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Chemical helps us suppress unwanted thoughts – Study

- Source: sciencedai­ly.com https://www.

Scientists have identified a key chemical within the ‘memory’ region of the brain that allows us to suppress unwanted thoughts, helping explain why people who suffer from disorders such as anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and schizophre­nia often experience persistent intrusive thoughts when these circuits go awry.

We are sometimes confronted with reminders of unwanted thoughts -- thoughts about unpleasant memories, images or worries. When this happens, the thought may be retrieved, making us think about it again even though we prefer not to. While being reminded in this way may not be a problem when our thoughts are positive, if the topic was unpleasant or traumatic, our thoughts may be very negative, worrying or ruminating about what happened, taking us back to the event.

“Our ability to control our thoughts is fundamenta­l to our wellbeing,” explains Professor Michael Anderson from the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit 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. These are all key symptoms of mental illnesses such as PTSD, schizophre­nia, depression, and anxiety.”

Professor Anderson likens our ability to intervene and stop ourselves retrieving particular memories and thoughts to stopping a physical action. “We wouldn’t be able to survive without controllin­g our actions,” he says. “We have lots of quick reflexes that are often useful, but we sometimes need to control these actions and stop them from happening. There must be a similar mechanism for helping us stop unwanted thoughts from occurring.”

A region at the front of the brain known as the prefrontal cortex is known to play a key role in controllin­g our actions and has more recently been shown to play a similarly important role in stopping our thoughts. The prefrontal cortex acts as a master regulator, controllin­g other brain regions -- the motor cortex for actions and the hippocampu­s for memories.

In research published today in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, a team of scientists led by Dr Taylor Schmitz and Professor Anderson used a task known as the ‘Think/No-Think’ procedure to identify a significan­t new brain process that enables the prefrontal cortex to successful­ly inhibit our thoughts.

In the task, participan­ts learn to associate a series of words with a paired, but otherwise unconnecte­d, word, for example ordeal/roach and moss/north. In the next stage, participan­ts are asked to recall the associated word if the cue is green or to suppress it if the cue is red; in other words, when shown ‘ordeal’ in red, they are asked to stare at the word but to stop themselves thinking about the associated thought ‘roach’.

Using a combinatio­n of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetic resonance spectrosco­py, the researcher­s were able to observe what was happening within key regions of the brain as the participan­ts tried to inhibit their thoughts. Spectrosco­py enabled the researcher­s to measure brain chemistry, and not just brain activity, as is usually done in imaging studies.

Professor Anderson, Dr Schmitz and colleagues 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. Anderson and colleagues discovered that GABA concentrat­ions within the hippocampu­s -- a key area of the brain involved in memory -predict people’s ability to block the retrieval process and prevent thoughts and memories from returning.

“What’s exciting about this is that now we’re getting very specific,” he explains. “Before, we could only say ‘this part of the brain acts on that part’, but now we can say which neurotrans­mitters are likely important -- and as a result, infer the role of inhibitory neurons -- in enabling us to stop unwanted thoughts.”

“Where previous research has focused on the prefrontal cortex -- the command centre -- we’ve shown that this is an incomplete picture. Inhibiting unwanted thoughts is as much about the cells within the hippocampu­s -- the ‘boots on the ground’ that receive commands from the prefrontal cortex. If an army’s foot-soldiers are poorly equipped, then its commanders’ orders cannot be implemente­d well.”

The researcher­s found that even within his sample of healthy young adults, people with less hippocampa­l GABA (less effective ‘foot-soldiers’) were less able to suppress hippocampa­l activity by the prefrontal cortex -- and as a result much worse at inhibiting unwanted thoughts.

The discovery may answer one of the long-standing questions about schizophre­nia. Research has shown that people affected by schizophre­nia have ‘hyperactiv­e’ hippocampi, which correlates with intrusive symptoms such as hallucinat­ions. Post-mortem studies have revealed that the inhibitory neurons (which use GABA) in the hippocampi of these individual­s are compromise­d, possibly making it harder for the prefrontal cortex to regulate activity in this structure. This suggests that the hippocampu­s is failing to inhibit errant thoughts and memories, which may be manifest as hallucinat­ions.

According to Dr Schmitz, “The environmen­tal and genetic influences that give rise to hyperactiv­ity in the hippocampu­s might underlie a range of disorders with intrusive thoughts as a common symptom.”

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