Author Topic: Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra  (Read 1333 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra
« on: December 24, 2004, 12:45:00 PM »
from:
http://http://archives.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/children/12/14/child.abuse.brain/index.html

Researchers:  Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent brain damage

December 14, 2000
Web posted at:  3:41 PM EST (2041 GMT)

By Troy Goodman
CNN.com Health Writer

(CNN) -- Child abuse and neglect can "rewire" the nascent brain, scientists have found, which may lead to psychological problems throughout adulthood.

"These changes are permanent," said Dr. Martin Teicher of Mclean Hospital, a psychiatric center affiliated with Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. "This is not something people can just get over with and get on with their lives."

In a report published in the journal Cerebrum, Teicher analyzed the largest and most detailed study on how childhood experiences affect brain development. He used high-tech brain imaging on several hundred children and adults to identify four types of brain abnormalities -- all of which were linked to child abuse and neglect.

The abuse-related brain damage appears to foster such problems as adult aggressiveness, depression, anxiety and even memory and attention impairment.  The report confirms smaller studies showing that the brain "rewires" itself in response to trauma.

"A child's interactions with the outside environment causes connections to form between brain cells," said Teicher, who heads McLean's Developmental Biopsychiatry Research Program. "These connections are pruned during puberty and adulthood. So whatever a child experiences, for good or bad, helps determine how his brain is wired."

Previous experiments with monkeys raised without their mothers have already linked depression, schizophrenia, autism and attention deficit disorders to childhood maltreatment, according to other experts.

There is even a growing body of evidence concerning "a history of childhood abuse among adolescents who later commit violent crimes," according to Teicher's report.

Other doctors were quick to point out that positive parental support -- and sometimes even psychotherapy -- can help normalize brain function. Obsessive-compulsive disorder, for instance, can be treated with a field of treatment known as cognitive behavioral therapy.

Then there is the idea that many people actually flourish despite childhood trauma. In other words, many youngsters "move on and get past it," said Michael Howell, the development director for Dallas, Texas-based Kid Net Foundation, a nonprofit group devoted to drug-exposed infants and children who suffer abuse, neglect and abandonment

"Something, someone, somehow -- be it an extended family,  a church group or whatever -- has touched them and helped them continue on in a normal way," Howell said.

Among the differences Teicher and his researchers found between normal brains and the brains of those abused or neglected in childhood is a condition called limbic irritability. The brain's limbic system controls many of the most fundamental emotions.

But after studying 253 adults who came to an outpatient mental health clinic for psychiatric assessment, the researchers found more than half reported being physically and/or sexually abused as children. Those that had been abused tested positive on a measure of their brain wave activity that looks for disturbances in the limbic system.

Other findings linked abuse to poor development of the "verbal" hemisphere of the brain, Teicher said, along with disruption in the cerebral communication that goes on between the two hemispheres of the human brain.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra
« Reply #1 on: December 24, 2004, 03:04:00 PM »
excerpted from:
http://www.4therapy.com/consumer/condit ... oryid=217&

"...According to Martin Teicher, MD, PhD, director of the Developmental Biopsychiatry Research Program, "science shows that childhood maltreatment may produce changes in both brain function and structure.  These changes are permanent.  This is not something people can just get over and get on with their lives."
 
 During the course of their studies, the researchers found that four abnormalities are more likely to be present in victims of child abuse and neglect:
 
 Changes to the Limbic System, the area of the brain that, together with the hypothalamus, controls hunger, thirst, emotional reactions and biological rhythms.  In addition, it coordinates complex activities requiring a sequence of performance steps.  Changes to the limbic system can result in epileptic seizures and abnormal electroencephalograms (EEG), usually affecting the left hemisphere of the brain, which is associated with more self-destructive behavior and more aggression.
 
 Deficient Development of the Left Side of the Brain, which can contribute to depression and impaired memory.
 
 Impaired Corpus Callosum, the pathway integrating the two hemispheres of the brain, which can result in dramatic shifts in mood and personality.
 
 Increased Blood Flow in the Cerebellar Vermis, the part of the brain involved in emotion, attention, and regulation of the limbic system, which can disrupt emotional balance.
 
 Animal studies have shown that neglect and emotional trauma triggers changes in hormones and neurotransmitters within parts of the brain that are responsible for regulating fear and anxiety.  The researchers suggest that this may also occur in children.  As Teicher emphasizes, "We know that an animal exposed to stress and neglect early in life develops a brain that is wired to experience fear, anxiety and stress.  We think the same is true of people."
 
 In July 2000, the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry reported that early emotional abuse can distort the processes of attachment and affective development.  Child abuse and neglect could also impair the individual?s capacity to develop appropriate emotional responses, leading to lifelong emotional and social difficulties.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra
« Reply #2 on: December 24, 2004, 05:22:00 PM »
Thanx,

I'll use that and the one on mj too.
Wes Fager
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra
« Reply #3 on: December 26, 2004, 10:14:00 AM »
Hi Wes, weird that both those articles turned up on the same day!

Here's a little more from a site on PTSD and workplace bullying:


Fatigue

The fatigue is understandable when you realise that in bullying, the target's fight or flight mechanism eventually becomes activated from Sunday evening (at the thought of facing the bully at work on Monday morning) through to the following Saturday morning (phew - weekend at last!). The fight or flight mechanism is designed to be operational only briefly and intermittently; in the heightened state of alert, the body consumes abnormally high levels of energy. If this state becomes semi-permanent, the body's physical, mental and emotional batteries are drained dry. Whilst the weekend theoretically is a time for the batteries to recharge, this doesn't happen, because:  
 
the person is by now obsessed with the situation (or rather, resolving the situation),     cannot switch off, may be unable to sleep, and probably has nightmares, flashbacks and     replays;
 
sleep is non-restorative and unrefreshing - one goes to sleep tired and     wakes up tired

this type of experience plays havoc with the immune system; when the fight or flight     system is eventually switched off, the immune system is impaired such that the person is     open to viruses which they would under normal circumstances fight off; the person then     spends each weekend with a cold, cough, flu, glandular fever, laryngitis, ear infection etc so the     body's batteries never have an opportunity to recharge.

When activated, the body's fight or flight response results in the digestive, immune and reproductive systems being placed on standby. It's no coincidence that people experiencing constant abuse, harassment and bullying report malfunctions related to these systems (loss of appetite, constant infections, flatulence, irritable bowel syndrome, loss of libido, impotence, etc). The body becomes awash with cortisol which in high prolonged doses is toxic to brain cells. Cortisol kills off neuroreceptors in the hippocampus, an area of the brain linked with learning and memory. The hippocampus is also the control centre for the fight or flight response, thus the ability to control the fight or flight mechanism itself becomes impaired.

Most survivors of bullying experience symptoms of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome - see health page for details.

(from: http://www.bullyonline.org/stress/ptsd.htm#Fatigue)
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Researchers: Child abuse, neglect can trigger permanent bra
« Reply #4 on: December 26, 2004, 10:21:00 AM »
Quote
the ability to control the fight or flight mechanism itself becomes impaired.



I guess that would explain all the fighting, destroying many friendships over the years.

Maybe also the sitting in chairs thing, as a living metaphor for familiar mental status of not running *and* not fighting, at the same time. Like a continuously applied low-grade electric shock. That would be mental torture, and the path is wired within and the shock now self-delivered.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »