Monday, February 22, 2010
For those with the regular mental illness known as generalized anxiety disorder, a new study has found that the brain processes emotions in unusual ways. The study authors say the research could provide new insight into better treatments for people distress from debilitating anxiety.
"Patients experience anxiety and worry and respond exceptionally to emotionally negative stimuli, but it's never been clear really why," Dr. Amit Etkin, acting assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University and first author of the study, said in a news release. In the study, researchers gave MRI brain scans to 17 people with generalized concern disorder and 24 healthy people. The researchers wanted to understand what happened in participants' brains as they felt different emotions.
The study authors found that the brains of the participants reacted differently in several situations. The findings suggest that the prefrontal cortex is irregular in people with generalized anxiety disorder, and the researchers think that knowledge could lead to superior diagnosis and treatment. Senior study author Dr. Alan Schatzberg, chair of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University, said in the news release that the findings, published in the February online issue of American Journal of Psychiatry, could lead to greater understanding of the biology of psychopathology and how people react to psychotherapy.














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