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posted by hubie on Thursday May 18, @08:41AM   Printer-friendly

"Powerful magnetic pulses applied to the scalp to stimulate the brain can bring fast relief to many severely depressed patients for whom standard treatments have failed. Yet it's been a mystery exactly how transcranial magnetic stimulation, as the treatment is known, changes the brain to dissipate depression. Now, research led by Stanford Medicine scientists has found that the treatment works by reversing the direction of abnormal brain signals."

"When they analyzed fMRI data across the whole brain, one connection stood out. In the normal brain, the anterior insula, a region that integrates bodily sensations, sends signals to a region that governs emotions, the anterior cingulate cortex.

"You could think of it as the anterior cingulate cortex receiving this information about the body—like heart rate or temperature—and then deciding how to feel on the basis of all these signals," Mitra said.

In three-quarters of the participants with depression, however, the typical flow of activity was reversed: The anterior cingulate cortex sent signals to the anterior insula. The more severe the depression, the higher the proportion of signals that traveled the wrong way."

"When depressed patients were treated with SNT, the flow of neural activity shifted to the normal direction within a week, coinciding with a lifting of their depression."

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-05-depression-reversing-brain-wrong.html


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  • (Score: 1) by Runaway1956 on Thursday May 18, @10:30AM (4 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Thursday May 18, @10:30AM (#1306824) Homepage Journal

    Those patients who are treated with psychoactive drugs? Is anything similar to this happening to them? Well, of course they aren't being treated with magnetic stimulation - the question is, are those electrical signals being reversed by the drugs?

    And, what of those infamous patients who go off their meds, and start murdering people? Those electrical signals that are out of time and going the wrong direction - what of those?

    I think they need to take a few of those suspects/patients, and start scanning their brains. Most importantly, they need to find out whether this treatment can cure those who have committed the most monstrous acts.

    What isn't quite clear in the article is, whether this cure is temporary (good for 3, 6, 12 months?) or whether it is permanent. With a permanent cure, there is no worry about some random patient going off his meds, and committing the most monstrous acts that people can imagine.

    --
    Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
  • (Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 18, @12:13PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 18, @12:13PM (#1306831)

    TFA clearly says the magnetic treatment is about depression and, a quick google suggests that studies attempting to link depression and violence have mixed results at best.

    On the other hand, many other mental diagnoses are tied to violence.

    Why do you fixate on depressed people becoming violent?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 18, @12:26PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 18, @12:26PM (#1306833)

      > Why do you fixate on depressed people becoming violent?

      Where TF did you get that from parent's post? More of your illogic? Crisscrossing neural short-circuits?

    • (Score: 1) by Runaway1956 on Thursday May 18, @09:16PM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Thursday May 18, @09:16PM (#1306908) Homepage Journal

      studies attempting to link depression and violence have mixed results at best.

      So, it happens. Notice that I didn't suggest that it happens everyday. I said it happens. Then you admit that it happens. The ball is in your court . . .

      --
      Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
  • (Score: 5, Informative) by ElizabethGreene on Thursday May 18, @03:14PM

    by ElizabethGreene (6748) on Thursday May 18, @03:14PM (#1306854)

    The people that go off their meds and start murdering people break down into a couple of different categories. The majority are Schizophrenics, a condition very different from depression and treated very differently. The other group is people between the ages of 15-24. Specific classes of SSRIs are strongly contraindicated for this age group because of the statistically significant increase in violent behavior. The cause of either group's behavior is not well understood.

    Your more general point is "Let's get an eyeball on how this treatment compares, as measured with fMRI, with the impact of other treatments." That's a good idea. The science linking serotonin levels and depression is starting to look soft, so I'm sure it's an active area of research.

    My novice non-expert understanding is that trans-cranial magnetic stimulation's effects have all been temporary. I haven't read any papers in that space in several years, so that may be outdated.