Most people know depression as a condition of low mood, sadness, or loss of interest. But for many, depression also brings something less talked about but just as disabling: a mental “slowing” or brain fog. Research led by Dr. Susannah Murphy and others shows that these thinking problems called Cognitive Dysfunction are a core feature of depression, not just a side effect.
What is Cognitive Dysfunction?
Cognitive dysfunction refers to difficulties with:
Dr. Murphy’s article “When the Fog Doesn’t Lift: Targeting Cognitive Dysfunction in Depression” highlights that 85-94% of people with major depression experience some cognitive difficulties especially slower thinking and decision making. These problems often persist even after mood symptoms improve.
Why Processing Speed Slows Down
Depression isn’t just a mental state; it changes how the brain works. Chronic stress, low levels of certain neurotransmitters (like serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine), and even inflammation can disrupt networks in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. These areas are essential for fast thinking, attention, and memory. This results in everyday activities such as reading email, doing work tasks, responding to friends take more effort and more time. People may feel “mentally tired” all day, even with adequate sleep.
Medications Can Play a Role Too
SSRIs-common antidepressants like fluoxetine, sertraline, and citalopram are effective at improving mood, but some patients notice lingering or even new problems with mental speed, especially early in treatment.
Research shows SSRI’s can, in some individuals, slightly dampen processing speed or alertness as the brain adapts to changes in serotonin levels. For most people this is temporary, but for some it may persist.
Neurobiological changes
Structural brain changes
Other contributing/comorbid factors
Sleep disruption, medical conditions (diabetes, thyroid dysfunction, cardiovascular issues, B12 deficiency, menopause, Alzheimer’s, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, sleep apnea, brain injury, stroke), Medication side effects (SSRI’s), Psychosocial stressors (chronic stress, social isolation, trauma which increases cortisol and overtimes harms hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, lifestyle factors (poor diet, lack of exercise and substance abuse)
Why This Matters
Cognitive dysfunction isn’t just an inconvenience. It can:
What You Can Do
If you’re experiencing depression and feel mentally slow, talk to your clinician. Ask specifically about your thinking and memory, not just mood.
Together you can:
Targeting Cognition by Dr. Murphy and Colleagues
The Takeaway
Depression is more than sadness; it can literally slow down your brain. Dr. Murphy’s work reminds us that effective depression treatment should target thinking and processing speed as well as mood. With the right combination of treatments and lifestyle support, many people can lift not only their mood but also the mental fog.