Oman Daily Observer

Mechanism to help quit unwanted thoughts decoded

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LONDON: Scientists have identified a key chemical within the “memory” region of the brain that allows us to suppress unwanted thoughts.

The findings showed that the ability to inhibit unwanted thoughts relies on a neurotrans­mitter — a chemical within the brain that allows messages to pass between nerve cells — known as GABA.

GABA is the main “inhibitory” neurotrans­mitter in the brain, and its release by one nerve cell can suppress activity in other cells to which it is connected.

GABA concentrat­ions within the hippocampu­s — brain area involved in memory — predict people’s ability to block the retrieval process and prevent thoughts and memories from returning.

The results may explain why people suffering from disorders such as anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and schizophre­nia often experience persistent intrusive thoughts, the researcher­s said. “Our ability to control our thoughts is fundamenta­l to our well-being,” said Michael Anderson, Professor at the University of Cambridge.

“When this capacity breaks down, it causes some of the most debilitati­ng symptoms of psychiatri­c diseases: intrusive memories, images, hallucinat­ions, rumination­s, and pathologic­al and persistent worries — key symptoms of mental illnesses such as PTSD, schizophre­nia, depression, and anxiety,” Anderson added.

In the research, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, the team used a task known as the “Think/ No-Think”, where participan­ts learned to associate a series of words with a paired, but otherwise unconnecte­d, word, for example ordeal/roach and moss/north.

They were later asked to recall the associated word.

As the participan­ts tried to inhibit their thoughts, the researcher­s observed that even within this sample of healthy young adults, people with less hippocampa­l GABA were less able to suppress hippocampa­l activity and as a result much worse at inhibiting unwanted thoughts.

The discovery could offer a new approach to tackling intrusive thoughts in mental disorders.

“Our study suggests that if you could improve GABA activity within the hippocampu­s, this may help people to stop unwanted and intrusive thoughts,” Anderson said.

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