A streamlined stack of supplements designed to meet your most critical needs - Adapt Naturals is now live. Learn more

Is Depression a Disease or a Symptom of Inflammation?

by

Published on

The idea that depression and other mental health conditions are caused by an imbalance of chemicals (particularly serotonin and norepinephrine) in the brain is so deeply ingrained in our collective psyche that it seems almost sacrilegious to question it. 

A depressed person
Depression and inflammation are linked. Find out how. iStock.com/AntonioGuillem

Of course, Big Pharma has played a role in perpetuating this idea. Antidepressant drugs, which are based on the chemical imbalance theory, represent a $10 billion dollar market in the U.S. alone. According to the CDC, 11 percent of Americans over 12 years old take antidepressants, and they are the second-most prescribed medications (after cholesterol-lowering drugs). Doctors wrote a staggering 254 million prescriptions for antidepressants in 2010. (1)

Research suggests that depression may be primarily caused by inflammation. Check out this article to find out more about the depression–inflammation connection. #MentalHealth

Yet as popular as this theory has become, it is riddled with problems. For example: 

  • Reducing levels of norepinephrine, serotonin, and dopamine does not produce depression in humans, even though it appears to do so in animals.
  • Although some depressed patients have low levels of serotonin and norepinephrine, the majority do not. Several studies indicate that only 25 percent of depressed patients have low levels of these neurotransmitters.
  • Some depressed patients have abnormally high levels of serotonin and norepinephrine, and some patients with no history of depression have low levels of them. (2)

What if depression isn’t caused by a “chemical imbalance” after all? More specifically, what if depression itself is not a disease, but a symptom of an underlying problem? 

That is exactly what the most recent research on depression is telling us. A new theory called the “Immune Cytokine Model of Depression” holds that depression is not a disease itself, but instead a “multifaceted sign of chronic immune system activation.” (3)

To put it plainly: depression may be a symptom of chronic inflammation.

The Connection between Depression and Inflammation

A large body of research now suggests that depression is associated with a low-grade, chronic inflammatory response and is accompanied by increased oxidative stress. 

In an excellent review paper by Berk et al, the authors presented several lines of evidence supporting the connection between depression and inflammation: (4)

  • Depression is often present in acute, inflammatory illnesses. (5)
  • Higher levels of inflammation increase the risk of developing depression. (6)
  • Administering endotoxins that provoke inflammation to healthy people triggers classic depressive symptoms. (7)
  • One-quarter of patients who take interferon, a medication used to treat hepatitis C that causes significant inflammation, develop major depression. (8)
  • Remission of clinical depression is often associated with a normalization of inflammatory markers. (9)

During an inflammatory reaction, chemicals called “cytokines” are produced. These include tumor necrosis factor (TNF)α, interleukin (IL)-1, interferon (IFN)ɣ, and interleukin (IL)-10, among others. Researchers discovered in the early 1980s that inflammatory cytokines produce a wide variety of psychiatric and neurological symptoms which perfectly mirror the defining characteristics of depression. (10)

Interestingly enough, antidepressants (particularly SSRIs) have been shown to reduce the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α, IL-1, interferon IFN-ɣ and increase the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines like IL-10. (11, 12) They also change the gene expression of some immune cells that are involved in inflammatory processes. This suggests that SSRIs are anti-inflammatory, which would explain their mechanism of action if inflammation is a primary driver of depression.

The research on this topic is robust, and the connection between depression and inflammation is now well-established. But if depression is primarily caused by inflammation, the obvious question that arises is, “What is causing the inflammation?”

Like what you’re reading? Get my free newsletter, recipes, eBooks, product recommendations, and more!

Nine Common Causes of Inflammation and Depression

If you’ve been following my blog for any length of time, you know that inflammation is at the root of nearly all modern disease, including diabetes, Alzheimer’s, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disease, allergies, asthma, and arthritis. So perhaps it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that depression is also caused by inflammation

The downside of this connection is that our modern diet and lifestyle are full of factors that provoke inflammation—and thus cause disease. The upside is that if we address these factors and reduce inflammation, we can prevent and even reverse the chronic, inflammatory diseases that have become such a fixture of industrial civilization.

According to the authors of the Berk et al review paper I referenced above, the following are the most common causes of inflammation that are associated with depression. 

1. Diet

There are several problems with the modern diet. It is high in foods that provoke inflammation, such as refined flour, excess sugar, oxidized (rancid) fats, trans fats, and a wide range of chemicals and preservatives. And it is low in foods that reduce inflammation, like long-chain omega-3 fats, fermented foods, and fermentable fiber. Numerous studies have associated the Western diet with major depressive disorder. (13)

2. Obesity

One of the most harmful consequences of the modern diet has been the dramatic increase in obesity. Obesity is an inflammatory state. Studies have shown higher levels of inflammatory cytokines in obese people, and weight loss is associated with a decrease in those cytokines. (14) Obesity is closely linked with depression, and while that relationship is likely multi-factorial and complex, inflammation appears to play a significant role. (15)

3. Gut Health

Disruptions in the gut microbiome and leaky gut (i.e. intestinal permeability) have both been shown to contribute to inflammation and correlate with depression. For example, a leaky gut permits endotoxins called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to escape the gut and enter the bloodstream, where they provoke the release of inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, IL-1 and COX-2. (16) And numerous studies have linked unfavorable changes to the bacteria inhabiting our gut with major depressive disorder. (17

Want to learn more about gut health?

Download This Free eBook

Your gut microbiome is connected with your overall health. Find out how to maintain and restore a healthy gut.

"*" indicates required fields

I hate spam, too. Your email is safe with me. By signing up, you agree to our privacy policy.

4. Stress

Stress may be one of the most obvious causes of depression, but the link between stress and inflammation is less well-known. Research has shown that psychosocial stress stimulates the pro-inflammatory cytokine network, including increases in TNF-α and IL-1. (18) These increases in inflammatory cytokines are in turn closely related to depressive symptoms, as described above. 

5. Lack of Physical Activity

There’s a huge amount of evidence indicating that exercise is an effective treatment for depression—in many cases as effective or more so than antidepressant drugs. It has also been shown to prevent depression in healthy people with no pre-existing symptoms. (19) Interestingly enough, while exercise initially produces the same inflammatory cytokines that are associated with depression, that is quickly followed by induction of anti-inflammatory substances. (20) This is known as a hormetic effect, where an initial stressor provokes a compensatory response in the body that has positive, long-term consequences. 

6. Sleep Deprivation

Chronic sleep loss has been shown to increase inflammatory markers even in people that are otherwise healthy. (21) And although temporary sleep deprivation has been used to therapeutically improve depression, chronic sleep loss is a well-known contributing factor to developing depression in the first place. (22

7. Chronic Infection

Chronic infections produce ongoing inflammation, so it’s no surprise to see that depression is associated with Toxoplasma gondii, West Nile virus, Clostridium difficile, and other pathogens. (23, 24, 25

8. Dental Caries and Periodontal Disease

Dental caries and periodontal disease are another source of chronic inflammation, and thus a potential cause of depression. According to one large study of over 80,000 adults, researchers found that people with depression were more likely to have tooth loss even after controlling for several demographic and health factors. (26

9. Vitamin D Deficiency

Low levels of vitamin D are common in Western populations, and there is growing evidence linking vitamin D deficiency to depression. Vitamin D modulates immune responses to infection, including reducing inflammatory markers like TNF-α and IL-1 that are associated with depression. (27) Supplementation with vitamin D to normalize serum 25D levels has been shown to to reduce inflammatory markers in some, but not all cases. (28)

The Biggest Problem with the Chemical Imbalance Theory

The early 1980s discovery that inflammatory cytokines produce all of the characteristic signs and symptoms of depression should have made a big splash. For the first time ever, scientists had discovered a class of molecules that were tightly and consistently associated with depression, and, when administered to healthy volunteers, produced all of the symptoms necessary for the diagnosis of depression. 

Unfortunately, the “chemical imbalance” theory continues to be the dominant paradigm for understanding depression nearly 30 years after this profound discovery, despite the weak correlation between serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine and depressive symptoms. There are probably several reasons for this—and you’d be correct if you guessed that some of them are financial—but I’ll leave that discussion for another time.

The significance of this finding is huge—both for patients and clinicians. It shifts our focus from viewing depression as being a disease caused by a chemical imbalance, which often requires medication to correct, to being a symptom of a deeper, underlying problem. It also leads to entirely new avenues of treatment—many of them more effective and safer than antidepressant drugs.

Understanding the physical roots of depression can have a profound effect on people who are suffering from it. Although the stigma surrounding depression has decreased in recent years, many who are depressed still carry the burden of thinking that there’s something wrong with them, and the depression they experience is “their fault.” When my patients with depression learn that theres an underlying physiological cause of their symptoms, they often feel a tremendous sense of relief and empowerment. Whats more, when we address this underlying cause, their mood improves dramatically and they quickly realize that the self-judgment and shame they felt about being depressed was misplaced and unwarranted.  

I don’t mean to suggest that emotional and psychological factors don’t play an important role in depression. In many cases they do, and I’ve written on that topic before. However, the assumption in mainstream medicine that depression is exclusively caused by those factors is obviously not true, and too often these other potential underlying causes go unexplored. The doctor prescribes an antidepressant, the patient takes it, and thats the end of the discussion.

What to Do If You’re Suffering from Depression

With this in mind, what can you do if you’re suffering from depression? Follow these two steps:

1. Adopt an Anti-Inflammatory Diet and Lifestyle

This means eating a nutrient-dense, whole foods diet, getting enough sleep, managing stress, engaging in appropriate (not too little or too much) physical activity, and nourishing your gut. For more on how to do this, see my book, The Paleo Cure.

2. Investigate Other Underlying Causes of Inflammation

On your own or with the help of a good Functional Medicine practitioner, explore other possible causes of inflammation that could be contributing to depression. These include gut issues (SIBO, leaky gut, dysbiosis, infections, etc.), chronic infections (viral, bacterial, fungal), low vitamin D levels, dental caries and periodontal disease, exposure to heavy metals and mold or other biotoxins, obstructive sleep apnea, and more.

ADAPT Naturals logo

Better supplementation. Fewer supplements.

Close the nutrient gap to feel and perform your best. 

A daily stack of supplements designed to meet your most critical needs.

Chris Kresser in kitchen
Affiliate Disclosure
This website contains affiliate links, which means Chris may receive a percentage of any product or service you purchase using the links in the articles or advertisements. You will pay the same price for all products and services, and your purchase helps support Chris‘s ongoing research and work. Thanks for your support!

369 Comments

Join the conversation

  1. Yes, I have read many articles about inflammation in the body and how it leads to so many problems, like diabetes. I knew it was also linked to Alzheimer’s disease. These findings regarding inflammation and depression come as no surprise to me. This article is important for all to see, and I am sharing it on my FB page.

  2. I’m going to suggest that not only may a Vitamin D deficiency be involved, but a B-vitamin and Omega-3 deficiency as well. Since most mental disorders (schizophrenia, hallucinations, etc.) usually boil down to either or both of these two deficiencies, why not depression too?

    • I would agree. There are many other possible causes of inflammation that weren’t mentioned in this article, though I did mention long-chain omega-3 in the diet section.

  3. I can’t figure out what is causing my inflammation. Currently CRP is 12. My health was improving over a few years while I changed my eating habits to WAPF, then a bit of GAPS, then PHD. My energy levels went up, I had fewer colds…2 years ago my CRP was 0 and TSH great but today both are high. It all started a year ago with a bout of ‘food poisoning’ that ‘reoccurred’ occasionally throughout the year (mild lower left tummy pain and usually associated with a short bout of diarrhoea). I’m not experiencing symptoms currently but my CRP is 12.
    I’ve had a private comprehensive digestive stool analysis. No pathogens found, just perfect digestion and normal low levels of inflammation in gut. I still feel that I do have some sort of chronic infection that got hold of me 1 year ago. I am now pregnant. What can I do since this inflammation (for which I can’t find the cause) is affecting my thyroid? I’m already doing an anti inflammatory diet, I’m working hard on circadian rythm entrainment and trying to get some exercise daily. My Vitamin D levels are very good at 80+ (my Vit D was too low in the days where my CRP was 0!)

    • Stool test is only one way of testing gut function. Also SIBO breath test, urine organic acids, and urine amino acids. I would also investigate heavy metal toxicity, mold/biotoxins, food intolerances, chronic infections, especially given your history.

      • Thanks Chris. What are the best tests/labs for chronic infections, is it just via stool that chronic infections can be found? Or are there other ways.
        My stool test by Genova Diagnostics (joined with Metametrix I believe) did not find any infections.

      • Also, I am wondering if it’s worth taking serrapeptase, even though I am pregnant. I can’t find any contraindications. Have you had any experience with it?
        Thanks

  4. Thank you very much. I had suspected as much with my own Major Depression because when i managed my inflammation through the lifestyle choices you mentioned my depression simultaneously lifted every time. It is challenging to keep making wise choices but well worth it. I believe this inflammation depression link wholeheartedly. Thanks again

  5. I’ve suffered with depression most of my life. I finally collapsed and thanks to a naturopath she got me on track. Yes i had leaky gut among many other things. I’ve been on a strict anti inflammatory diet for many years now, as well as avoiding allergy good such as gluten, dairy, soy and eggs. She says I have no inflammation yet the depression is back. I stayed free from depression for 3 years. She says my tests are better than ever so is now thinking it’s just my chemistry. Another Dr. thinks I’m bipolar II.

    I need help. Where do I go from here?

  6. Hi
    I found this article quite interesting because it seems to be drawing connections between a number of conditions which i have accepted to be connected for some time due to my own experiences. For about 6 years i suffered chronic pain in my back, neck, shoulders, arms, chest and even my leg. In parallel i suffered gastrointestinal issues, eczema, asthma, allergies and even depression. I tried everything that modern medicine could trow at me with varying degrees of success and always with temporary gains no matter how consistent and strict i was. I have been extremely good with my diet/nutrition for over 10 years and know about as much as you need to know to lead a healthy lifestyle – however this never really made a difference to me and certainly didn’t stop me getting these conditions.

    Late last year i came to understand the true nature of my condition and haven’t suffered from any of the above since! I was lucky enough to stumble across the answer and after applying the right principles i was amazed to find that it didn’t take long at all to overcome the chronic pain and the other conditions seemed go at the same time!

    Basically, the answer is something that is even more “radical” than what you are suggesting. All of the above conditions, including chronic pain syndromes, gastro-intestinal syndromes, allergies, asthma, headaches, migraines, depression and anxiety are all just symptoms. They are not symptoms caused by inflammation but actually this inflammation (where it actually exists) has got a common cause. The cause of all of these conditions is actually something which is common in nearly everyone you know in some form or another and could be thought of as the human condition. It is the result of the nature of our evolution and a battle between old and new parts of our brain. These conditions are actually a defense mechanism created to protect you from the consequences (as trivial as they may seem) of extreme unconscious emotion becoming conscious. This is based upon concepts first developed by Freud (for those who are interested it is about the id, ego and super-ego or in more modern parlance the child, adult and parent parts of the mind). The theory, originally known as TMS (Tension Myositis Syndrome) is slowly being more readily accepted in the psycho-analysis world as PPD (Psychophysiologic disorders) and I urge any of you that suffer from any of these to take this theory seriously and to read more about it.

    I would recommend the two books i have read that helped me:
    The Mindbody Prescription and
    The Divided Mind, both by Dr. John E Sarno.

    I realise this is a step change in all of your thinking and i haven’t really got the space or time to go into much detail about it but if you knew me before and now you would not hesitate in reading these books. They’re fairly cheap so there’s no good reason to not give them a try. If you can read them with an open mind i promise the future will become a very different place for you.

    I wish you all well and will be overjoyed if even one of you takes the plunge to read the books and come to the same realisation as me.

    Stuart

  7. Chris, have you seen William Walsh’s work at Biobalance? He sees deficiencies in key nutrients plus genetic/epigenetic defects in neurotransmitter synthesis/removal as responsible for several mental health issues including depression. Many psychiatrists are adopting his methods (very targeted supplementation) with great results. I would love to hear your take on this. Thanks for another great article.

  8. I have dealt withSAD for many years. Sisters and brother are on depression meds. I have been against medicating and just suffer through. I found a paleo diet to help my brothers immune disease and tried it for myself. It was awesome! Brain function, gut health, depression symptoms, even my skin feels healthy. unfortunately the western diet makes it too easy to be unhealthy and difficult and confusing to set up an ongoing healthy diet.

  9. The problem with articles like this is that he sites the central premise as a fact when it is not a fact at all. I am sure BigPharma do make a big deal out of anti-depressants being the ultimate cure, but obviously they are bias. As far as I’m aware the Psychological community has NEVER said depression was caused by chemical imbalance. Depression is a complex interaction between cognitive, social, behavioural and physical factors, which is best treated by a combination of cognitive, behaviour, social and physical interventions. Anti-depressants were designed to ease the therapy process, not to be a stand-alone treatment. Chemical imbalance is a common symptom, which perpetuates the other symptoms, but it is almost always triggered by an external factor- sometimes disease, but more commonly extreme or prolonged pressure or trauma.

    So while I think that having a healthy diet and lifestyle is wonderful, especially if it helps you to take control over your symptoms, I think it is wholy damaging to compound negative stereotypes of depression to make your argument, and to attribute these stereotypes falsely to those individuals who are trying to further the cause of correct treatment for people suffering depression.

  10. Chris,
    Do you think a test to measure your CRP is an accurate indication of inflammation in your body?
    Sandy

    • Hi Hellen,

      The problem is the lag time between what researchers have discovered and what the general public still believes. Most doctors and people still believe the “chemical imbalance” theory because Big Pharma did such an excellent job of spreading that meme. Similarly, most people believe eating dietary cholesterol raises your blood cholesterol levels despite the fact that this has been completely disproven in the scientific literature (for 70% of the population, at least). It takes a long time to change a paradigm.

      • Yes. A very difficult paradigm change because it’s become so ingrained in our culture.

        Thanks for all the work that you do!

  11. Chris,

    If following a Paleo diet and supplementing with fish oil is not enough to break through inflammation, which seems to be the case for me, what would you recommend? After years of trying to address the inflammation issue I believe there is a hump I’m not able to get over, similar to how an allergic reaction sometimes needs to be stopped with an acute steroid injection. I’ve followed all the rules and I’m not seeing improvement, so how can I bring out the big guns?

    Thank you. I love your work.

    • Hi Justin,

      I would explore all of the potential causes of inflammation I mentioned in the article, as well as things like mold/biotoxins, heavy metals, chronic infection, etc.

  12. Years ago started having panic attacks out of no where, which started doctor visits, medication for anti-depressant & anti-anxiety crippling terror at the young age of 28, I was a young mother with 3 small kids and wanted to died. This was in 1988 thank God my sister worked for a Chiroprator that turned me onto a book called “the yeast syndrome” and candida overgrowth. I basically followed the book, my doctor was not receptive to the concept of nutrition affecting health. I quit taking the meds which also included Ativan to take the edge off lol and slowly got off the meds ate meat, veggies, eggs & yogurt. The book is still in print was published in 1985 these Doctors that wrote book were way ahead of the times. Anyway it is basically paleo diet with nutritional support of herbs and vitamins. After that experience I am very skeptical of better living though modern medicine!

  13. please i want to know what are the causes of depression during pregnancy and how can we avoit it ?

  14. We dispense LDN and a few male customers are reporting improvement in their BPH (Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia) symptoms, especially the ones related to numerous bathroom visits. The more we look the more it seems systemic inflammation may be at the root of numerous immune diseases; MS, arthritis, IBS, and so on. Of course, there will always be the recommendation to reduce or eliminate environmental inflammation triggers (sugars, processed foods, grains, and so on). Please note that I am not suggesting that there is any empirical data to support these comments regarding BPH.

  15. This is a great article. I did a 60 day Paleo diet and noticed a drastic change in my attitude, energy level, confidence and the almost disappearance of my leaky gut syndrome. However, one day I caved in and ate all inflammatory items on a Paleo do not eat list. Within a week, I was stressed out, sluggish, dazed, confused and had mood swings and depression swings out of nowhere. After reading this article, I can attest that depression is a symptom of inflammation.

  16. I think depression is even more complex than inflammation. The mind is more than inflammation. Depression can be intertwined with someone’s personality to the point where it’s not unlike eye or hair color. Most studies show anti-depressants don’t work, and I’m not sure alleviating inflammation would work either. Maybe in some cases – where people become ill and the depression is a result of that. But I think the majority of depressives are that way for deeper reasons having to do with our modern society and not knowing how to live in it.

  17. Amazing article, thank you for sharing. As someone who has suffered depression most of my life and currently also other inflammatory issues this is very helpful information to have. Does not surprise me at all. I always wondered why some people could just have a short bout of depression treated with med’s if the underlying cause was an imbalance?

  18. Hi,
    The universe is funny. I have been experiencing horrible depression all week and was trying to figure out what i was going to do because 5htp..etc nothing was working and boom …in my inbox was your article. You continue to amaze me with your boldness and I sincerely pray our healthcare will improve in this country so people do not have to suffer. Thanks Chris