Women who are distraught after breaking
up with a romantic partner show brain changes that are not
seen in women less upset by a romantic rift, researchers report.
Specifically, women who said
they were particularly upset about the breakup showed greater
decreases in brain activity in brain regions associated with
emotion, motivation and attention while thinking sad thoughts
about their former partners.
Emotion, motivation and attention
are "all factors that go awry in depression and now, it appears
grief as well," Dr. Jeffrey P. stated.
"We speculate that brain regions
involved in emotion, motivation and attention regions are
impaired with severe grief," said Lorberbaum, at the Medical
University of South Carolina in Charleston.
These findings may provide
clues to how the brain processes extreme sadness, and how
that sadness can sometimes lead to depression, he added. "If
we can first understand the brain basis of grief then we eventually
might be able to help those who are disabled by grief, as
well as understand how depression gets triggered."
In the American Journal of
Psychiatry, Lorberbaum and his colleagues suggest that depression
may sometimes occur when the brain becomes unable to properly
handle sadness, separation or grief.
To investigate further how
the brain responds to grief, the investigators performed brain
scans on nine women dealing with feelings surrounding a breakup
that occurred within the previous 4 months, involving a romantic
relationship that lasted at least 6 months.
All of the participants were
having trouble getting over the relationship, the authors
note -- perhaps feeling as if they can't get the person out
of their head, or still feeling sad.
During the study, the researchers
noted women's brain activity when they thought sad thoughts
about their former partner and compared it to the activity
seen when they thought neutral thoughts about a person they
had known for the same amount of time.
Immediately after the breakup,
all women said they had experienced some symptoms of depression,
although most added that the symptoms had started to fade
after 2 weeks. At the time of the study, only one person was
suffering full-blown depression.
Lorberbaum and his colleagues
found that women who were grieving the most from the breakup
showed the greatest decreases in brain activity in brain regions
associated with emotion, motivation and attention while thinking
sad thoughts about the ex-partner.
Additional research is needed
to shed light on how normal sadness, grief and depression
are related, the authors note.
SOURCE: American Journal of
Psychiatry, December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
December 30, 2004