overzicht

Neuroscientists describe brain chemicals that create PTSD response

Gepubliceerd: 17-11-2015

Diagram of the rat brain (left) showing the outlines of various brain structures. The black rectangle is located around the basolateral amygdala (BLA), which is an important brain nucleus mediating fear responses. Panel A shows that the two …more

A new study by University of Wisconsin-Madison neuroscientists shows how stress chemicals reshape the brains of rodents, research that could lead to better treatments for people with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Long after traumatic events such as war, abuse and car accidents, the brains of people with PTSD overreact to loud noises and other stimuli with an exaggerated startle response. Other hallmarks of the disorder include nightmares, insomnia, flashbacks and heightened anxiety, which make it difficult for people to have a normal life. Lacking good treatments, people with PTSD often self-medicate with alcohol and other drugs.

”We have created a rodent model that systematically delineates the chemical steps that occur in the brain in response to trauma, and how these steps ultimately lead to the hallmark features of PTSD: exaggerated startle responses to mild stimuli, long after the stressful experience,’’ says Vaishali Bakshi, associate professor of psychiatry in the UW School of Medicine and Public Health.

”This is exciting because rodent brains and human brains are wired the same way; new medications for PTSD can be identified by understanding which brain chemicals are mediating trauma effects.”

The study was published recently in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Bakshi says her lab’s ”predator stress” model involves exposing a rat for five minutes to a ferret that is just outside its wire cage. There is no physical contact but the rat can see, hear and smell the ferret, a natural predator. Rats that were psychologically traumatized by the ferret still showed exaggerated startle responses to low-level or innocuous challenges a month after the last exposure. This is the equivalent of two to three years in humans, and closely mimics the time course for the exaggerated reactivity that characterizes PTSD.

She says this model more closely captures the essential element of the type of psychological trauma that causes PTSD, because it matches how people with the disorder describe their own traumatizing events. ”We know that people commonly say they thought they were going to die, and that’s how the rats react to the ferret,’’ she says.

This fear response to the repeated psychological trauma created permanent changes in the brain. The repeated exposure to the predator-stress model caused long-lasting hypersensitivity of a certain protein, the alpha1 noradrenergic receptor, in a specific part of the brain known to regulate fear responses: the basolateral amygdala. This receptor hypersensitivity in turn led to exaggerated startle in the traumatized rats, similar to what is seen in PTSD patients. Control rats that never underwent the predator stress had completely normal startle responses.

Moreover, Bakshi’s group identified the chemical in the basolateral amygdala that created the hypersensitivity of the alpha1 receptor. This chemical, a protein called corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), is released into the basolateral amygdala with each trauma exposure; this repeated CRF release causes the hypersensitivity of the alpha-1 receptor that leads to abnormally exaggerated startle.

Brian Baldo, an assistant professor of psychiatry and collaborator on the project, showed that the proteins (receptors) that mediate the effects of CRF are located on the same amygdala cells as the alpha1 receptors, providing an anatomical framework for understanding the interactions between these two neurochemical systems. Blocking CRF specifically within the basolateral amygdala prevents the PTSD-like profile from developing after trauma exposure.

Additionally, the study found that cells in the basolateral amygdala that are getting sensitized by trauma exposure project to several other parts of the brain that are important for fear, anxiety and drug abuse.

”We believe the mechanism we discovered for trauma-induced ’re-wiring’ of the amygdala could also be important for stress-induced drug abuse, which is a common problem in people with PTSD,’’ says Baldo, an expert on reward and addiction.

By discovering the specific chemicals in discrete parts of the brain that control the responses to trauma exposure, Bakshi says her lab can identify possible new medication targets for treating PTSD.

”For example, any chemical that prevents the trauma-induced hypersensitivity of these basolateral amygdala cells from taking place could be a potential new drug target for PTSD prophylaxis,” Bakshi notes. ”Imagine how powerful it would be to have a medication that could be taken soon after the trauma occurs so that the sensitized PTSD response never develops. Our model has the ability to identify such chemicals.”

Bron: Journal of Neuroscience / University of Wisconsin-Madison

Overig nieuws


18-05-2026 - Hakken
18-05-2026 - Van vastlopen door autisme naar een passende baan
18-05-2026 - Lekker depressief zijn
18-05-2026 - Het veranderende vrouwenbrein
18-05-2026 - Heus
18-05-2026 - Mijn broeders hoeder, naar een gezelschappelijke psychiatrie
18-05-2026 - Alles wat we (willen) weten over verouderen met autisme
18-05-2026 - Liefdeswonden, los komen en jezelf hervinden na een toxische relatie
18-05-2026 - De bibliotheek
15-05-2026 - Beleidstoets mentale gezondheid voor lokale samenwerking en beleid
15-05-2026 - Intensieve vierde onderhandeling voor cao ggz
15-05-2026 - Onderzoek Breaking barriers naar autisme op school en werk van start
13-05-2026 - ‘De dag dat...’ over depressie, PTSS en online shaming
11-05-2026 - Mentale toestand tieners bepalend voor hun volwassen leven
08-05-2026 - Handreiking rol psycholoog in multidisciplinaire teams
07-05-2026 - Technologie helpt autistische kinderen bij contact
06-05-2026 - Kinderen halen weinig steun uit ouders of vrienden na huiselijk geweld
05-05-2026 - Kans op angststoornissen door overactief immuunsysteem
04-05-2026 - Met z’n allen!
04-05-2026 - Hulpverlening of probleemverlening?
04-05-2026 - Wanneer helpt een klinische opname bij een depressie echt
04-05-2026 - Spiegel zonder gezicht
04-05-2026 - Niet veilig thuis. Herstellen van trauma in je jeugd
04-05-2026 - Muziek als zelfmedicatie
04-05-2026 - De bibliotheek
30-04-2026 - Vraag subsidie aan voor domeinoverstijgende aanpak ggz
30-04-2026 - Nieuwe handreiking zelfmanagement bij autisme
29-04-2026 - Aanjaagfinanciering voor project wachttijden jeugd-ggz
28-04-2026 - Niels Mulder in bestuur Akwa GGZ
24-04-2026 - Zorginstituut publiceert patiëntervaringen ggz
23-04-2026 - Inspecties: Toegang psychische zorg schiet tekort voor asielzoekers

Laatste nieuws

Tagcloud


  • autisme
  • bibliotheek
  • congres
  • depressie
  • gedicht
  • jeugdzorg
  • personalia
  • recensie
  • suicide
  • verslaving

Zoeken in nieuws


Zoek

Contactgegevens

LET OP: GGZ Totaal is geen instelling voor behandeling of begeleiding. Neem daarvoor contact op met de eigen behandelaar of huisarts.
t: -
info@ggztotaal.nl

Deel deze pagina

Neem contact op


Op de hoogte blijven?


Vul uw emailadres in en ontvang gratis ons magazine!

 

 

Disclamer & privacy


Hoe gaan we met jouw gegevens om?

 

Het laatste nieuws


  • Hakken

    van de redactie
  • Van vastlopen door autisme naar een passende baan

    door Stienke de Jager
  • Lekker depressief zijn

    column van Mathijs van Meerkerk
  • Het veranderende vrouwenbrein

    (advertentie)
  • Heus

    een gedicht van Josine Schuilenburg

Zoeken


 

Social media


FacebookTwitterLinkedInInstagram

 

Weesperzijde 10-H   |   1091 EA Amsterdam   |  info@ggztotaal.nl   |   Webdesign PEW

Copyright 2026 - GGZ Totaal
Inloggen | Ziber Website | Design by PEW Grafisch ontwerpstudio