Exercise matches antidepressants for depression relief, review shows

A new Cochrane Library review of dozens of trials confirms that regular exercise can alleviate depression symptoms as effectively as antidepressants or cognitive behavioral therapy. Even light activities like walking may provide significant benefits. Researchers analyzed nearly 5,000 adults with depression, finding moderate reductions in symptoms across various exercise types.

An updated review published by the Cochrane Library has strengthened evidence that exercise offers a viable treatment for depression. Building on a 2013 analysis, this latest examination nearly doubles the data, drawing from 69 randomized controlled trials involving almost 5,000 adults diagnosed with mild, moderate, or severe depression, or scoring high on symptom scales.

In 57 trials, participants assigned to regular exercise showed moderately reduced symptoms—such as persistent sadness or loss of interest—compared to those on waiting lists or without treatment. Exercises ranged from low-intensity gardening and brisk walking to vigorous sprinting or football, excluding yoga or stretching to isolate physical activity effects. Sessions typically occurred weekly for weeks to months.

The review also compared exercise directly to other therapies. Across 10 trials against cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and five against antidepressants alone, exercise performed equally well. "There wasn’t a difference between them," notes Emily Hird at University College London, who was not involved in the study.

Light and moderate exercises appeared more effective than intense ones, likely due to better adherence. "If you start going hard, then people drop out and stop exercising," explains Brendon Stubbs at King’s College London. Potential mechanisms include social benefits from group activities, boosted self-esteem, and muscle-released myokines that reduce inflammation and promote brain cell growth, especially in resistance training.

Guidelines from bodies like the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence already endorse aerobic exercise, such as 10 weeks of jogging. However, limitations persist: participants knew their group assignments, risking placebo effects, and many trials had small samples. Larger studies are needed to pinpoint optimal exercises for different depression severities. "The most important thing is empowering people to do something they enjoy," Stubbs adds.

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UCLA study illustration: Patient receiving accelerated TMS therapy in clinic, with efficacy graphs comparing 5-day vs 6-week treatments.
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UCLA study finds five-day accelerated TMS schedule performed similarly to conventional six-week course for treatment-resistant depression

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Researchers at UCLA Health report that delivering transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in an intensive five-day schedule—five sessions per day for five days—was associated with depression symptom improvements comparable to a conventional six-week schedule in a retrospective analysis of 175 patients with treatment-resistant depression. The study also found that some patients who showed little immediate change after the accelerated course improved noticeably in the following weeks.

An umbrella review and pooled analysis published in BMJ’s open-access journal RMD Open concludes that exercise therapy—widely promoted as a first-line treatment for osteoarthritis—delivers, at most, small and short-term improvements in pain and function compared with placebo or no treatment, with benefits appearing smaller in larger and longer-term trials.

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Specialists state that physical exercise must be mandatory in cancer treatment, not optional. Evidence from studies highlights benefits like reduced cardiac toxicity and fatigue. The recommendation was emphasized at the Onco in Rio congress in Rio de Janeiro.

A randomized clinical trial found that 24 minutes of specially designed music paired with auditory beat stimulation significantly lowers anxiety symptoms. Researchers at Toronto Metropolitan University tested various listening durations on 144 adults with moderate anxiety. The 24-minute session provided the strongest benefits.

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Adults with stage 1 hypertension who practiced baduanjin—an eight-movement Chinese mind-body routine—had modest but measurable reductions in systolic blood pressure over three months that were maintained at one year, with results comparable to brisk walking, according to a randomized trial published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

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