Stress-Related Disorders Affect Brain's Processing of Memory
CHICAGO, Dec. 3 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Researchers using functional
MRI (fMRI) have determined that the circuitry in the area of the brain
responsible for suppressing memory is dysfunctional in patients suffering from
stress-related psychiatric disorders. Results of the study will be presented
today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America
(RSNA).
"For patients with major depression and other stress-related disorders,
traumatic memories are a source of anxiety," said Nivedita Agarwal, M.D.,
radiology resident at the University of Udine in Italy, where the study is
being conducted, and research fellow at the Brain Imaging Center of McLean
Hospital, Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
"Because traumatic memories are not adequately suppressed by the brain, they
continue to interfere with the patient's life."
Dr. Agarwal and colleagues used brain fMRI to explore alterations in the
neural circuitry that links the prefrontal cortex to the hippocampus, while
study participants performed a memory task. Participants included 11 patients
with major depression, 13 with generalized anxiety disorder, nine with panic
attack disorders, five with borderline personality disorder and 21 healthy
individuals. All patients reported suffering varying degrees of stressful
traumatic events, such as sexual or physical abuse, difficult relationships or
"mobbing" - a type of bullying or harassment - at some point in their lives.
After reviewing a list of neutral word pairs, each participant underwent
fMRI. During imaging, they were presented with one of the words and asked to
either recall or to suppress the memory of its associated word.
The fMRI images revealed that the prefrontal cortex, which controls the
suppression and retrieval of memories processed by the hippocampus, showed
abnormal activation in the patients with stress-related disorders compared to
the healthy controls. During the memory suppression phase of the test,
patients with stress-related disorders showed greater activation in the
hippocampus, suggesting that insufficient activation of the prefrontal cortex
could be the basis for inadequate suppression of unwanted traumatic memories
stored in the hippocampus.
"These data suggest that the mechanism for memory suppression is
dysfunctional in patients with stress-related disorders primarily because of
an alteration of the prefrontal cortex," Dr. Agarwal said. "These patients
often complain of poor memory, which might in part be attributed to this
altered circuitry," she added.
According to Dr. Agarwal, fMRI is an important tool in understanding the
neurobiological basis of psychiatric disorders and in identifying imaging
markers to psychiatric disease, helping clinicians target specific parts of
the brain for treatment.
The study's principal investigator is Paolo Brambilla, M.D., Ph.D. Co-
authors are Monica Baiano, M.D., Ph.D., Massimo Bazzocchi, M.D., Giuseppe
Como, M.D., and Marta Maieron, Ph.D.
AT A GLANCE
-- Researchers using fMRI have found that people with stress-
related psychiatric disorders have difficulty suppressing
traumatic memories.
-- The brain's prefrontal cortex, which controls processing of
memories, is dysfunctional in patients with stress-related
psychiatric disorders.
-- fMRI is an important tool in understanding psychiatric
disorders.
Note: Copies of RSNA 2008 news releases and electronic images will be
available online at RSNA.org/press08 beginning Monday, Dec. 1.
RSNA is an association of more than 42,000 radiologists, radiation
oncologists, medical physicists and related scientists committed to excellence
in patient care through education and research. The Society is based in Oak
Brook, Ill. (RSNA.org)
Editor's note: The data in these releases may differ from those in the
printed abstract and those actually presented at the meeting, as researchers
continue to update their data right up until the meeting. To ensure you are
using the most up-to-date information, please call the RSNA Newsroom at 1-312-
949-3233.
For patient-friendly information on fMRI, visit RadiologyInfo.org.
SOURCE Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)