plix (imported) wrote: Thu Feb 07, 2008 1:18 pm You were very lucky that your GP thought to check your T level. Most doctors do not do this, and instead the diagnosis of "depression" is given and SSRIs are prescribed.
I know of many cases where this has happened, and these guys have spent years or even decades on SSRIs trying to figure out why they still don't feel so great. Some have even had their marriages and other aspects of their lives ruined over the doctor's mistake. Then years later they find out it was low T all along. Once they start T therapy, they feel better than they have in years or decades. And since SSRIs are suspected to lower T, they may even make the problem worse (and goodness only knows what other long-term effects these powerful and little understood drugs have on the body and mind).
This could have easily been you if it were not for you doctor's knowledge to give your T a check first. You have a good doctor
You are right that there is no objective test for depression, and that is my biggest beef with it. This diagnosis is entirely subjective, usually given by only one person, and often it is based on one short interview. There are no objective tests to confirm any diagnosis of depression.
I have been given more psychiatric diagnoses than I can count by therapists who have seen me no more than a few sessions, sometimes as few as one. These people usually knew nothing about me or my history. And many of their diagnoses were later said by other therapists to be mistakes. So if the diagnosis of "depression" is to be given, it is one that should be given with care, only after all possible physical medical problems have been ruled out. It is a diagnosis that follows a person for the rest of his or her life.
Thanks! I really am pleased (and amazed) that I have such a good doctor. When she retires I plan to jump off a building
I've often wondered about the number of menopausal women who are prescribed SSRIs. Is this more of the same thing? I mean are they treating the "symptoms" instead of the actual cause? And again I wonder if its two different things? I can see how strong doses of mental health meds might make a person feeling lousy from hormone problems no longer "care" about them. We had a neighbor who had "vegged" out on this type of thing and her doctor left her on this junk for years. Then when she went off the stuff she was so happy to have her head removed from the "fog" that it was almost scary.