Showing posts with label University of Michigan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of Michigan. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Do you have a happy gene?

On the Threshold of EternityImage via WikipediaIf genes can be inherited, I would sure like to pass down to my descendants the happy and healthy genes!
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Study finds link between genes and depression
Posted: 08 February 2011

Depression
WASHINGTON - People who are genetically predisposed to produce lower amounts of a certain brain chemical that regulates appetite and stress may be at higher risk of severe depression, researchers said Monday.

The findings should shed more light on how depression affects certain people more than others, and could help lead the way toward developing more individualised therapies, researchers at the University of Michigan said.

"We've identified a biomarker - in this case genetic variation - that is linked with increased risk of major depression," said senior study author Jon-Kar Zubieta, a professor of psychiatry and radiology.

"This appears to be another mechanism, independent of previous targets in depression research, such as serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine."

People who produce lower amounts of the brain molecule neuropeptide Y (NPY) had "measurably stronger brain responses to negative stimuli and psychological responses to physical pain," the study said.

"They were also overrepresented in a population diagnosed with a major depressive disorder."

The study, which appears in the Archives of General Psychiatry, used three different methods. First, researchers classified subject participants into three categories according to low, medium or high NPY expression.

Then, they used MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) to look at brain activity as the subjects viewed different words -- some neutral (like "material"), some negative (like "murderer") and some positive (like "hopeful").

"In response to negative words, subjects in the low NPY group showed strong activation in the prefrontal cortex, which is involved with processing emotion, while subjects with high NPY demonstrated a much smaller response," the study said.

In the second trial, researchers looked at how subjects described their emotional state before and after a stress challenge in which saline solution was injected into their jaw muscles, causing moderate pain for about 20 minutes.

"Those in the low NPY group were more negative both before and after the pain - meaning they were more emotionally affected while anticipating the pain and while reflecting on their experience immediately afterward," it said.

Finally, researchers examined the NPY genotypes of people with major depressive disorders and found that, compared to a control group, people with low NPY were "overrepresented" in the group with depression.

"These are genetic features that can be measured in any person," said lead author Brian Mickey, an assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Michigan Medical School.

"We hope they can guide us toward assessing an individual's risk for developing depression and anxiety."

- AFP/rl


Taken from ChannelNewsAsia.com; source article is below:
Study finds link between genes and depression



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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Brain scan can tell if a smoker will quit

I am not sure if this discovery will be of good use; we'd had so many of this in the past that is simply used as a pawn for evil...
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Posted: 31 January 2011


WASHINGTON : US researchers have found a way to predict how successful a smoker will be at quitting by using an MRI scan to look for activity in a region of the brain associated with behaviour change.

The scans were performed on 28 heavy smokers who had joined an anti-smoking programme, according to the study published Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Health Psychology.

Participants were asked to watch a series of commercials about quitting smoking while a magnetic resonance imaging machine scanned their brains for activity.

After each ad, subjects in the study "rated how it affected their intention to quit, whether it increased their confidence about quitting, and how much they related to the message," researchers explained.

Those who showed activity in the medial prefrontal cortex during the ads were "significantly linked to reductions in smoking behaviour" in the month that followed, regardless of how the people said they were affected by the ad.

"What is exciting is that by knowing what is going on in someone's brain during the ads, we can do twice as well at predicting their future behaviour, compared to if we only knew their self-reported estimate of how successful they would be or their intention to quit," said lead author Emily Falk.

"It seems that our brain activity may provide information that introspection does not," added Falk, director of the Communication Neuroscience Laboratory at the University of Michigan.

She said researchers would next try to determine which kind of messages were most effective by matching brain activity to the ads.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation, and took place at University of California, Los Angeles.

- AFP/il


Taken From ChannelNewsAsia.com; source article is below:
Brain scan can tell if a smoker will quit



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