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Why Bad Memories Stick
Stressful events may sear themselves into the
memory, lab tests show.
By Miranda Hitti WebMD Medical News
October, 2007 -- Stressful events
can create bad memories that are hard to forget, and
scientists may have figured out why.
The theory:
In stressful
situations, the stress hormone norepinephrine may
prime the brain to remember what happened in order
to avoid the same threat in the future.
Norepinephrine tweaks a certain
type of chemical receptor in the brain called GluR1.
As a result, the brain lowers its threshold for
learning, making it easier to make memories.
The findings come from researchers
including Hailan Hu, PhD, and Roberto Manilow, MD,
PhD, of New York's Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Their report appears in the journal Cell.
Bad Memories in the Making
The scientists studied the
formation of bad memories in mice, not in people.
"We expect that the molecular
mechanisms are the same" for humans, Manilow says in
a news release.
The researchers injected the mice
with epinephrine (which can boost norepinephrine in
the central nervous system) or salt water (which
doesn't affect norepinephrine).
The mice were then briefly placed
in a new cage and were allowed to explore the cage.
The next day, the mice revisited
the same cage. They got a mild electrical shock as
soon as they were placed in the cage.
Finally, the mice made one more
trip to that cage a day later. This time, they
didn't get shocked. Instead, they were videotaped
during their three minutes in the cage.
The researchers watched to see
which group of mice stood still longer: those that
had gotten the epinephrine or salt water shot on the
first day of the experiment.
The epinephrine group stood still
longer than the salt water group. The scientists
took that as a sign of fear-based learning.
Further tests indicate that the
GluR1 receptors were important in that process.
Other chemical chain reactions in the brain are
probably also involved, the scientists note.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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Stressful events can create bad
memories that are hard to forget, and scientists may
have figured out why. |
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