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News Childhood Trauma Leaves Its Mark On The Brain

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ms spock

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Childhood Trauma Leaves Its Mark On the Brain
Jan. 15, 2013 — It is well known that violent adults often have a history of childhood psychological trauma. Some of these individuals exhibit very real, physical alterations in a part of the brain called the orbitofrontal cortex. Yet a direct link between such early trauma and neurological changes has been difficult to find, until now.

Publishing in the January 15 edition of Translational Psychiatry, EPFL Professor Carmen Sandi and team demonstrate for the first time a correlation between psychological trauma in pre-adolescent rats and neurological changes similar to those found in violent humans.

"This research shows that people exposed to trauma in childhood don't only suffer psychologically, but their brain also gets altered," explains Sandi, Head of EPFL's Laboratory of Behavioral Genetics, Director of the Brain Mind Institute, and a member of the National Centers for Competence in Research SYNAPSY. "This adds an additional dimension to the consequences of abuse, and obviously has scientific, therapeutic and social implications."

The researchers were able to unravel the biological foundations of violence using a cohort of male rats exposed to psychologically stressful situations when young. After observing that these experiences led to aggressive behavior when the rats reached adulthood, they examined what was happening in the animals' brains to see if the traumatic period had left a lasting mark.

"In a challenging social situation, the orbitofrontal cortex of a healthy individual is activated in order to inhibit aggressive impulses and to maintain normal interactions," explains Sandi. "But in the rats we studied, we noticed that there was very little activation of the orbitofrontal cortex. This, in turn, reduces their ability to moderate their negative impulses. This reduced activation is accompanied by the overactivation of the amygdala, a region of the brain that's involved in emotional reactions." Other researchers who have studied the brains of violent human individuals have observed the same deficit in orbitofrontal activation and the same corresponding reduced inhibition of aggressive impulses. "It's remarkable; we didn't expect to find this level of similarity," says Sandi.

The scientists also measured changes in the expression of certain genes in the brain. They focused on genes known to be involved in aggressive behavior for which there are polymorphisms (genetic variants) that predispose carriers to an aggressive attitude, and they looked at whether the psychological stress experienced by the rats caused a modification in the expression of these genes. "We found that the level of MAOA gene expression increased in the prefrontal cortex," says Sandi. This alteration was linked to an epigenetic change; in other words, the traumatic experience ended up causing a long-term modification of this gene's expression.

Finally, the researchers tested the efficacy of an MAOA gene inhibitor, in this case an anti-depressant, to see if it could reverse the rise in aggression induced by juvenile stress, which it did. Going forward, the team will explore treatments for reversing physical changes in the brain, and above all, attempt to shed light on whether some people are more vulnerable to being effected by trauma based on their genetic makeup.

"This research could also reveal the possible ability of antidepressants -- an ability that's increasingly being suspected -- to renew cerebral plasticity," says Sandi.

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It will be amazing when they can treat the specific genes and how will that change treatment options.

I wonder if some form of processing the trauma will need to occur to enable treatment to work in some ways..
 
But anti-depressants don't work well for me. All of the side effects make my life a living hell. :( If there is a side effect I get it, ALL of them. Even when they seem like they should cancel one another out. :(

Lately I have been paying a lot of attention to which triggers increase my violent tendencies. Man I just want to beat half the state with a stick. :(
 
I have already had a ct scan because of my stroke. Perhaps this can be used to assist my psychiarist when S/he reaches a decision about my ptsd, or my abusive childhood.I hope so.

I once was discretely accused of hoping to make money from this. It's enough make me forget about therapy. The only thing I wish for, is help. I am so tired of living alone with this "emotional numbness", and all the other features.
 
Well epigenetic changes are essentially switching genes from 'off' to 'on,' or vice versa, not changing your genetic code. So if these gene expressions get switched on/off due to trauma, or inherited in the on/off position do to the traumas of parents/grandparents/etc., then we might eventually find a way to switch them back. That would be great, obviously, since it's looking like a lot of diseases of the mind and body are due to stressors and their resulting epigenetic changes being handed down through the generations.

Meantime though I gotta say I feel sorry that the rats are suffering because of our suffering—though I realize this is far from a universal feeling. Seems to me all suffering reverberates out into the world, be it from a rat or a human, and adds to the overall burden of grief and pain in the ether, so to speak. I mean, we basically have real-world experiments underway all over the globe with humans and their exposure to war, violence, abuse, attack, and every other form of inhumanity, not to mention natural disasters. And we already have many real-world experiments underway with all kinds of psychopharmacological agents to see how they work in people (who are not rats). Why involve the rats?

Excuse my pet petite rant, and sorry if it's too off thread.
 
But anti-depressants don't work well for me. All of the side effects make my life a living hell. :( If there is a side effect I get it, ALL of them. Even when they seem like they should cancel one another out. :(

That really sucks the big one, big time. I two bad reactions and one ADVERSE reaction to a medication last year. Scared the living bejesus out of me.
 
@Ms Spock luckily marijuana relieves a very high percentage of my symptoms and is legal for me to use where I live. I feel very lucky to have discovered this nearly magical plant. :)

That said: I have to figure out how to deal with my symptoms without it because I want to do long-term travel alone with my kids and being stoned + traveling alone with kids = serious danger. So uhm, dangit!

Freakin bodies suck.
 
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