More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

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Abuse May Alter Child?s Brain Activity
Doctors' Lounge
December 09, 2011

Exposure to violence has a measurable effect, researchers say.

Children who are abused or exposed to family violence have changes in brain activity similar to those seen in combat veterans, a new study finds.

The brains of these children become increasingly "tuned" for identifying possible sources of danger, said U.K. researchers who used functional imaging to monitor brain activity.

When the study authors showed pictures of angry faces to children with a history of abuse, the children's brains showed increased activity in the anterior insula and amygdala, which are involved in detecting threat and anticipating pain.

These changes don't indicate brain damage but are the brain's way of adapting to a challenging or dangerous environment, study author Eamon McCrory, of University College London, explained.

The study appears in the Dec. 6 issue of the journal Current Biology.

"Enhanced reactivity to a biologically salient threat cue such as anger may represent an adaptive response for these children in the short term, helping keep them out of danger," McCrory said in a journal news release. "However, it may also constitute an underlying neurobiological risk factor increasing their vulnerability to later mental health problems, and particularly anxiety."

The findings are important because of the large numbers of children who are exposed to family violence.

"This underlines the importance of taking seriously the impact for a child of living in a family characterized by violence. Even if such a child is not showing overt signs of anxiety or depression, these experiences still appear to have a measurable effect at the neural level," McCrory said.

SOURCE: Current Biology, news release, Dec. 5, 2011
 
I was reading about this very thing today. As adults, when we see or hear or feel something that reminds us of traumatic events from childhood we react with "fight or flight" responses or we dissociate (go somewhere in our minds) to escape the anticipated abuse. These coping mechanisms worked when we were children and are hardwired into our brain. That hardwiring makes these "responses" to threats very difficult to change. I think that most behavioral problems and some "feeling" problems are caused by this kind of programming. The thing is, there is no perfect childhood free of all threats and abuse - it is just that some people get it worse than others. Regardless of how we learned to cope as children it is our job as adults to break these old patterns.

It has been the Holy Grail of psychology to find a way that will help everyone change old behaviors and thinking/feeling patterns, but my guess is that one size does not fit all. You have to find the right person (therapist) for you and then stick with it and work at it whatever the method may be.
 
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