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    J Hist Neurosci. 2003 Jun;12(2):207-20.

    The myth of reserpine-induced depression: role in the historical development of the monoamine hypothesis.

    Baumeister AA, Hawkins MF, Uzelac SM.

    Psychology Department, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA. abaumei@lsu.edu

    For five decades it has been generally accepted that reserpine, an antihypertensive and antipsychotic drug, causes depression. The discovery that reserpine depletes brain monoamines was an important factor in the development of the monoamine hypothesis of depression, and it continues to be widely cited in support of this hypothesis. The present paper argues that, contrary to prevailing belief, reserpine is not depressogenic. The reason for perpetuation of this myth is reluctance to discard the monoamine hypothesis. This hypothesis ushered the modern biochemical paradigm into psychiatry and is still of great importance. It serves as a heuristic to guide research, it enhances psychiatry's prestige, and it helps to validate and promote drug therapy for depression and other mental disorders.

    PMID: 12953623 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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    Patient drug information

    • Reserpine (Serpalan®, Serpasil®)

      Reserpine is used to treat high blood pressure. It works by decreasing your heart rate and relaxing the blood vessels so that blood can flow more easily through the body. It also is used to treat severe agitation in pati...