IFAQ's: Infrequently Asked Questions


Most people don't understand or even attempt to understand depression. That's why I've named this the IFAQ (as opposed to FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions) page. Hopefully this page will help you learn something you don't know about depression and antidepressants such as Prozac.


What is Prozac?
Prozac is the first of a new class of antidepressnt compounds called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRI's. Hailed as a miracle drug by millions of patients and numerous psychiatrists, trumpeted on the covers of magazines such as Newsweek and New York, and made notorious by the Church of Scientology's attacks, Prozac has become the best-selling antidepressant of all time. Its generic name is fluoxetine hydrochloride.


Who takes Prozac?
You'd be amazed. Since its introduction, over 11 million patients worldwide and 6 million in the United States have taken Prozac. These people cover the gamut from children to adolescents to the elderly, from lifelong depressives who, with the help of Prozac, are beginning for the first time to structure their lives in responsible ways, to many highly successful, productive people who have had from one to numerous bouts of depression in their lifetime. In fact, you probably know someone who is taking it or has taken it.


Is there more than one type of depression?
Yes. Here is a list of the primary types of depression:
*Major depression, also known as unipolar or clinical depression, is a disorder that is usually recurrent, with repeated depressive episodes alternating with normal periods.
*Dysthymia is a type of depression in which symptoms are relatively mild but present most of the time and persistent for at least two years.
*Manic-depressive (bipolar I) disorder is characterized by dark periods of moderate to severe depression alternating with manic highs, which are often severe enough to require hospitalization.
*Manic depressive (bipolar II) disorder involves periods of major depression interspersed with mildly manic - or hypomanic - episodes, which are usually pleasurable or irritable in nature.


What are some symptoms of depression?
Symptoms include: lack of energy, trouble sleeping or sleeping too much, loss of concentration, anxiety, loss of interest in life, feeling "down": sad, empty, alone, change in weight, feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, guilt and worthlessness, and feelings of irritation or agitation. All or some of these symptoms may be present in varying degrees for varying periods of time.


What causes depression?
It does not take a life-shattering event for someone to become depressed. It is a medical disease, just the same as cancer or kidney failure. Depression is caused by an imbalance in the number of neurotransmitters that travel between the nerves across the synapses in the brain.

Fieve, Dr. Ronald R., Prozac: Questions and Answers for Patients, Family, and Physicians Avon Books: New York, 1994.

Click here for information on schizophrenia - a disease that affects young people when they are 16-25 and whose symptoms are related to depression.

Click here for more information on depression and related topics


Click here to return to our index page!