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Depressed Mind Responds
Differently to Different Therapies
Excerpt
By Kathleen
Doheny, Healthday
Patients
who engage in cognitive or "talk" therapy to recover from depression
show brain changes that differ from what occurs with drug therapy,
new research finds.
The study shows for the first time
with imaging evidence that the depressed brain responds differently
to different treatments -- and the results may help doctors understand
why one treatment works for one patient but not another, says
study author Dr. Helen Mayberg. Her report appears in the January
issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
Mayberg, an associate scientist
at the University of Toronto's Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest
Centre for Geriatric Care, and her team looked at 14 adults with
clinical depression who received 15 to 20 sessions of outpatient
talk therapy without any drug treatments. They gave the patients
brain scans before and after therapy using positron emission tomography
(PET), which pinpoints the areas where the most changes in brain
metabolism occur. They compared the results to typical changes
that have been found with drug therapy.
They found both therapies affected
many of the same regions in the brain, but in different ways.
"One [treatment] isn't better than
the other," says Mayberg, who is also a professor of psychiatry
and neurology at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta.
"Different treatments work on the brain in different ways."
In drug therapy, the brain chemistry
is altered in the bottom regions of the brain, such as the limbic
region, areas that drive basic emotional behaviors, according
to Mayberg. It's considered a "bottom-up" approach.
Talk therapy is termed a "top-down"
approach because it focuses on changes in the cortical -- or top
-- areas of the brain, regions associated with thinking functions,
to change abnormal mood states.
With drug therapy, experts know
that blood flow decreases in the bottom regions and increases
in the top areas. But with talk therapy, blood flow increased
in the bottom regions and decreased in the top regions.
Mayberg says the reverse pattern
can be explained this way: As talk therapy patients learn to shut
off the thinking patterns that lead them to dwell on negativity,
activity in areas of the cortical or top regions decrease as well.
Dr. Aaron Beck, one of the originators
of cognitive therapy and a professor of psychiatry at the University
of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, praises the new study. "It demonstrates
that cognitive therapy does have a serious impact insofar as there
are brain changes," he says.
"Clinically, we have documented
the changes in depression [with talk therapy]," he says. Now,
he adds, the study provides the subjective evidence that there
are neurophysiological changes.
The findings, he adds, are consistent
with the top-down theory of how cognitive therapy works. "You
do get a kind of confluence between the two approaches in terms
of the brain changes," he adds.
The findings may help doctors better
decide how to treat depression, says Mayberg, using a combination
of approaches. "The areas that cognitive therapy work in are areas
that drugs don't touch," she says.
More information
For information on cognitive therapy,
try the Beck
Institute for Cognitive Therapy. Read about depression from
the National
Institute of Mental Health, and find a therapist at the American
Psychological Association.
Reference
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