Novel method developed helps identify the brain mechanism behind depression. Major depressive disorders are due to alterations in the brain activity and connectivity.
A new method developed aids in identifying the brain mechanism behind depression. People with major depressive disorders experience alterations in the brain activity and connectivity underlying reward and memory, reveals a new study. The //findings, published in the journal Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, provide clues as to which regions of the brain could be at the root of symptoms, such as reduced happiness and pleasure, or negative memories, in depression.
‘Understanding the brain mechanism behind depression can lead to new developmental treatments for depression.’
For the study, the researchers used a new approach to measure the influence of one brain region on another, referred to as effective connectivity, in depression. The approach goes beyond the limitations of previous brain imaging studies, which show if but not how activity of different brain regions is related.
"The new method allows the effect of one brain region on another to be measured in depression, in order to discover more about which brain systems make causal contributions to depression," said one of the researchers Edmund Rolls, Professor at University of Warwick in England.
The researchers compared 336 people with major depressive disorder to 350 healthy controls.
Brain regions involved in reward and subjective pleasure received less drive (or reduced effective connectivity) in patients, which may contribute to the decreased feeling of happiness in depression, the study showed.
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Memory-related areas of the brain had increased activity and connectivity in people with depression, which the authors suggest may be related to heightened memory processing, possibly of unpleasant memories, in depression.
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Source-IANS