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Clinical
Depression Linked To Abnormal Emotional Brain Circuits
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
In what may be the first
study to use brain imaging to look at the neural circuits
involved in emotional control in patients with depression,
researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have found
that brains of people with clinical depression react very
differently than those of healthy people when trying to cope with
negative situations.
The study appears in the August
15 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.
According to the World Health
Organization, clinical depression is one of the leading causes of
disability and lost productivity in the world. Understanding the
root cause of depression, however, has proved difficult.
"It's normal for people to
have negative emotions in certain circumstances," says lead
study author Tom Johnstone. "One of the features of major
depression is not that people have negative reactions to negative
situations, it's that they can't pull themselves out of those
negative emotional moods. They seem to have a deficit in their
ability to be able to regulate their emotions�
to come back down to baseline after a negative experience."
To evaluate the role of
emotional regulation in depression, psychology and psychiatry
researchers from the UW-Madison School of Medicine and Public
Health and Waisman Center monitored the brain responses of
healthy or depressed individuals to a series of images designed
to provoke strong negative emotional responses - images such as
car accidents and threatening-looking animals.
Participants were asked to
consciously work to decrease their emotional responses to some of
the negative images, using techniques such as envisioning a more
positive outcome than the one implied or by imagining the
situation was acted out rather than real.
"We ask them to reframe
the content of what they're seeing," rather than divert
their attention or distract themselves with unrelated thoughts,
Johnstone says. "We hope to engage cognitive areas in
re-interpreting the emotional content of a stimulusï½
to either increase or decrease its impact."
In both healthy and depressed
individuals, they found that such efforts increased brain
activity in prefrontal cortical areas known to help regulate the
emotional centers of the brain, as they expected.
The big difference was seen in
the reactions of the emotional centers themselves, including a
small almond-shaped structure called the amygdala located deep in
the brain.
In nondepressed individuals,
high levels of regulatory activity correlated with low activity
in the emotional response centers - in effect, the healthy
subjects' efforts successfully quelled their emotional responses.
In depressed patients, however, high levels of activity in the
amygdala and other emotional centers persisted despite intense
activity in the regulatory regions.
This finding suggests that
healthy people are able to effectively regulate their negative
emotions through conscious effort, but that the necessary neural
circuits are dysfunctional in many patients with depression, the
researchers say.
The difference becomes even
more pronounced the harder the patients try.
"Those [healthy]
individuals putting more cognitive effort into it are getting a
bigger payoff in terms of decreasing activation in these
emotional centers," Johnstone explains. "In the
depressed individuals, you find the exact opposite relationship -
it seems the more effort they put in, the more activation there
is in the amygdala."
Though the researchers don't
yet know exactly where the differences lie, Johnstone suggests
multiple factors may be at work. One possibility is that
depressed individuals have a broken link between the brain
regions, such that regulatory centers fail to send any dampening
signals to emotional centers.
Alternately, he says, depressed
patients may fall prey to rumination on negative thoughts. Maybe,
he says, "When they try to engage in this regulation they
just think more about the emotional content of the images.
Perhaps it's quite maladaptive for themï½ instead of
turning down their emotional responses possibly they turn up
their emotional responses."
The results of this study may
help identify appropriate treatment methods for people with
depression, who represent a diverse patient population, says
senior study author Richard Davidson.
Common psychological therapies
use mental strategies similar to those used in this study, he
says, and although psychotherapy might benefit patients who found
conscious efforts effective in the scenarios provided in this
study, it could be counterproductive for those patients whose
mental efforts increased their emotional responses.
"Our results suggest that
there is a subgroup of patients with depression for whom
traditional cognitive therapy may be contraindicated,"
Davidson says. "Other therapeutic interventions may benefit
this subgroup more than cognitive therapy, though this remains to
be studied in future research."
Identifying the involvement of
emotional brain circuits may also help focus the development of
new treatment strategies for depression and other psychiatric
disorders. "Emotional regulation underlies many psychiatric
disorders, not only depression," Johnstone says.
Long term, he says, "If we
understand where the brain circuits are that are important and
how they are involved in regulating emotion, then we can target
them with different types of therapies."
Other authors on the study
include Carien van Reekum, Heather Urry, and Ned Kalin. The work
was funded by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health
and Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceuticals.
Source:
University of Wisconsin, Madison

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