regularly

    having better nutrition getting good

    sleep all those things actually raise

    your d2 receptor levels make you less

    vulnerable and so people get out of our

    detox they’re like why do i still feel

    crappy

    and then

    you have to be honest it’s going to take

    a year before you start feeling near

    normal yeah in two years before you’re

    fairly normal yeah and well dr ryan

    every addiction treatment center website

    says we can fix this we can support this

    and i think that to your point and the

    reason i’m highlighting that because i’m

    vulnerable to it you know we want to be

    in a position to help people and our

    website says something similar i think

    we want to have more transparent honest

    discussions about what this is going to

    take from mental health primary to sud

    primary you know a dual diagnosis of you

    know maybe both categories uh in that

    regard that we’re dealing with something

    quite complex and it’s not taboo we

    don’t shake it and it goes away we don’t

    say stop thinking it and it goes away

    you know or just throw these monotherapy

    approaches at it it goes away we’ve

    learned in real time the ineffective

    nature of all of these approaches and

    it’s time to

    get real and honest about that support

    the public to recognize that yes these

    things are valuable but it’s not a

    single shot and we need to work toward

    all of these things in support of that

    and

    i know

    to the to be charitable to our industry

    insurance is running a lot of this you

    know you know through you know tms

    clinic and so forth like that front-end

    medication we have to see the failure

    first before we can intervene with other

    things at the level of insurance

    that’s nonsense it perpetuates the issue

    in a way as well too so not only is the

    situation complex for major depressive

    disorder sud and so forth it’s complex

    from the downward pressure we experience

    as a society for how these things are

    paid for delivered in real time

    that tangent i suppose for another day

    but just wanted to

    highlight that from what you were

    stating yeah i mean i i think

    if you need help come to peaks i think

    we do cutting edge medications i think

    we have top-notch curriculum top-notch

    therapists and we’re going to start

    integrating more holistic

    effects that are going to set people up

    for the future i think that’s

    that’s the next step for us

    and and yeah and i love the fact that

    there’s a kind of an interesting dance

    between i mean

    one of your core values is

    like unvarnished honesty you’ve never

    told me that but i can see it right i

    mean

    it’s just being really genuine and

    honest

    but at the same time there’s a wisdom

    component to

    like

    there are helpful truths and there’s a

    timing to it and i so here’s just my my

    take on this and i’ll

    throw it out there and maybe this is a

    horrible idea but

    i feel like when somebody is just

    starting down the path of recovery

    from addiction

    it’s too much to give them the truth of

    like it could be two years

    brother it could be two years before

    it’s like

    okay you know what

    this drug is

    literally ruining your life and you know

    it and that’s why you’re here

    um and we are here for you we’ve got

    your back we’re going to partner with

    you and we’ll get you through the

    toughest stretch of it and we’re going

    to give you all kinds of tools all kinds

    of support

    and

    every day

    you’re going to get one step closer to

    this goal and

    we’re not going gonna lie and say it’s

    an easy road but it’s a valuable road

    and it’s so worth doing and you know

    millions of people have discovered that

    they’ve it’s like that path has been

    blazed that trail has been blazed we

    know it

    but you know what i mean so like

    absolutely to celebrate the small wins

    to celebrate like every day is a win

    every day of sobriety every day of you

    know is a win

    and yeah at the end of 45 days okay

    we’re gonna be honest like this this was

    the first phase of your journey

    but if you quit now

    your odds of staying well you know

    without doing phase two

    not great

    yeah absolutely i think it’s i think the

    idea that being a journey is exactly

    what it is and it’s it’s a journey of

    discovery it’s a journey of healing it’s

    a journey of repair yes uh

    psychologically and and physiologically

    and being able to like you said

    celebrate the

    entire spectrum of what recovery is

    whether it’s recovery from substance use

    or recovery within mental health

    without suffering from mental health

    diagnoses it’s it’s a journey every

    recovered addict that i’ve known

    personally

    has told me that early on that journey

    they had to wholeheartedly embrace the

    wisdom of just think about today

    absolutely can you get through and if

    you if that’s too big

    can you get through the next hour right

    and we’re here for you and we got you

    and you know we’re going to get you

    through this it’s like

    we face these moments of incredible

    weakness and temptation but it’s like i

    can power through the next hour or the

    this day

    and if that person who’s feeling

    depleted and overwhelmed has to think

    about

    oh my god it’s a two-year journey to get

    you know it’s just it’s too much truth i

    don’t even think about that it’s too

    much truth for them right right

    totally yeah

    there’s got to be hope right there’s got

    to be some next thing so maybe we don’t

    think about it i think family systems

    should appreciate this is going to have

    a major time component to it but we

    celebrate the

    successful interventions along the way

    we celebrate every win yeah absolutely

    and and we don’t burden

    people with the we see it’s like you

    know with kids it’s like you don’t

    burden your kids with

    there’s certain knowledge that like

    they’ll be ready for it someday but like

    right now they don’t

    need to grapple with the problem of evil

    right why are there psychopaths that

    torment people and it’s like you know

    what honey we’ll get there someday

    you know though i will say i think

    there’s a time where it it does benefit

    people to know that to know that yes it

    my brain will get back to normal because

    because they have this fear that it’s

    never going to get better absolutely and

    it will yeah

    and they yeah

    yeah absolutely

    well on that note um i suppose as the

    host i gotta i gotta cut it at some

    point the social media the kids they can

    only watch clips in

    you know 30 seconds five minutes out of

    times i’m sure somebody’s popping

    popcorn in the background right now you

    know we’re gonna come back to it i think

    there’s still no wait there’s yeah no go

    ahead so

    i was going to say there’s a drinking

    game but this is the wrong audience

    so hard cut off there

    we’ll take it out of there

    i cannot believe it the old clinical

    psychology

    i’m with college undergrads absolutely

    all right totally different settings

    no worries no worries and an

    appreciation of

    um

    [Music]

    you

    uh dr elardi being on this with us thank

    you so much dr ryan for joining us as

    well too clint nicholson

    all things peaks recovery centers to the

    viewers out there i certainly hope this

    was supportive helpful to your family

    systems

    the knowledge download that’s taking

    place and hopefully creating some

    curiosity for you and your loved one

    about how you can approach

    treatment options down the road check

    out dr steven elardy’s book the

    depression cure amazon all the

    bookstores it’s a great read on the next

    episode we’re going to talk about the

    shtick the thing that

    is the the thread that makes all of this

    true at the end of the day

    we’ll talk about it we’ll challenge it

    we’ll do all those things uh remember if

    you’ve got uh additional questions

    thoughts ideas finding peaks at

    peaksrecovery.com

    we’ll put it in there and that box there

    we got some talent in the back that’ll

    be able to do that for me uh chris burns

    on the tick tock screaming at it love it

    keep watching it

    highlighting that on behalf of peaks

    recovery centers uh the twitter the

    facebooks all the other things until

    next time everyone wait wait wait

    shout out to uh

    i have a a podcast yeah yeah do it yeah

    can i do it yeah absolutely

    camera three yeah

    mental health with steve allardy and

    hugh james it uh so it’s a he’s hugh is

    an irish poet

    who is hilarious unlike me

    and it’s it’s we’re the perfect odd

    couple he’s young i’m old uh he’s the

    poet i’m the scientist he’s irish i’m a

    mayor i mean it’s anyway

    we tackle really really deep dark tough

    mental health mental illness issues

    with a kind of a light touch

    and yet at the same time really honoring

    uh the experience of those that are

    suffering different forms of mental

    illness so um look for it if you’re in

    the podcast we also are doing a youtube

    thing so um very cool you had me at

    irish poet so

    [Laughter]

    okay love it and thank you and please

    watch it absolutely listen to it get

    involved with it this is a big topic an

    excellent

    uh professional and individual guiding

    us through those things as well too so

    until next time everybody thank you

    empathy is knowing your own darkness

    without that connection you don’t have

    anything what’s the opposite of

    addiction just freedom

    hello everyone

    welcome to

    another special episode of finding peaks

    this is a special episode we got a

    special guest with us today and i’m

    excited

    to be a part of this group dynamic uh

    today and we’re gonna also have an

    additional episode uh coming soon as

    well too or thereafter however it works

    out in the time frame of things but

    again welcome my name is brandon burns

    chief executive officer for peaks

    recovery centers you all know me your

    favorite host trying to disrupt an

    industry provide quality of care vision

    insights for family systems

    seeking treatment so that we can empower

    you all to make best possible decisions

    for your loved one for yourself and so

    forth joined today as always by the

    great clinton nicholson chief operating

    officer great lpclic

    all things clinical

    to join us today the heavy-hitting dr

    ryan md board-certified addictionologist

    with us today uh at peaks recovery

    centers and then our

    what’s that chief medical officer i am

    so sorry chief medical officer wow that

    wouldn’t make any sense

    we’ll rewind the tape we’ll fix it

    special guest today dr stephen elardy

    clinical psychologist researcher

    professor university of kansas and

    author of the depression cure the book

    and joining us here today to talk about

    depression major depressive disorders

    all of its variations some anxiety maybe

    we’ll tackle some sud along the way

    welcome

    hey thank you so much for having me it’s

    a pleasure to be here um

    i i’m in such a gas company i didn’t

    realize the great yeah the great the

    chief medical officer yeah

    favorite podcast host or whatever you

    know it’s like

    i this is like some pretty pretty high

    cotton that is pretty impressive i i so

    i’m honored to be yeah trying to give

    you some highlights too because you run

    your own podcast as well too you know

    that’s a new thing okay it’s it’s i

    dabble i don’t know maybe some folks out

    there could identify with this i get

    bored really easily

    so like you know i’ve done nba

    consulting i’ve

    i’ve written blogs for espn i’ve

    done a podcast now youtube channel

    um

    you know it it this is new train for me

    though so being on camera it’s like

    not nervous at all

    well now you know you can come on and

    say you were the greatest host and mean

    it when you say it and just really give

    yourself all the credit i’m taking notes

    they’re the mental notes right now but

    yeah absolutely absolutely the viewers

    at home are like yeah i think he is the

    best host

    that’s gonna be in my bag

    so yeah thank you for being here excited

    about this group and this bunch that we

    have to really talk about

    major depressive disorder

    the symptomology of it and so forth and

    the potential for the cure for it and

    the remission of symptoms and so forth

    and

    as the viewers know we’ve done some

    episodes with you know for example uh dr

    ashley johnson a do psychiatrist with

    colorado recovery services

    here in town doing tms services and a

    lot of great psychiatric work and what

    the reason for highlighting that is

    because in those episodes we talked

    about medication um the benefits of it

    also its limitations and the excitement

    around new opportunities like tms and

    sitting here with uh you know dr o’lardy

    and certainly uh dr ryan johnson here we

    want to uh i think reintroduce that as a

    topic and highlight it through a

    different lens

    and have a really good conversation

    about it the pros of it the cons of it

    uh in that regard and a little bit more

    of a backdrop and we were talking about

    this earlier as well too you know when

    you go to each and every single

    addiction treatment center’s website it

    says we treat dual diagnosis we can

    treat this thing called major depressive

    disorder

    and generally out of that i think it’s

    something like here’s depression and six

    months ago you know the pot smoking was

    taking place or the drug use and so

    forth and somehow our industry keeps

    trying to make it about this thing over

    here and i think what that’s led to from

    an industry standard is uh limitations

    about how we treat major depression

    major depression so certainly here at

    peaks we’re trying to you know work

    alongside you know individuals like you

    to really advance new insights education

    and

    ultimately see

    as an outcome a reduction in symptoms

    around major depressive disorder and do

    more than just med management certainly

    meds are important but you have a

    great deal of analogies and insights

    into this so i’m just going to let you

    fire away and then we’re just going to

    wrap around and talk about it with you

    okay well thanks yeah so the first thing

    i want to say is somebody earlier this

    morning when i was getting to know the

    staff at peaks

    mentioned you know the common thread

    that runs through

    everything that takes place at peaks

    is you’re dealing first and foremost

    with human suffering

    whether or not somebody is battling

    clinical depression whether they’re

    battling a substance use disorder

    whether they’re battling

    associated anxiety or any of the other

    so-called dual diagnoses

    they’re suffering

    and there’s a through line that really

    connects substance use disorders and

    depression and that is reduced

    activity in the brain’s reward circuits

    and probably a lot of the audience have

    heard of brain chemical dopamine which

    is the go-to signaling molecule in those

    reward circuits

    when we’re depressed

    there’s a syndrome that goes along with

    it our fancy we got a fancy word you

    ready you know it the audience may not

    and had anhedonia from the latin

    no hedonic no no pleasure right

    um

    the dopamine-based reward circuits in

    clinical depression don’t fire so the

    person now doesn’t enjoy their normal

    activities the way they used to they

    don’t have sex drive anymore they don’t

    enjoy food anymore

    and

    the person who is battling substance use

    disorder

    when they stop using what we typically

    find is their dopamine reward circuits

    are very blunted

    they they’ve been kind of kicked into

    artificially high modes of activity with

    whatever they were using

    and now they’re

    in this state maybe they’ve gotten

    through withdrawal

    but they’re they’re in recovery and they

    often have a lot of craving

    and the reward circuits are throbbing in

    anticipation like

    what is out there for me

    and they’re going through day-to-day

    life often feeling like things are kind

    of

    blunted things are kind of dim and pale

    and life doesn’t have the vivid colors

    well guess what that’s exactly what my

    depressed patients say

    and we see the same kinds of underlying

    neurological deficits in both and what

    is exciting to me

    is

    many of the same strategies that can

    help

    with that suffering and loss of pleasure

    and depression can also help in

    addiction so to bring it back around

    full circle

    what about the role of medication what

    about their old drugs well it sounds

    kind of ironic and i don’t know if you

    want to go down this rabbit hole but the

    idea of using drugs to treat substance

    use disorder strikes some people as

    counterintuitive

    right yeah

    and yet there’s a really compelling

    rationale for it in all kinds of ways

    and we can talk about that in a bit but

    one of the things the drugs can do

    is to help those reward circuits that

    have been kind of fried

    in the grip of addiction in the grip of

    substance use disorder to help them

    normalize more quickly so the person can

    enjoy the things respond to the rewards

    that we’re supposed to

    rather than this artificial sort of

    reward

    well when it comes to depression

    you hear a lot about serotonin

    you don’t hear nearly as much about

    dopamine but dopamine function is

    crucial

    in depression well why do we hear so

    much more about serotonin because most

    of the depression drugs target serotonin

    why are the depression drugs not

    as effective as we wish they were i mean

    they certainly help a lot of people

    don’t get me wrong millions of lives

    have been improved

    but they’re not the game changers for

    many people that we need them to be that

    we want them to be why not in part

    because when you give a drug like our

    ssris or sssnris to ramp up serotonin

    signaling very often you’re

    simultaneously pushing down on the

    dopamine system that’s why we have

    sexual side effects it’s one of the

    most common side effects right you’re

    pushing down on the on the reward

    circuitry well that’s not really what we

    want

    in depression so we need to augment that

    effect with other things and you know

    because we’ve talked about it a lot

    that i’m a big big proponent of the idea

    that there is no magic bullet in

    depression there’s no single thing

    fancy word monotherapy there’s no

    monotherapy approach there’s no magic

    drug that’s going to completely cure

    forever a person’s depression most of

    the time there are you know rare

    exceptions but

    um the drugs have a place they have a

    role but we have to augment it we have

    to do all the things we can’t just rely

    on the one thing we can’t rely on the

    monotherapy

    so that’s that’s just the first premise

    i wanted to put out there

    i know there are a lot of different so

    i’m curious now too you know and um

    certainly we’re presenting to the team

    earlier which is so grateful for it was

    so uh informed on educational but why

    why how are we in a situation which i

    mean maybe it’s just speaking science or

    we just don’t have the application for

    it yet but why don’t we have drugs that

    do the dopamine thing rather than the

    serotonin we do okay so the one that

    probably a lot of the audience have

    heard of is is the generic is bupropion

    the the trade name is either depending

    on whether you’re taking it for smoking

    cessation or depression the trade name

    is wellbutrin for depression or or zyban

    for smoking cessation same drug

    um

    and

    the problem is that depression is often

    and by often i mean over half the time

    accompanied by a lot of anxiety

    and if you give a drug like wellbutrin

    it’s like oh okay so we’re going to ramp

    up dopamine that’s good we’re going to

    ramp up rewards signaling that’s good

    occasionally a patient will even have

    spontaneous orgasm

    on wealthy trend okay um side effects of

    podcast

    we will circle back around

    there was a grey’s anatomy episode by

    the way for interesting yeah um

    so

    it’s no joke it can ramp up reward

    signaling

    but it can also ramp up anxiety okay

    because the circuits are kind of

    cross-wired a little bit which it’s a

    long story we don’t have to go into but

    so um well what else can we use well

    stimulants

    right adhd meds like um like adderall

    like methylphenidate ritalin like

    vivants all these drugs also ramp up

    dopamine can they be helpful in

    depression yes

    absolutely

    are they commonly used no why because

    well they’re controlled substances a

    have a high addiction potential or at

    least moderate addiction potential be

    but c they also ramp up anxiety

    and so a lot of prescribers are very

    loath to use them even though we’ve got

    these dopamine deficits

    in depression

    that if anything a lot of times the

    medications that we’re throwing at

    depression can make worse

    so then it’s like all right well what

    can we do that’s non-pharmacological to

    ramp up dopamine

    and it turns out thank god there are

    lots of things like physical activity

    like

    ambient sunlight exposure which is about

    and light is a drug literally photons of

    light are drugs

    that hit specialized receptors in the

    back of the eye in the retina that have

    a broadband connection

    to the center of the brain the

    hypothalamus

    and they

    not only

    renormalize our body clock which gets

    out of sync and depression

    not only regulate our sleep regulate our

    hormones but kick up dopamine signaling

    so we’ve probably all had this

    experience when we go out on a bright

    sunny day like we happen to be enjoying

    today

    if we go on a long hike or something

    regardless of the activity level we feel

    energized we feel stimulated and often

    we have better focus because of that

    sort of stimulant-like effect

    when people are depressed though what do

    they do they they don’t go outside they

    crawl into a cave their brain is giving

    them a signal to shut down pull away

    withdrawal

    and

    part of

    effective clinical work with depressed

    populations is validating for them like

    look

    your brain is telling you that you’re

    sick your brain is telling you just like

    when you have the flu

    get away from everybody crawl into a

    cave lick your wounds

    rest tight for a couple weeks till you

    heal

    and when you have the flu that’s great

    listen to the brain when you have

    depression that’s the last thing in the

    world you want to do because that’s

    going to make it worse

    and so a lot of

    the threading the needle with depressed

    patients is validating yes of course you

    feel like shutting down yes of course

    you don’t want to be around other people

    yes of course you have no energy and you

    have no initiative and you’re suffering

    and you’re hurting

    but we have to partner together to help

    you not listen to these signals from

    your brain that are actually broken

    signals right now

    and if we can

    if we can pull off that particular

    clinical trick then we’re actually

    ramping up dopamine signaling and that’s

    the part that i think so many people

    don’t get they’re like well wait a

    minute if you have a brain chemistry

    problem the only possible way to fix it

    is to throw drugs at it or to you know

    put some powerful magnets on the brain

    and call it tms or you know do

    electroshock there if you’re something

    very somatic

    but what we know from the realm of

    neuroscience the realm that i’m trained

    in is experience changes the brain

    and

    activity changes the brain and the food

    we eat changes the brain and our ambient

    light exposure changes the brain so all

    the things

    we think of as like oh my grandma could

    have told me

    to go get some fresh air my grandma

    could have told me oh go get some oh be

    active

    but grandma didn’t know that this is

    like powerful powerful psychoactive sort

    of intervention

    yeah so what i’m hearing though is that

    at least one of the primary barriers is

    that all of the things that you need or

    at least

    a good um

    a good chunk of the things that you need

    to get better or at least to start to

    overcome depression are things that your

    brain are telling you to not engage in

    exactly right and that’s part of the

    tragedy right of depression absolutely

    and you know just to build on that a

    little bit so imagine i’m depressed

    and my doctor gives me an antidepressant

    let’s say

    um lexapro sure it’s one that a lot of

    people have heard of acetal frame

    and

    um

    one of the things it’s doing

    is it’s eventually going to kick up

    activity in my serotonin circuits what

    does that do well

    it’s going to help put the brakes

    a bit on my stress response circuits

    which is good because they tend to be

    way too active in depression

    but they’re also going to do this really

    cool magical thing called

    neuroplasticity they’re going to

    increase the brain’s ability

    to make new connections and new

    associations and by the way that ability

    is really compromised in the presence so

    when people are depressed they cannot

    easily learn new things they can’t

    easily acquire new

    associations and new parts of their

    repertoire they’re kind of

    closed sure and so you give them a drug

    like lexapro is like oh this is amazing

    this is going to kick up

    the brain’s growth hormone it’s called

    bdnf if folks want to look it up and now

    they’re going to have greater

    neuroplasticity here’s the problem

    most patients with depression who get

    treatment all they get is the drug and

    it’s like here take this drug

    and good luck with that go back to your

    life

    and well in a lot of cases their life

    has some toxic elements to it so we’re

    sending them to an environment that’s

    negative

    or at least that has some prominent

    negative features sometimes by the way

    is a side effect of the depression

    because when we’re depressed we’re not

    at our best and we can actually have a

    sort of corrosive effect on some

    relationships because we’ve been shut

    down because we’ve been withdrawing and

    we’ve been ghosting people and we’ve

    been not responding to them

    and now we give them the drug okay great

    i got more plasticity but i’m going back

    to a life that has a lot of negative

    elements and now i’m

    making those associations so it’s like

    oh

    the drug is making me more responsive to

    my environment and i’ve done nothing to

    fix my environment

    yeah

    hey

    maybe that’s a reason why these drugs

    are not more effective than they

    actually turn out to be maybe these

    drugs have the potential to be a lot

    more effective

    if we could attend to the

    neuroplasticity angle and provide a

    supportive context so provide

    a beautifully healing support of milieu

    yeah this sounds like an ad i love it

    and i’m thinking about going you know

    for the for the viewers out there that

    can’t see you know your slides in your

    presentation right i’m thinking of the

    pie chart right where 76 roughly 76 77

    of the time they’re just getting that

    you know mono therapeutic approach

    through medications most patients with

    depression if they get treatment all

    they’re getting is meds all they’re

    getting is meds that is wild

    when it’s such a complex issue as we’ll

    get into certainly here around your web

    analogy and so forth and then i think

    out of that as well too it’s somewhere

    you know 4.8 to 5.6 percent somewhere

    and they’re just received psychotherapy

    alone

    and then 18 roughly of the popular

    population receives both psychotherapy

    and medication as a management

    at the same time in lieu of that pie

    chart and that incredible data right we

    have more depression anxiety and so

    forth than ever before

    and then we have these medications and

    no wonder we’re arriving at sort of a

    frustration here in american culture

    there’s such

    a belief in

    the med only a sort of approach yet it’s

    not really resolving the problem and

    it’s kind of like you know for me i i

    just i want to shake the tree of

    american culture and say let’s wake up

    to this and let’s put

    all these other benefits like you were

    talking about the light and all of these

    natural things and also how through

    psychotherapy maybe it’s a residential

    program maybe it’s ambulatory you know

    uh you were saying something uh

    wonderful earlier as well too like how

    can we be you know the frontal lobe how

    can we be the how can we do that for you

    as you get well in the process yeah

    should we unpack that a little bit yes

    please so

    so

    i

    that’s like page 9 15 100. it’s all over

    the book so

    yeah please unpack it okay so

    um

    depression hits so many different

    circuits in the brain and takes them

    offline or or just compromises them so

    they don’t work as well and one of the

    most important to me

    is this set of circuits in the frontal

    cortex and they lateralize to the left

    so it’s really cool people are always

    fascinated by left brain right brain and

    a lot of the popular ideas about what

    that is are are off-base but

    one of them to put it gently but one of

    the ways that lateralization matters is

    the left frontal cortex has circuits

    that help us go after the things that we

    want and initiate

    sort of pull the trigger if i can you

    can i use that metaphor yes i’m in

    colorado with that yeah

    pull the trigger on

    our

    um the things we want to do so if i’m

    sitting on the couch i am sitting you

    know if i’m sitting on a couch and i’m

    like oh i should get up

    and i should get out it would help me to

    get up and go for a brisk walk outside

    maybe walk the dog whatever

    um if i’m depressed

    my left frontal cortex takes that

    impulse

    and it’s like

    flatline like oh i should do that i got

    nothing

    it’s like i’ve fallen and i can’t get up

    it’s like i’m sitting and i can i and

    and what our depressed patients tell us

    all the time

    is i know the things that will help me

    and i can’t make myself do

    them when i started crafting the

    therapeutic lifestyle change program for

    depression what several colleagues told

    me is yes we see the research we see the

    science we see the evidence we know

    these things will help but they’re all

    the things people can’t do when they’re

    depressed right

    and and my gentle pushback was

    friendly amendment these are things they

    cannot initiate often when they’re

    depressed but if they have someone to

    partner with them to provide them that

    spark of initiative that their left

    frontal cortex is not giving

    then they can do them so let’s take

    exercise for example so what is the

    antidepressant dose of exercise luckily

    it’s very low

    the the most robustly established

    antidepressant what do i mean by

    antidepressant as effective as the

    average drug for the average patient

    three times a week

    i’ll say it again because it’s low 30

    minutes of brisk aerobic walking three

    times a week

    that’s been tested in head-to-head

    trials against zoloft sertraline

    twice now at my alma mater duke

    university

    and found to be every bit as effective

    in the short term more effective

    at preventing recurrence

    and it’s super low dose but

    patients with depression usually have

    trouble making themselves do it so what

    do we do we partner with them we say you

    know would you let us play the role of

    your left frontal cortex would you let

    us

    schedule the exercise with you

    or with your trainer would you let us

    then give you a little prompt a little

    tickler a little reminder what do you

    call it tickler that’s fine i think that

    works yeah

    i don’t know i’m looking at the

    millennial in the room

    no

    yeah i’m in between is there a cooler

    i’m on the latter end of the millennial

    spectrum right now i’ve got to have a

    cooler word yeah i’m the

    i don’t oh

    i don’t have a cooler word than tickler

    yeah

    um so a little tickler

    a half hour before the workout like hey

    you know we just just took a little

    reminder we you know we’re mrs jones you

    know we’re going to be meeting in a half

    hour

    and it’s like oh now the trainer is

    playing the role of the left frontal

    cortex giving that signal that spark

    that the depressed person is not getting

    on their own so what do we find people

    with depression can exercise people with

    depression can enjoy exercise people

    with depression can benefit enormously

    but they cannot make themselves do it

    usually

    so we have to let go of the judgment we

    have to let go of the nagging we have to

    let go of the self-blame

    and just be freaking realist about it

    it’s like

    let’s validate for people that are

    suffering with depression it’s like yes

    depression is taking you away from your

    best self

    it’s robbing you of capabilities that

    you normally have

    and there’s no judgment

    but we’re going to partner with you

    to help you do the things that you need

    to do

    to get well

    because when you’re well you’ll be able

    to initiate all the things again

    hopefully yeah if you could before you

    you got depressed then you’ll be able to

    again yeah yeah absolutely and i think

    that’s the that’s the that’s a special

    sauce in the tlc model because you know

    at peaks recovery certainly we have an

    opportunity to front line with

    medications and do what we can there and

    i hope that the viewers watching this as

    well too can hear all the things that

    doctors are trying to roll through in

    their heads as prescribers or even

    mid-level providers as they go through

    this because i mean that’s back to my

    point about the dopamine medication it’s

    like don’t we have these things you know

    it was kind of rhetorical right we do

    have these things but why don’t we throw

    that at them you know in that sort of

    way because it comes with all these

    consequences a med and then a med to

    manage the symptoms of the med and you

    know potentially all of this you know

    fallout

    and then on the other side of that we

    have psychotherapy you know but the med

    is going to take time to ramp up and the

    depressed patient is having difficulty

    just sitting in that environment and it

    feels like as the next sensible thing

    and why this tlc model is so fascinating

    uh is because now we can do so much more

    with the time that we have them within

    these residential settings and

    differently than the challenges of your

    you know your research studies where

    they had to kind of go home come back

    report that sort of thing and you’ve got

    them yeah

    and you can provide a level of support

    and a level of for one of the better

    word stress management sure that you

    know is just going to be so

    incredibly beneficial for many patients

    and so with the integration i mean

    when you talk about depression i just

    keep having this

    this idea of like paralysis right it’s

    like almost like a neural paralysis

    where things just are stuck like you

    can’t

    move in any way shape or form

    neurologically to a certain degree and

    then you have something you introduce

    medication which gives you

    neuroplasticity right so you’ve got some

    room to maneuver at that point but then

    that desire to

    to actually make those changes and push

    forward and push through that paralysis

    requires almost like

    neural like a neural partner right like

    somebody to come and partner with you in

    order to push you along and so then you

    have these all of a sudden though you’ve

    got all of the major components

    especially in something like a

    residential program where you can really

    come at it from all these different

    angles and like you said do all the

    things right exactly right and then we

    have iop right where we get to help them

    make those habits lifelong habits and

    and change the environment they’re in

    and i think that’s what’s exciting about

    this yes that’s a really important point

    too right because we were talking about

    this earlier but

    so much of the if we if we zoom out to

    landscape of mental health and treating

    depression what we see

    is it’s challenging to treat depression

    in the short term

    in the first couple months

    but we have the tools if we’re willing

    to do all the things we’ve got the tools

    it’s like we’ve got this in the great

    majority of cases

    the bigger challenge is treating it in

    the long term

    very similar case i would say i think

    you’d agree with substance use disorders

    where absolutely you know the short-term

    outcomes are better generally than the

    long-term outcomes and yet we’re playing

    the long game

    we want our patients to thrive in the

    long term and so that means now how can

    we pivot from this very cocoon like can

    i use that word this oasis like

    environment of 45 days where i’m going

    to be

    really well cared for

    but everything in my environment is

    controlled and now i’ve got to pivot

    back out to the real world my life as it

    exists outside

    how do i take all of these new tools and

    skills and associations and generalize

    them out to my life in the world and

    that that is

    i mean

    it’s like you’re speaking my love

    language now because because i mean i’m

    so excited about this this 45-day

    residential i mean

    that’s miraculous that that exists

    but then to be able to take that and

    take it out into somebody’s you know

    real world life is is so important

    absolutely

    yeah

    um

    yeah so well there are a lot of

    different directions we can go yeah with

    this yeah one of the one of the

    challenges of integrated care and i

    don’t know if uh if there’s you know a

    tone you can put on it or give us some

    insights or just a general conversation

    but you go to integrate the care and

    major depressive patient and sud patient

    are sitting next to each other and say

    i’m not like that person and i’m not

    like that person and why are we in the

    same room together and you’re treating

    something different but it reminds you

    know going back to that you know the the

    dopamine you know uh reward circuits you

    remember reward circuits in scenario

    that’s the that’s the intersection

    that’s the bridge well the two two

    bridges one is profound suffering yeah

    profound suffering

    and you know i i don’t know if you all

    find this but i find that when people

    are suffering

    a lot of the superfluous things in life

    get stripped away and people get very

    real

    because it’s like you know i mean like i

    worked for three months on a brain tumor

    clinic

    with patients that

    for the most part had about a year to

    live

    and it was the most existentially

    profound experience professionally of my

    life because people just get so most

    people not everyone but most people just

    get very dialed in to what’s important

    and what’s not

    and i feel like a lot of sud patients

    get that way

    i mean they’ve been to the brink a lot

    absolutely right they’ve been to the

    brink

    a lot of depressed patients have been

    suicidal they’ve been to the brink some

    of them made a town some of them made

    serious attempts

    and then you know now they’re at this

    moment where they’re like i you know

    i can’t take much more of this i need

    some relief and they’re coming to you

    and they’re desperate

    and your sud patients are coming to you

    and they’re desperate

    so

    they’re experiencing the suffering

    and

    they have

    compromised reward circuits and you know

    for those who want to take the deep dive

    there’s a dopamine receptor subtype that

    helps coordinate

    activity in the these circuits are

    called d2 receptors

    and long story short

    people with sud have low levels of d2

    receptors so the reward circuits don’t

    work correctly they don’t get high on

    life but they get way way way too much

    reward from substances of abuse

    people with depression also low d2

    receptors also wonky reward circuitry so

    they’re kindred

    yeah and by the way there’s a lot of

    overlap because a lot of people with

    depression self-medicate

    and a lot of addicts become depressed

    and a lot of those who are not addicts

    but just sud you know abuse folks get

    depressed so and i think both of those

    worlds those uh people suffering from

    either sud or depression feel isolated

    they feel like they feel completely

    disconnected and brilliant and again

    yeah earlier in the day we talked about

    the idea of you know the opposite of

    addiction being connection and so the i

    and we were talking about the opposite

    of suffering is also connection yeah so

    it’s interesting you get it’s this

    ironic thing again where you have two

    people sitting next to each other who

    feel so far apart but they’re actually

    so close together and one of the actual

    things that would make them feel even

    better was is to find that connection

    with each other and to share that so

    it’s just this kind of i i don’t know i

    think that we we live in a world of

    irony a lot of times in what we do

    there’s so many levels of irony that we

    are dealing with and it’s just really

    interesting to hear them point it out

    that way and uh sort of have a different

    angle and a different lens to look at it

    through that’s a great connection i love

    that

    yeah just this idea that whether

    somebody’s sud or depressed

    they’re experiencing the sense of

    alienation absolutely the sense of

    isolation and

    often just profound disconnection yeah

    often also i hadn’t thought about this

    but profound

    self-loathing

    absolutely that’s literally a symptom of

    depression

    is self-deprecation self-loathing but so

    common in sud as well because people

    have made really bad decisions often and

    they’re beating themselves up and

    they’re seeing the fallout absolutely

    and i think we as a you know peaks we’ve

    really we we work really hard to try to

    get rid of this idea of

    uh substance use disorder and mental

    health disorder being different they are

    so the same you know they are so

    intertwined it’s it’s again it goes it

    goes back to suffering and it goes back

    to this connection it goes back to

    self-loathing it goes back to

    this a sort of neural paralysis that you

    exist in and and the treatment again is

    uh is

    there’s so much overlap and can be so

    similar for both sides exactly and it’s

    um

    yeah so it’s just it’s great to hear i

    don’t know some affirmation for that to

    be quite honest yeah well i get really

    excited about it and you know the other

    thing i just want if it’s okay to circle

    back to something you said earlier just

    about

    um okay so you’ve got 45 days if if

    somebody’s coming residential if they’re

    doing intensive outpatient it’s a little

    bit different but

    when somebody’s suffering they want

    relief immediately

    if we use a standard anti-depressant so

    the typical treatment that the majority

    of patients are going to get one

    antidepressant standard off the shelf

    garden variety anti-depressant they’re

    told usually like two to six weeks

    depending if you’re lucky two weeks if

    you’re not so lucky maybe four to six

    weeks four kicks in and we see anxiety

    three weeks depression four weeks is

    typical okay there you go yeah

    you know and there are exceptions or you

    know uh

    so

    what what are we at that’s faster

    well you know there’s a lot of

    excitement around

    more i think of them maybe you all don’t

    as a little bit more extreme

    interventions um some folks obviously

    have heard for decades about

    electroshock that we now call

    electroconvulsive therapy it’s faster

    has re there are reasons why it’s not a

    go-to intervention for most people but

    it is faster

    tms transcranial magnetic stimulation

    is faster for some people the effects

    are not as robust yet as i would like

    them to be but there’s there’s still it

    can be faster well guess what this is

    where i get super excited

    light therapy bright light therapy not

    just for somebody who has winter onset

    depression not just for somebody who has

    seasonal depression or sad some people

    have heard

    for any depression

    effects can kick in within five to seven

    days

    it’s fast acting

    now i’ve got a nutritional intervention

    that can kick in within seven days

    acetyl l-carnitine

    and acetyl-carnitine is like it’s a

    nutrient

    that

    our bodies mostly have to i say a

    nutrient it’s it’s a a nutrient that our

    bodies make out of substrate that we get

    from our diet how about that and the

    more we age

    the crappier our body isn’t making it so

    if you look at people who are depressed

    in their teens and 20s their levels of

    acetyl-carnitine are usually sort of

    okay they’re lower than we would want

    them to be but they’re okay and and

    what it means is if their levels are low

    the powerhouse the mitochondria of their

    brain cells are not as efficient and so

    literally their brain is getting a bit

    underpowered

    and the circuits that they need

    uh get fatigued more quickly

    so they can’t fire as efficiently okay

    so we can supplement with

    acetyl-l-carnitine and the best research

    is two thousand milligrams a day divided

    dose so a thousand milligrams twice a

    day

    and not only in the best

    meta-analysis studies of studies does

    acetyl-l-carnitine

    outperform placebo

    with an effect size that’s roughly on

    par with medication

    has no common side effects

    and effects kick in typically within

    about a week

    and were you saying that’s more

    important with age more important with

    the thank you right it’s yeah so for

    those of us who are of a certain age

    on the wrong side 40 how about the wrong

    side of 40

    yeah

    there’s some really nice signal in the

    in the research that says that

    middle-aged and older depressed

    individuals really respond right and

    younger individuals are less likely to

    have that i haven’t heard of that before

    so yeah it’s a pretty cool little little

    tidbit

    and there are other things as well but i

    guess my point is

    that

    even if we don’t want to go to something

    as extreme as electro-convulsive therapy

    to get that really fast effect because

    we’re we’re all impatient we’re

    americans

    we’re not saying right of course we’re

    impatient but people are suffering

    people’s lives are hanging in the

    balance of course we’re impatient

    we don’t have to wait four weeks

    we have things already in the toolkit

    that can get this recovery going and get

    it going pretty quickly

    and i think a lot of people don’t

    realize that can i give you one more

    please okay

    we did we did not rehearse this we don’t

    script this i’m totally going off script

    now ladies and gentlemen

    and brandon is he bold

    i’m open to it okay

    martin luther said sin boldly so here we

    go um

    good intro

    it’s a little reformation yeah the

    viewers at home are like

    come on sin boldly where is he taking

    this

    yeah

    you you’ll edit that out yeah um

    there is a

    novel

    integrative intervention

    called

    chronotherapy

    have you heard of it i’m not familiar

    okay it involves three things the first

    of which is going to blow your mind yeah

    you want to know how to get

    an immediate antidepressant effect with

    someone even if they’re severely

    depressed it will warning disclaimer it

    will only last for about 12 hours

    keep the person up for 36 straight hours

    i kid you not

    acute sleep

    deprivation 36 hours of continuous

    wakefulness has a profound acute

    antidepressant effect why do we not use

    it aside from the obvious people don’t

    like staying up 36 hours

    because

    as soon as the person goes to sleep when

    they wake up the next day they’re right

    back where they started there’s zero

    enduring effect

    but proof of concept

    sleep deprivation strategically employed

    antidepressant we can build on that

    second

    component

    circadian

    circuit reset

    most people with depression have a body

    clock that is out of sync with the

    ambient world around them

    the most common form of circadian phase

    shifting

    is the person’s body clock

    thinks that it is a couple hours maybe

    three hours later than it really is

    so we say it’s phase advanced so they

    wake up let’s say they’re wake time

    what’s the wait time in the room here

    six a.m is that yeah say six it’s great

    okay yeah so their wake time is 6 a.m

    but they’re wide awake at 3 a.m because

    their body clock is telling them oh it’s

    we call this by the way terminal

    insomnia because it’s at the terminus of

    their sleep cycle interesting okay

    so we want to phase shift them

    three hours

    right and that will help a lot it will

    help with their sleep which has

    antidepressant therapeutic effects the

    final thing is the use of bright light

    therapy which we’ve talked about before

    so you combine all three

    there is a center for chronotherapy in

    chicago

    that’s a residential

    facility

    we really should talk about this is

    pretty cool because you guys could do

    this

    um where they have

    patients come in and they’re like okay

    we’re going to combine these three

    things

    so we’re going to keep you up 36

    straight hours

    and then we’re going to

    let you sleep for a while

    actually it’ll be more than 36 or eight

    hours it’ll be we’re basically going to

    shift their body clock about four hours

    every day

    until we’ve run all the way through

    the the clock if you think if you do the

    math in your head it’s like five or six

    days

    and we’re going to hit them with a

    massive dose of therapeutic bright light

    as soon as they wake up

    to give a signal of circadian reset to

    be like okay hey you know what

    um it’s now 8 am but your brain thinks

    it’s noon hey it’s now noon or 8 am but

    your brain thinks it’s four in the

    afternoon and then the next day eight

    in the evening and after a week you’ve

    run the entire cycle your back around

    where you started

    and you can get them entrained

    perfectly to the world around them you

    get the acute benefit of sleep

    deprivation it doesn’t go away because

    you’re continually keeping the brain off

    balance and you have the antidepressant

    effect of the bright light

    and you can now connect with people

    because they’re up at the same time

    exactly yeah and at the center for

    chronotherapy in chicago

    they um you know they try to use the

    milieu of it right so they have like

    activities for folks when it’s four in

    the morning and they’re all up and they

    and they shine pretty bright light out

    in the patient day room where they’re

    all hanging out

    so it’s a it’s a but it’s a very fast

    acting

    very powerful oh by the way it’s been

    used in bipolar depression

    and patients with bipolar are

    exquisitely sensitive to light

    exquisitely sensitive to changes in

    circadian rhythm exquisitely sensitive

    to sleep deprivation

    and

    it has a roughly 50 percent acute

    response rate in bipolar depression in a

    week

    which is

    far higher

    than any in a week any current

    therapeutic medication that we have for

    bipolar depression

    so there’s some all kinds of really cool

    exciting potentials i would say

    and not to veer off script here but uh

    on the manic side of bipolar disorder

    wasn’t there a light benefit or an

    anti-light benefit yeah because yeah

    thank you so bipolar patients i don’t

    know if you guys have ever experimented

    with this but bipolar patients

    exquisitely sensitive to light

    and very sensitive to um

    time change

    you know going on and off of daylight

    savings time can often be a trigger for

    depression or mania

    but it’s recently been discovered that

    when a patient with bipolar is manic

    or

    mixed where there’s sort of

    simultaneously manic and some depressive

    symptoms

    if you use polarized wraparound goggles

    or lenses polarized in the sense that

    they’re that deep amber

    okay kind of like if folks know the rock

    star bono of youtube

    he has glaucoma

    and has to filter out that light for

    medical reasons for it’s the same basic

    principle

    um

    patients with mania who filter out

    probably most people know about blocking

    blue light like at night it’s blue light

    is very stimulating

    patients with mania where they block out

    blue light 24 7 and then stay out of

    direct sunlight

    it has enormous potential to break a

    manic episode

    and can be used in tandem with

    anti-manic medication

    to potentiate the effect to quicken the

    effect to speed it up to make it more

    robust

    and in some cases i’m not recommending

    this at all but in some cases it’s been

    used without medication for patients

    as you probably know sometimes when

    patients are manic they they do

    everything against medical advice

    because they have impaired judgment

    and they will not take them in

    but sometimes they will agree to wear

    the cool bono glasses

    right sounds like a fantastic

    alternative

    um

    so i feel like we’re just scratching the

    tip of the iceberg

    on leveraging

    the neurological power

    of lifestyle based intervention

    these things are like drugs and their

    effects on the brain

    absolutely yeah

    powerful stuff so dr ryan yeah you got

    the challenging job we got to keep him

    up for 36 hours

    you get hazardous duty pay for that

    right

    i love the idea i think we need a little

    more robust nursing staff

    you’d have to definitely make some new

    hires for sure

    no but i’m curious dr reddit i mean

    there’s somebody who you know you live

    in the trenches with this right i’ve

    seen i and i’ve

    you know being in rounds with you and um

    with working with the clinical team the

    medical team even our residential team

    and and seeing people struggle and

    really trying to get a hold on what is

    going to be the best approach to help

    stabilize them to help keep them engaged

    to help

    i mean we’re not even at symptom

    reduction yet at that point right but uh

    but listening to this and listening to

    this sort of approach and which does

    feel integrative it actually has a

    genuinely holistic feel to it i’m just

    curious what your response is

    i love it um i mean i think it has the

    potential

    now to fix them while they’re with us

    but more importantly to set them up for

    success in the future um

    when he spoke

    earlier today steve you talked about a

    spider web

    yeah

    do you want to yeah go ahead and talk

    about this

    [Laughter]

    he talked about depression be having a

    lot of different attachments and

    basically every every

    thing you can pull off so a medication

    you’re pulling off a big string you’re

    pulling off another string with light

    therapy with exercise with connectedness

    with nutrition what am i missing

    uh habits of healthy sleep habits of

    healthy sleep i mean you’re just pulling

    more off of that

    brain axis and yeah

    and i think the more we more of those

    strings we can pull off

    the better people are going to do i love

    the analogy i think it’s great for thank

    you yeah

    yeah metaphor metaphor analogy

    yes yes

    so

    yeah i i mean i a patient

    actually actually

    many years ago said to me you know i

    just feel like i’m caught in this web

    um and it always stayed with me that

    that image of like being trapped in this

    web and then when i started thinking

    about how depression involves all these

    different layers of dysregulation

    molecular

    neurochemical

    hormonal

    cognitive affective potential and we

    haven’t even talked about like the

    attentional biases people when they’re

    depressed

    the brain only wants to go to negative

    things people when they’re depressed

    they they don’t want to be around other

    people so there’s the social withdrawal

    piece there’s the i mean there’s so many

    different layers and it’s like this web

    and our typical approach like we talked

    about earlier is monotherapy we’re going

    to do the one thing we’re looking for

    the one magic

    stone that we can throw at the web and

    bring the whole thing down

    and sometimes we get lucky sometimes we

    get lucky and the one thing really does

    bring it down for some people some for

    some time

    but god it just makes so much more sense

    to think about like what if i have a

    whole pocket full of stones or you know

    like a shotgun or something where i can

    just blast this thing

    and i feel like

    how about this

    depression is so much more treacherous

    than we give it credit for being it’s so

    much harder to fix it is fixable

    it’s completely fixable but it’s so much

    harder to to get it well and keep

    somebody well

    and we do our patients a grave

    disservice by

    being very cavalier and very oh yeah

    yeah we got this our these meds are like

    magic these it’s like the meds you know

    they’re helpful but they’re not all that

    for so many patients but if we’re

    willing to really take it seriously like

    you all do at peaks that’s what i get

    really excited about yeah i’m going to

    send you so many patients yeah

    [Laughter]

    love it also would love to figure out a

    you know path forward to you know we

    have a setting in which

    you know it’s a little bit different

    than the ambulatory stylus setting in

    which we could approach you know maybe a

    project of research or something around

    it to really ignite this and

    locate its value proposition because

    this is exciting stuff and

    i don’t want to insist that we’re the

    only treatment center thinking of this

    in america but

    i think our industry is sort of missing

    this opportunity to really

    bring in all of these things at the same

    time but to do that we have to

    responsibly think about integration of

    care we cannot just talk about drugs in

    these settings that’s a really visionary

    a rich genuinely visionary sort of

    approach because i mean here’s what i’m

    thinking and maybe

    you all tell me if i’m too naive about

    this because you know the biz way better

    than i do

    my feeling is

    if you could get

    some sort of

    funding sponsorship

    to pay for the research to

    like legitimately show with a carefully

    controlled conducted research study

    that this kind of multi-pronged

    approach this

    doing all the things approach

    is highly effective

    now you’ve got this

    publication that you can

    take to all the industry people all the

    leaders all the you know and say

    don’t just take our word for it like we

    you know

    we have

    independent verification that what we’re

    doing is working

    and we’d like we’d like to make this the

    gold standard yeah but to do it right

    it’s going to take some money

    some money some time a lot of time

    to get it right why did you point to me

    because

    when i when i hear all the things i

    think that is your

    you are mr all the things that yes wait

    doctor

    he’s director of all things

    chief of all things at peace recovery

    centers there

    there’s so much to expand on to talk

    about to be excited about on this i do

    you know while we got the the sort of

    the medi the met the strict medical lens

    here before we invite the the clinical

    side of things into this you know the

    anti-ruminating you know uh

    psychotherapy psychotherapy approaches

    and so forth into this i i did want to

    touch base you know chris burns one of

    the host president founder of peace

    recovery centers is often talking about

    the vulnerable population

    and what i what i would like to talk

    about is that you know it really uh

    struck me as kind of obvious for myself

    when you were talking about it earlier

    with our team but

    you know i wake up in the morning and i

    get the sunshine i think this is a

    beautiful day look at this mountain

    that’s in front of me pike’s peak

    america’s mountain man so beautiful you

    know we live among nature we get to see

    deer running across the highway we get

    it all here in you know colorado uh in

    that regard and so

    you know you get this high on life sort

    of experience when your dopamine levels

    are up and that’s my common experience

    and why it resonates with me so much

    with those lower dopamine levels that’s

    the vulnerable person we’re talking

    about right because they’re taking the

    drug and they take it and all of a

    sudden it’s the mountain they’re high on

    life this is what this guy brandon was

    experiencing when he was talking to me

    about looking at the mountain that i

    don’t experience

    yeah exactly right so that’s that’s

    that’s one of the real

    under

    appreciated and i think misunderstood

    elements of the

    the brain of the person vulnerable to

    addiction vulnerable to substance use

    disorder is

    they’re very often genetically

    predisposed to those low d2 receptor

    levels so in other words genetically

    predisposed to not

    be able

    as much to get high in life

    and to have the drug be able to hack

    into their reward circuits the drug

    takes over and says

    this is what you’ve been missing yeah

    this is now your home

    now you’re in a space where you feel on

    top of the world

    by the way fun side note psilocybin

    actually does not light up the brain’s

    reward circuit or lsd or any of those

    it really does i didn’t get that message

    when i was doing it

    it could be i mean obviously it could be

    really

    yeah i mean depending on your own

    experience it certainly can have a

    reward component by the way

    a lot of

    folks probably know psilocybin is now

    being actively investigated

    as a

    supercharging agent for effective

    psychotherapy for depression

    so

    you know it increases plasticity it

    opens people up to reconceptualizing

    their stuckness

    and under expert therapeutic guidance it

    can be a

    catalyst

    for a lot of healing for a lot of you

    know sort of rapid response so i think

    it’s been a little bit overhyped

    oversold but i’m not in any way opposed

    to that kind of research and work i just

    want to

    basically i’m just giving like a public

    service announcement for magic mushrooms

    they are being actively investigated at

    some of the leading research centers in

    the world as a

    legitimate psychiatric

    agent

    but they don’t they’re not a drug of

    addiction typically yeah um but yeah

    like alcohol how about i mean there’s a

    very common drug of addiction

    um

    you know

    can i say this we were out to dinner

    last night there may have been a glass

    or two of alcohol consumed

    um in a very responsible manner and

    um

    a little bit of dopaminergic reward

    which you know all drugs of addiction do

    but if somebody has high d2 receptor

    levels they just walk away they’re just

    like oh yeah that was fine whatever

    um

    and so i feel like once we start viewing

    addiction through this lens of these are

    our

    brothers and sisters our fellow

    travelers

    who are laboring right now with the

    burden of reward circuits that don’t get

    lit up the way they’re supposed to

    when they hug a friend when they see the

    beauty of nature when they have an uh a

    professional accomplishment when they

    have sex when they do anything

    except for using and when they’re using

    then it lights everything up and that’s

    a tragedy and you know it’s like if we

    can have that viewpoint for me at least

    i’ll just speak to myself judgment melts

    away

    and compassion

    seems to be the only sane response

    yeah you know um so yeah i just i

    i love the work you’re doing um i i love

    i love the compassion i love the sanity

    i love the

    you know the community absolutely um

    yeah

    so

    well i think that’s beautiful and

    exactly what we’re you know what we’re

    coming to here when we apprecia we can

    all appreciate that decisions are being

    made around alcohol use drug use and so

    forth

    but at the level of decision making

    they

    those who suffer from addiction

    don’t know

    that that is the underlying thing within

    their being right that’s going to get

    ignited and that experience is going to

    happen making them most vulnerable or

    susceptible to

    gosh i want to do that one more time

    just to because that felt really right

    in that moment in displaced this moral

    personal responsibility conundrum thing

    we find ourselves stuck and i think as a

    society to say well they chose right we

    all choose but we’re all kind of

    vulnerable and susceptible in different

    ways within those choices and that

    displaces personal responsibility uh

    in a much different way than i

    experience personal responsibility and

    they’re just like i think that choice

    narrative is actually true for people

    who struggle with depression as well

    because we’re so cavalier with what we

    identify as depression

    there is this idea well then just stop

    being depressed you know like go do

    stuff oh my god yourself feel better

    just snap out of it just absolutely do

    the things that you it’s like stop doing

    the drugs snap out of the get stop being

    so sad all the time you know watch a

    funny movie that it’s it’s all of these

    very like simplistic very misinformed

    kind of perceptions that we have that

    are ingrained culturally and have turned

    what are really debilitating illnesses

    into taboos absolutely and one of the

    really interesting things that happens

    when somebody’s recovering from

    addiction

    is it takes a while and by a while i

    mean like three to 12 months

    for their reward circuits to start

    getting

    normal again near normal

    near normal yeah more normal

    normal enough to be

    to get them past the craving and you

    know

    um

    once they can push through with massive

    support

    and compassion and acceptance

    to get to a place of sustained recovery

    their d2 receptors start to normalize

    their reward circuit starts they start

    to regain the ability to get high on

    life

    why

    because substance use actually changes

    the brain and pushes those d2 receptors

    down

    substance use actually makes the reward

    circuits more blunted

    and

    sobriety

    extended through time

    allows the reward circuits to normalize

    and heal experience changes the brain

    and that’s a profound sort of thought

    yes we may be born genetically more

    vulnerable less vulnerable but guess

    what

    i’ve known lots of people who were born

    genetically not vulnerable to addiction

    never had a problem until they were

    prescribed

    an opiate

    prescribed a benzodiazepine like xanax

    by the way benzodiazepines the number

    one most prescribed class of psychiatric

    meds in the u.s

    party drugs

    possibly

    what could possibly go wrong

    zany

    yeah it’s our most prescribed that’s

    crazy um so anyway i’m not here to bash

    well a little bit yeah

    and so easy to find in the black market

    as well too of course it’s everywhere

    but here’s my point yeah

    i have known people who were as far as i

    know the only person in their very vast

    extended genetic circle that had an

    addiction they were addicted to benzos

    why because they’re

    typically family practice stock 90 of no

    offense 90 of benzos are prescribed by

    general practice

    dogs not psychiatrists psychiatrists

    usually see the danger usually not

    always

    the best the best family practice not

    always the best family practice doctor

    see the danger but a lot don’t right

    okay

    so they’re prescribed the benzo

    as a sleep aid yeah but they take it

    every night yeah after getting their

    ritalin and adderall yeah right yeah so

    but but then after a couple years now

    they are completely addicted

    they did not start off with an addictive

    vulnerability we created the addictive

    vulnerability but now that they’re

    addicted their d2 receptor levels are

    low even though they were born with a

    nice high genetic level you see it so

    regardless of whether if you’re born

    with a low level

    well guess what getting connected with

    people being immersed in community

    exercising regularly

    having better nutrition getting good

    sleep all those things actually raise

    your d2 receptor levels make you less

    vulnerable and so people get out of our

    detox they’re like why do i still feel

    crappy

    and then

    you have to be honest it’s going to take

    a year before you start feeling near

    normal yeah in two years before you’re

    fairly normal yeah and well dr ryan

    every addiction treatment center website

    says we can fix this we can support this

    and i think that to your point and the

    reason i’m highlighting that because i’m

    vulnerable to it you know we want to be

    in a position to help people and our

    website says something similar i think

    we want to have more transparent honest

    discussions about what this is going to

    take from mental health primary to sud

    primary you know a dual diagnosis of you

    know maybe both categories uh in that

    regard that we’re dealing with something

    quite complex and it’s not taboo we

    don’t shake it and it goes away we don’t

    say stop thinking it and it goes away

    you know or just throw these monotherapy

    approaches at it it goes away we’ve

    learned in real time the ineffective

    nature of all of these approaches and

    it’s time to

    get real and honest about that support

    the public to recognize that yes these

    things are valuable but it’s not a

    single shot and we need to work toward

    all of these things in support of that

    and

    i know

    to the to be charitable to our industry

    insurance is running a lot of this you

    know you know through you know tms

    clinic and so forth like that front-end

    medication we have to see the failure

    first before we can intervene with other

    things at the level of insurance

    that’s nonsense it perpetuates the issue

    in a way as well too so not only is the

    situation complex for major depressive

    disorder sud and so forth it’s complex

    from the downward pressure we experience

    as a society for how these things are

    paid for delivered in real time

    that tangent i suppose for another day

    but just wanted to

    highlight that from what you were

    stating yeah i mean i i think

    if you need help come to peaks i think

    we do cutting edge medications i think

    we have top-notch curriculum top-notch

    therapists and we’re going to start

    integrating more holistic

    effects that are going to set people up

    for the future i think that’s

    that’s the next step for us

    and and yeah and i love the fact that

    there’s a kind of an interesting dance

    between i mean

    one of your core values is

    like unvarnished honesty you’ve never

    told me that but i can see it right i

    mean

    it’s just being really genuine and

    honest

    but at the same time there’s a wisdom

    component to

    like

    there are helpful truths and there’s a

    timing to it and i so here’s just my my

    take on this and i’ll

    throw it out there and maybe this is a

    horrible idea but

    i feel like when somebody is just

    starting down the path of recovery

    from addiction

    it’s too much to give them the truth of

    like it could be two years

    brother it could be two years before

    it’s like

    okay you know what

    this drug is

    literally ruining your life and you know

    it and that’s why you’re here

    um and we are here for you we’ve got

    your back we’re going to partner with

    you and we’ll get you through the

    toughest stretch of it and we’re going

    to give you all kinds of tools all kinds

    of support

    and

    every day

    you’re going to get one step closer to

    this goal and

    we’re not going gonna lie and say it’s

    an easy road but it’s a valuable road

    and it’s so worth doing and you know

    millions of people have discovered that

    they’ve it’s like that path has been

    blazed that trail has been blazed we

    know it

    but you know what i mean so like

    absolutely to celebrate the small wins

    to celebrate like every day is a win

    every day of sobriety every day of you

    know is a win

    and yeah at the end of 45 days okay

    we’re gonna be honest like this this was

    the first phase of your journey

    but if you quit now

    your odds of staying well you know

    without doing phase two

    not great

    yeah absolutely i think it’s i think the

    idea that being a journey is exactly

    what it is and it’s it’s a journey of

    discovery it’s a journey of healing it’s

    a journey of repair yes uh

    psychologically and and physiologically

    and being able to like you said

    celebrate the

    entire spectrum of what recovery is

    whether it’s recovery from substance use

    or recovery within mental health

    without suffering from mental health

    diagnoses it’s it’s a journey every

    recovered addict that i’ve known

    personally

    has told me that early on that journey

    they had to wholeheartedly embrace the

    wisdom of just think about today

    absolutely can you get through and if

    you if that’s too big

    can you get through the next hour right

    and we’re here for you and we got you

    and you know we’re going to get you

    through this it’s like

    we face these moments of incredible

    weakness and temptation but it’s like i

    can power through the next hour or the

    this day

    and if that person who’s feeling

    depleted and overwhelmed has to think

    about

    oh my god it’s a two-year journey to get

    you know it’s just it’s too much truth i

    don’t even think about that it’s too

    much truth for them right right

    totally yeah

    there’s got to be hope right there’s got

    to be some next thing so maybe we don’t

    think about it i think family systems

    should appreciate this is going to have

    a major time component to it but we

    celebrate the

    successful interventions along the way

    we celebrate every win yeah absolutely

    and and we don’t burden

    people with the we see it’s like you

    know with kids it’s like you don’t

    burden your kids with

    there’s certain knowledge that like

    they’ll be ready for it someday but like

    right now they don’t

    need to grapple with the problem of evil

    right why are there psychopaths that

    torment people and it’s like you know

    what honey we’ll get there someday

    you know though i will say i think

    there’s a time where it it does benefit

    people to know that to know that yes it

    my brain will get back to normal because

    because they have this fear that it’s

    never going to get better absolutely and

    it will yeah

    and they yeah

    yeah absolutely

    well on that note um i suppose as the

    host i gotta i gotta cut it at some

    point the social media the kids they can

    only watch clips in

    you know 30 seconds five minutes out of

    times i’m sure somebody’s popping

    popcorn in the background right now you

    know we’re gonna come back to it i think

    there’s still no wait there’s yeah no go

    ahead so

    i was going to say there’s a drinking

    game but this is the wrong audience

    so hard cut off there

    we’ll take it out of there

    i cannot believe it the old clinical

    psychology

    i’m with college undergrads absolutely

    all right totally different settings

    no worries no worries and an

    appreciation of

    um

    [Music]

    you

    uh dr elardi being on this with us thank

    you so much dr ryan for joining us as

    well too clint nicholson

    all things peaks recovery centers to the

    viewers out there i certainly hope this

    was supportive helpful to your family

    systems

    the knowledge download that’s taking

    place and hopefully creating some

    curiosity for you and your loved one

    about how you can approach

    treatment options down the road check

    out dr steven elardy’s book the

    depression cure amazon all the

    bookstores it’s a great read on the next

    episode we’re going to talk about the

    shtick the thing that

    is the the thread that makes all of this

    true at the end of the day

    we’ll talk about it we’ll challenge it

    we’ll do all those things uh remember if

    you’ve got uh additional questions

    thoughts ideas finding peaks at

    peaksrecovery.com

    we’ll put it in there and that box there

    we got some talent in the back that’ll

    be able to do that for me uh chris burns

    on the tick tock screaming at it love it

    keep watching it

    highlighting that on behalf of peaks

    recovery centers uh the twitter the

    facebooks all the other things until

    next time everyone wait wait wait

    shout out to uh

    i have a a podcast yeah yeah do it yeah

    can i do it yeah absolutely

    camera three yeah

    mental health with steve allardy and

    hugh james it uh so it’s a he’s hugh is

    an irish poet

    who is hilarious unlike me

    and it’s it’s we’re the perfect odd

    couple he’s young i’m old uh he’s the

    poet i’m the scientist he’s irish i’m a

    mayor i mean it’s anyway

    we tackle really really deep dark tough

    mental health mental illness issues

    with a kind of a light touch

    and yet at the same time really honoring

    uh the experience of those that are

    suffering different forms of mental

    illness so um look for it if you’re in

    the podcast we also are doing a youtube

    thing so um very cool you had me at

    irish poet so

    [Laughter]

    okay love it and thank you and please

    watch it absolutely listen to it get

    involved with it this is a big topic an

    excellent

    uh professional and individual guiding

    us through those things as well too so

    until next time everybody thank you

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    Finding PeaksBy Peaks Recovery Centers

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