Category: Anxiety

Forget Me Not

Business Logo for Psychological and Neuropsychological IssuesMemories are typically useful and pleasant.  It is fortunate that relatively few are unpleasant and aversive.  Both pleasant and unpleasant memories are sustained by the same brain system, though the strength of the memories may be unequal.  It is advantageous for a person to encode emotionally charged information over neutral memories.  Events that provoke an emotional reaction tend to leave a stronger trace than those that do not leave an emotional impression.  Remembering where food poisoning was contracted is likely more important than the lyrics to a song.  The first memory avoids illness or death while the second avoids boredom.  Obviously, survival of the organism is more dependent on the first memory than the second.  The trouble begins when the emotionally charged memory trace is over-activated.  It transforms the memory from helpful and adaptive to unpleasant and aversive.  Moreover, the overactive memory may decrease adaption and jeopardize survival.  The memory of contracting food poisoning may make the person afraid of all food sources.  The once useful memory may become a liability.

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder evolves by this mechanism.  Being harmed or confronted with death is highly emotionally charged, and will certainly make a lasting impression.  This is a necessary adaption in order to avoid harm in the future.  Avoidance of specific situations that risk harm to the organism is necessary for survival.  Avoidance of all situations that are even remotely related to the original is called over-generalization.  The more the fear is generalized to related stimuli, the greater the overall impairment in the person’s functioning.  A man holding an umbrella may generate as much fear as that of a man holding a gun.  The over-generalization becomes increasingly entrenched.  Repeated alarming experiences that are close to the initial trauma are reinforced.  It is not only the gun that that generates anxiety and fear, but any object that remotely resembles a gun.  Each time the person has frightful reactions to related stimuli, the maladaptive memories become stronger and stronger.  Like any road, furrows widen and deepen with use.  The longer the maladaptive memory persists, the wider and deeper it becomes.

The act of filling in the maladaptive furrows with neutral recollection is termed extinction.  It is a very difficult process for the patient, in that it entails approaching the feared stimuli.  Moreover, it is very common for the extinguished traumatic memory to reappear months later.  This can be very disconcerting, as the patient and doctor believe the trauma is extinguished, only to reappear at a later date.  It is only natural for the patient to become increasingly hopeless that their suffering will be alleviated.  They feel powerless in the face of their traumatic memory.  Recently, there has been progress towards increasing the effectiveness of extinction training; both behavioral and medicinal.
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It appears that the extinction of traumatic memories may be accelerated by drugs that block the physical aspects of an emotional response.  The beta blocker propranolol blocks a neurotransmitter that induces excitation in the brain.  It may help the brain to reconsolidate traumatic memories in a less fearful way.  Unfortunately, the research has been inconclusive as to its efficacy during extinction training.  Some studies indicate that it is useful in this regard, others do not.  A new behavioral approach has received greater experimental support, and does not have the typical disadvantages of medication.  Researchers (principally Elizabeth Phelps at NYU) have included an extra reminder trail ten minutes prior to the usual extinction trial.  For example, an extinction trial for the person with food poisoning may consist of pairing pictures of the food with its odor.  As the trials proceed, the odor is gradually removed until the patient no longer displays a reaction to the feared object-say a hot dog.  It appears that merely showing the picture without the odor, ten minutes prior to the extinction trial, significantly increases the effectiveness of the procedure.  It is believed that the reminder trial opens the brain to change during the extinction trial.  The effectiveness of the extinction is enhanced if the brain is already considering the feared stimuli.  There may be a window during recollection where memories are vulnerable to alteration.

It is hoped that this new technique will significantly enhance behavioral treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.  The reminder session during extinction may shed light on how humans consolidate their memories.  This process has been studied intensively for decades, and yet remains murky.  If this new technique receives additional experimental support, it may not only help those suffering with traumatic memories, but reveal a fundamental property of how we form memories.  It’s two revelations for the price of one.  A bargain at any price.

Losing It

Business Logo for Psychological and Neuropsychological IssuesLosing it.  All of us lose “it” at some point.  The “it” appears to be the control exerted by the prefrontal cortex of the brain.  The prefrontal cortex serves many functions, and one of the most important is the inhibition of impulses.  The most common impulses to inhibit are sexual and aggressive urges; though they are not mutually exclusive.  The research of Amy Arnsten at Yale has shown that acute stress releases chemicals that reduces the influence of the prefrontal cortex over these impulses.  Not only is prefrontal control weakened, but more primitive areas of the brain emerge to pick up the slack.

In response to the stress confronting the brain, the less evolved brainstem releases two primary neurotransmitters called dopamine and norepinephrine.  Dr. Arnsten discovered that these neurotransmitters actually diminish the communication between the prefrontal area and other regions of the brain.  Once the regulatory network is down, the base of the brain sends a chemical message to the adrenal glands adjacent to the kidneys, and the adrenal releases a hormone that influences the brain in turn.  Norepinephrine and the adrenal hormone cortisol promotes emotional areas of the brain to be fearful and prepare for possible danger.

Chronic unrelenting stress may actually reduce connections between nerve cells in the inhibitory prefrontal area.  Conversely, nerve connections in the more primitive emotional areas of the brain may expand.  There is some evidence to suggest that shrinkage of neural connections in the prefrontal cortex may play a role in depression, addiction and anxiety disorders.  The neurotransmitter dopamine has been long implicated in addiction, due to its strong influence on habit forming areas of the brain.  It appears that a relatively brief exposure to stress has little lasting affect on brain structure.  The longer stress is experienced, the greater the chance the more primitive emotional brain areas will dominate one’s behavior.
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This feedback loop of the brain may play a role in post-traumatic stress disorder.  The habit forming areas of the brain allow us to quickly acquire skills and behaviors that ensure success in novel environments; for example, a war zone.  The prefrontal cortex allows us to formulate plans and inhibit fearful impulses that would reduce effective functioning.  Once the threat is removed, the dangers already experienced may overwhelm the prefrontal cortex’s ability to inhibit the emotional excitement.  Over time, the dopamine, cortisol and norepinephrine may weaken the prefrontal control to the point that the fearful impulses are rarely blocked.  The unfortunate person may re-experience highly emotional scenes in an uncontrolled and repetitive fashion.  This person would experience substantial stress in a peaceful environment, since the brain continues to assault them with feelings and images that inspire fear and avoidance.

It is still a mystery why some people manage chronic stress well, and others-not so much.  It is conjectured that some lucky people have an enhanced ability to digest the dopamine and epinephrine excreted during stress. They would possess an innate biological resistance to stress.  On the other hand, psychological research has revealed that people with a long record of mastering challenging situations are better able to tolerate stress.  People who are often defeated and overwhelmed by events are more liable to suffer with chronic stress and depression.  A person’s perception of control is a key element in the subjective experience of stress.  To what degree the subjective sense of control is a product of training or brain chemistry is anyone’s guess.  As with most psychological phenomenon, it is likely that both elements play an important role.  Effective behavioral training increases a sense of personal control; decreasing the excretion of stress chemicals.  Inheriting favorable brain chemistry may reduce the biological strength of the stress response.  Nature and nurture.  Can’t get away from it.

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