Brain scans of people with a history of depression are different in the regions associated with guilt and knowledge of socially acceptable behavior from individuals who never get depressed
Brain scans of people with a history of depression are different in the regions associated with guilt and knowledge of socially acceptable behavior from individuals who never get depressed, researchers at the University of Manchester have found. The study provides the first evidence of brain mechanisms to explain Freud's classical observation that exaggerated guilt and self-blame are key to understanding depression.
"Our research provides the first brain mechanism that could explain the classical observation by Freud that depression is distinguished from normal sadness by proneness to exaggerated feelings of guilt or self-blame," said lead researcher Dr Roland Zahn, from the University's School of Psychological Sciences.
"For the first time, we chart the regions of the brain that interact to link detailed knowledge about socially appropriate behaviour - the anterior temporal lobe - with feelings of guilt - the subgenual region of the brain - in people who are prone to depression," he stated.
The study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the brains of a group of people after remission from major depression for more than a year, and a control group who have never had depression.
Both groups were asked to imagine acting badly, for example being 'stingy' or 'bossy' towards their best friends. They then reported their feelings to the research team.
"The scans revealed that the people with a history of depression did not 'couple' the brain regions associated with guilt and knowledge of appropriate behaviour together as strongly as the never depressed control group do," said Dr Zahn, a MRC Clinician Scientist Fellow.
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The research, part-funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), is important because it reveals brain mechanisms underlying specific symptoms of depression that may explain why some people react to stress with depression rather than aggression.
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The study was published in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.
Source-ANI