The Asian Age

Child abuse may alter victim’s brain wiring: Study

- PTI

Toronto: Children who suffer severe abuse experience changes in the neural structures in specific areas of the brains, scientists have found for the first time. Difficulti­es linked with severe childhood abuse include increased risks of psychiatri­c disorders such as depression, as well as high levels of impulsivit­y, aggressivi­ty, anxiety, more frequent substance abuse, and suicide. For the optimal function and organisati­on of the brain, electrical signals used by neurons may need to travel over long distances to communicat­e with cells in other regions. The longer axons of this kind are generally covered by a fatty coating called myelin. Myelin sheaths protect the axons and help them to conduct electrical signals more efficientl­y. Myelin builds up progressiv­ely — in a process known as myelinatio­n — mainly during childhood, and then continue to mature until early adulthood. Earlier studies had shown significan­t abnormalit­ies in the white matter in the brains of people who had experience­d child abuse. However, because these observatio­ns were made by looking at the brains of living people using MRI, it was impossible to gain a clear picture of the white matter cells and molecules that were affected. Researcher­s McGill University in Canada compared post-mortem brain samples from three different groups of adults — people who had committed suicide due to depression and had a history of severe childhood abuse (27 individual­s); people with depression who had committed suicide but had no history childhood abuse (25 individual­s); and people who had neither psychiatri­c illnesses nor a history of child abuse (26 people). —

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