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Depression is detectable in the blood

Researchers at the MedUni Vienna have demonstrated the possibility of using a blood test to detect depression. While blood tests for mental illnesses have until recently been regarded as impossible, a recent study clearly indicates that, in principle, depression can in fact be diagnosed in this way and this could become reality in the not too distant future.


Serotonin transporter (SERT) is a protein in the cell membrane that facilitates the transport of the  (popularly known as the "happiness hormone") into the cell. In the brain, serotonin transporter regulates neural depression networks. Depressive conditions can frequently be caused by a lack of serotonin. As a result, the serotonin transporter is also the point of action for the major antidepressant drugs.

The serotonin transporter, however, also occurs in large quantities in numerous other organs such as the intestines or blood. Recent studies have shown that the  in the blood works in exactly the same way as in the brain. In the blood, it ensures that  maintain the appropriate concentration of serotonin in the blood plasma.

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-04-depression-blood.html

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