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Brain differences mark those with depression risk

Posted in : Symptoms

(added few years ago!)

People, who have a high family risk of developing depression, had less brain matter on the right side of their brains on par with losses seen in Alzheimer’s disease, US researchers said. Brain scans showed a 28 percent thinning in the right cortex — the outer layer of the brain — in people who had a family history of depression compared with people who did not.

“The difference was so great that at first we almost didn’t believe it. But we checked and re-checked all of our data, and we looked for all possible alternative explanations, and still the difference was there,” Dr Bradley Peterson of Columbia University Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute said.

His study appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The findings are based on imaging studies of 131 people aged 6 to 54 with and without a family history of depression. The team was looking specifically for abnormalities in the brain that could signal a predisposition to depression, rather than changes that may be caused by the disease.

The thinning on the right side was only linked with a family predisposition to depression. People who actually were depressed also had thinning on the left side of cortex. Peterson said having a thinner right cortex might increase the risk of depression by disrupting a person’s ability to decode and remember social and emotional cues from other people.

They did memory and attention tests on the study subjects and found the less brain material a person had in the right cortex, the worse they performed on attention and memory tests. Peterson said the findings suggest medications used to treat attention problems such as stimulants might be useful in the treatment of depression in some patients.

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(added few years ago!) / 178 views