The Poison of Stress and the Middle-East

After reading articles like this (or this or this or this), I can't help but wonder what's happening to the brains of Iraqis, Palestinians, Israelis and Lebanese. After all, neuroscience now knows that chronic stress is toxic. When your brain is constantly suffused with stress hormones (usually glucocorticoids), neurons die and aren't replaced. Dendritic growth slows down. You have fewer synaptic proteins. Your hippocampus begins to wither and shrink. Even if you are just a baby in your mother's belly during the war, you are still born with reduced levels of neurogenesis.

The worst part of all is that chronic stress tends to leave lasting scars. Elizabeth Gould and her post-doc Christian Mirescu did a simple experiment in which they deprived newborn rats of their mother for either 15 minutes or three hours a day. For an infant rat, there is nothing more stressful. Earlier studies had shown that even after these rats become adults, the effects of their developmental deprivation linger: They never learn how to deal with stress. As Mirescu told me when I visited Gould's lab earlier this year,"Normal rats can turn off their glucocorticoid system relatively quickly. They can recover from the stress response. But these deprived rats can't do that. It's as if they are missing the 'off' switch." In other words, their stressful childhood meant that the rats were never able to effectively deal with the normal stressors of life. While most rats eventually learned how to properly evaluate threats, these rats were freaked out by everything.

That's some scary data. It demonstrates that stress can easily become a downward spiral, as an increased exposure to stress makes us increasingly unable to cope with it. Is this what's happening to the citizens of the Middle East? Is the endless war warping their brain? Is violence a positive feedback loop?

Some enterprising scientist should study the hippocampuses of Baghdad residents...

More like this

The trauma of child abuse can last a lifetime, leading to a higher risk of anxiety, depression and suicide further down the line. This link seems obvious, but a group of Canadian scientists have found that it has a genetic basis. By studying the brains of suicide victims, Patrick McGowan from the…
There was a debate in the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for some time about whether the shrinkage observed in the hippocampus -- a structure involved in learning and memory -- was the result of the stress or was a vulnerability factor for the disease. We know that high levels of cortisol…
It is now well established that the adult mammalian brain - including that of humans - contains at least two discrete populations of neural stem cells which continue to generate new nerve cells throughout life. These newborn neurons are quickly integrated into existing circuits and are essential…
In 2000, researchers from the Yale University School of Medicine made a surprising discovery that would start to change the way we think about the causes of depression. Ronald Duman and his colleagues chronically administered different classes of antidepressants to rats, and found that this…

I would note for this generation of Iraqis, anyone between 14 and 17 would have been a baby during the first gulf war, and anybody between 20 and 30 would have been a baby during the Iran-Iraq 10 year conflict.

that leaves a large generation of young adults for which some of them would have been traumatized by war at some point in their early childhood...

By Joe Shelby (not verified) on 01 Aug 2006 #permalink