| Brain Images Reveal Effects of Antidepressants | |
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and UW Medical School
recently added important new information to the growing body of knowledge. For
the first time, they used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)--technology
that provides a view of the brain as it is working--to see what changes occur
over time during antidepressant treatment while patients experience negative and
positive emotions.
The study appears in the January issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
UW psychology professor Richard Davidson, Ph.D., psychiatry department chair Ned
Kalin, MD, research associate William Irwin and research assistant Michael
Anderle were the authors.
The researchers found that when they gave the antidepressant venlafaxine (Effexor(r))
to a small group of clinically depressed patients, the drug produced robust
alterations in the anterior cingulate. This area of the brain has to do with
focused attention and also becomes activated when people face conflicts.
Unexpectedly, the changes were observed in just two weeks.
"Conducting repeated brain scans in these patients allowed us to see for the
first time how quickly antidepressants work on brain mechanisms," said Davidson,
who also is director of the W. M. Keck Laboratory for Functional Brain Imaging
and Behavior, where imaging for the study took place. He noted that the findings
were surprising because patients don't usually begin noticing mood improvements
until after they have been taking antidepressants for three to five weeks.
The researchers also found that while the depressed patients displayed lower
overall activity in the anterior cingulate than non-depressed controls, those
depressed patients who showed relatively more activity before treatment
responded better to the medication than those with lower pre-treatment activity.
This kind of information may be extremely useful to clinicians someday, Kalin
said.
"We expect that physicians in the future will be able to predict which patients
will be the best candidates for antidepressants simply by looking at brain scans
that reveal this type of pertinent information," said Kalin, who also is
director of the HealthEmotions Research Institute, where scientists concentrate
on uncovering the scientific basis of linkages between emotions and health. One
third of all patients treated with antidepressants do not respond to them, and
of those that do, only about 50 percent get completely better, he added.
Virtually all previous studies analyzing brain activity in depressed people used
PET (positron emission tomography) and SPECT (single photon emission computed
tomography) technology. With these imaging systems scientists were not able to
obtain pictures with the same resolution as that which is now obtainable with
fMRI, which provides a "working snapshot" of the brain.
The Wisconsin team used fMRI's capability to capture brain activity as it
occurred to record subjects' reactions as they viewed pictures designed to
stimulate negative and positive emotions.
"We believe that we can uncover the best indicators of treatment changes when we
present research subjects these emotion challenges," said Davidson. "The
pictures activate the individual circuits that underlie different kinds of
emotional responses."
UW emotions researchers have been using fMRIs with emotion-challenging pictures
for several years in an effort to understand normal and abnormal brain responses
to a range of emotions. They theorize that in depressed people, reactions to
negative emotions are similar to, but more exaggerated than, reactions that
non-depressed people have, and that the reactions may be more difficult to turn
off.
"We all experience some sadness from time to time, but in depression, the
responses may be sustained and out of context," said psychiatrist Kalin.
With the HealthEmotions Research Institute, the Keck Laboratory for Functional
Brain Imaging and Behavior and the Laboratory for Affective Neuroscience, UW is
home to a critical mass of some of the foremost emotions researchers in the
world.
---University of Wisconsin-Madison
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