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Brain imaging has revealed a
breakdown in normal patterns of emotional processing that impairs
the ability of people with clinical depression to suppress negative
emotional states. Efforts by depressed patients to suppress their
feelings when viewing emotionally negative images enhanced activity
in several brain areas, including the amygdala, known to play a role
in generating emotion, according to a report in the Aug. 15 issue of
the Journal of Neuroscience. |
WASHINGTON, DC, August 15, 2007 – Brain imaging has revealed a
breakdown in normal patterns of emotional processing that impairs the
ability of people with clinical depression to suppress negative emotional
states. Efforts by depressed patients to suppress their feelings when
viewing emotionally negative images enhanced activity in several brain
areas, including the amygdala, known to play a role in generating emotion,
according to a report in the August 15 issue of The Journal of
Neuroscience.
“Identifying areas in the nervous system that correlate to pathological
mood states is one of the pressing questions in mental illness today,”
says Carol Tamminga, MD, of the University of Texas Southwest Medical
Center. Tamminga was not involved in the study.
Tom Johnstone, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin, and colleagues
there and at Tufts University studied 21 adults diagnosed with major
depressive disorder and 18 healthy subjects of comparable ages.
Participants were asked to view a series of emotionally positive and
negative images and then indicate their reaction to each one. Four seconds
after the presentation of each picture, participants were asked either to
increase their emotional response (for example, imagining a loved one
experiencing what was depicted in the image), to decrease it, or simply to
continue watching the image.
During the test, a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner
detected changes in neural activity. Johnstone and his colleagues also
recorded levels of emotional excitement by measuring pupil dilation.
The data showed distinctive patterns of activity in the ventromedial
prefrontal cortex (VMPFC) and the right prefrontal cortex (PFC), areas
that regulate the emotional output generated from the amygdala. The VMPFC
is compromised in depression, likely because of the inappropriate
engagement of right PFC circuitry in depressed individuals.
“These findings underscore the importance of emotional regulation
deficits in depression,” says Johnstone. “They also suggest targets for
therapeutic intervention.”
According to previous research, normal interaction between the amygdala
and the VMPFC may underlie the proper adaptation of levels of the stress
hormone cortisol on a daily basis. These levels do not vary as widely in
people with major depressive disorder; future research may now be able to
clarify the mechanism that underlies this aspect of depression. It could
also examine the possibility of using measurements of activity in the
amygdala to predict the effectiveness of treatments for depression such as
cognitive behavioral therapy.
The work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health, part
of the National Institutes of Health, and Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceuticals.
The Journal of Neuroscience is published by the Society for
Neuroscience, an organization of more than 36,500 basic scientists and
clinicians who study the brain and nervous system. Johnstone can be
reached at itjohnstone@wisc.edu.
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