Eastern Eye (UK)

Adult brain not rigid?

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DEPRESSION treatments have the ability to rewire the human brain, according to a study that calls into question the belief that the structure of the adult brain is rigid.

Researcher­s at the University of Muenster in Germany have shown in-patient treatment for depression can lead to an increase in brain connectivi­ty.

Those patients who respond well to this treatment show a greater increase in connectivi­ty than those who do not, they said.

The study, presented at the European College for Neuropsych­opharmacol­ogy Congress in Vienna, Austria, calls into question the belief that the structure of the adult brain is generally rigid and incapable of rapid changes.

The researcher­s found that patients who responded well to antidepres­sion treatment, showed a greater increase in connectivi­ty than those who did not.

“We found that treatment for depression changed the infrastruc­ture of the brain, which goes against previous expectatio­ns,” said study lead researcher Professor Jonathan Repple. “Treated patients showed a greater number of connection­s than they had shown before treatment,” Repple said.

The researcher­s studied 109 patients with serious depression and compared them with 55 healthy controls. Their brains were scanned using an MRI scanner which had been set up to identify parts of the brain that were communicat­ing with other parts, determinin­g the level of connection­s within the brain. The patients were then treated for depression, some with electrocon­vulsive therapy (ECT), some with psychologi­cal therapy or medication, some with a combinatio­n of all therapies.

After treatment they were then rescanned and the number of connection­s recounted. They were also retested for symptoms of depression. “Moreover, those who showed the most response to treatment had developed a greater the number of new connection­s than those who showed little response,” Repple said.

“A second scan showing that there are no time effects in healthy controls supports our findings that we see something that is related to the disease and more importantl­y the treatment of this disease,” said Repple.

“We don’t have an explanatio­n as to how these changes take place, or why they should happen with such different forms of treatment,” he added.

The findings align very much with the current belief the brain has much more flexibilit­y in adaptation. “This means the brain structure of patients with serious clinical depression is not as fixed as we thought,” said Eric Ruhe, from Rabdoud Medical Center.

 ?? ?? TREATMENT: The researcher­s studied 109 patients with serious depression
TREATMENT: The researcher­s studied 109 patients with serious depression

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