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And Hayes can measure how some of those regions go awry in the vicious cycle that is PTSD, where patients feel like they're reliving a trauma instead of understanding that it's just a memory.
What happens? A brain processing system that includes the amygdala -- the fear hot spot -- becomes overactive. Other regions important for attention and memory, regions that usually moderate our response to fear, are tamped down.
"The good news is this neural signal is not permanent. It can change with treatment," Hayes says.
Her lab performed MRI scans while patients either tried to suppress their negative memories, or followed PTSD therapy and changed how they thought about their trauma. That fear-processing region quickly cooled down when people followed the PTSD therapy.
It's work that has implications far beyond the military: About a quarter of a million Americans will develop PTSD at some point in their lives. Anyone can develop it after a terrifying experience, from a car accident or hurricane to rape or child abuse.
More research is needed for the scans to be used in diagnosing either PTSD or a TBI. But some are getting close -- like another MRI-based test that can spot lingering traces of iron left over from bleeding, thus signaling a healed TBI. If the brain was hit hard enough to bleed, then more delicate nerve pathways surely were damaged, too, Kelly notes.
[Associated
Press;
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