Researchers pinpoint circuits that drive PTSD flashbacks - Action News
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Researchers pinpoint circuits that drive PTSD flashbacks

Researchers at a large veterans' hospital in Minnesota say they've pinpointed the neural circuits that drive PTSD flashbacks and panic attacks. And solving the PTSD riddle may help treat those suffering from neuroticism, psychosis and obsessive-compulsive disorder as well.

Studies could help people suffering from panic attacks, psychosis and obsessive-compulsive disorder

Canadian soldiers in Kandahar in 2010. An estimated 14,000 Canadian soldiers suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. (Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press)

"It's like sort ofboxes opening up, and your brain just launches these things without you actually trying to stimulate them."That was how then-senator, and retired general, Romeo Dallaire describedthe flashbacks that bubble up in his head.

Dallaire made the comments ina 2013 interview with the CBC's Sunday Edition, 20 years after the Rwandan genocide he tried to stop.

He's far from alone in dealing with those type of unwelcome flashbacks. Anestimated 10 per cent of Canadians struggle with depression, flashbacks and panic attacks as a result ofpost-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, according to the Canadian Mental Health Association.

About 14,000 Canadian veterans also suffer from PTSD, includingDallaire.

And the retired general's description aptly sums up how brain circuits work. It also fitswith recent brain research on post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

'Your brain just launches these things without you actually trying to stimulate them,' said retired general Romeo Dallaire in describing his post-traumatic flashbacks. (Pawel Dwulit/CP)

Dr.ApostolosGeorgopoulosis the director of the Brain Science Centre at the Minneapolis VA Medical Centre, alarge veterans' hospital in Minnesota.

Researchers there say they've pinpointed the neural circuits that drive PTSD flashbacks and panic attacks.

"Your brain is a dynamic network," said Georgopoulos,describinghow healthy brains form neural networks, andthen wipe the slate clean and start all over.

"So when you have, let's say, a visual stimulus come in to your eyes, then the visual network that receives that information becomes temporarily locked. That individual system lasts for a few seconds. And then very quickly, [the network] becomes again ready to absorb new information."

That's how nine of out of 10 people process their experiences,be they mundane or horrific. One out of 10, however, don't wipe the slate clean. Dreadful sights and sounds resonate in their heads.

Georgopoulos' lab can spot PTSD sufferers by magnetically scanning their brains, a procedure called magnetoencephalography.

Dr. Apostolos Georgopoulos studies post-traumatic stress disorder at the Minneapolis VA Medical Centre, a large veterans' hospital in Minnesota. He says he and his team can identify PTSD with 95 per cent accuracy through magnetic scanning. (University of Minnesota/YouTube)

"The healthy people had the ability tomaintain the flexibility of their networks at various trauma strength exposures," saidGeorgopolous.

Those with PTSD, though, havewhat he calls "inflexibility" in their neural networks.

"Their networks were locked in and could not be modulated," he said.

Based on a one-minute scan,Georgopolous' team can spot inflexiblePTSDcircuits with 95 per centaccuracy.

If they do detect PTSD, drugs can be prescribed as a treatment.

A variety of behavioural therapies aimed at getting stubborn brain circuits to unlock can also help.

"You can sort of re-package that all together and put that memory aside," saidDr. Lisa James, a clinical psychologist at the Brain Science Center.

"So it allows for their brain to de-correlate and become more flexible, so that that memory isn't just constantly there, popping up."

PTSD flashbacks are hard to shake. The more we learn about how neural circuits recycle or get stuck, the better treatment will be.

And the dividends could be huge. The locked circuits in PTSD are located in the brain's temporal lobe, just above the right ear.

The stubborn thoughts associated with neuroticism, psychosis and obsessive-compulsive disorder originate elsewhere in the brain, and can also be picked up in magnetic scans. Solving the PTSD riddle may help solve these as well.