BEHAVIOR
Like Drugs, Talk Therapy Can Change Brain Chemistry
By
RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, M.D.
fter
six years of twice-weekly psychotherapy sessions, Eric had plenty of
insight. But his anxiety level had barely changed.
He was still bedeviled by a ceaseless urge to wash his hands and
shameful and repetitive violent thoughts. Out of desperation and
against the wishes of his therapist, he visited my office to discuss
the possibility of medication.
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"I thought I could understand my way out of my obsessive
compulsive disorder," he recalled recently. "I wanted to be able to
do it on my own, without medication."
What he did not remember was his vehement opposition to
psychotropic medication on the ground that it was not natural and
would change his brain chemistry.
Of course, he was right. Like Eric, many patients and therapists
share the view that psychotherapy is preferable to pharmacotherapy
because it is more "natural" and because it supposedly gets to the
root of the patient's problem. They are convinced that
self-understanding will bring relief, whether the problem is
anxiety, depression or obsessional thinking.
Insight is a prerequisite of happiness, the theory goes, and
well-being achieved without the hard work of psychotherapy is
artificial and inauthentic.
But new evidence suggests that the talking cure and psychotropic
medication have much more in common than had been thought. In fact,
both produce surprisingly similar changes in the brain.
Take Eric's obsessive compulsive disorder. It hobbles patients
with unwanted thoughts, often violent or sexual, that play in the
mind like a broken record. Owing to the sometimes lurid nature of
the thoughts, the treatment mainstay had for years been
psychoanalytically oriented therapy to unlock the sexual and
aggressive conflicts presumed to underlie the symptoms.
There was just one problem. That form of psychotherapy rarely, if
ever, worked for those patients, a point now widely accepted by most
psychoanalysts themselves.
But two seemingly different treatments can be highly effective: a
form of talk therapy called cognitive-behavior therapy and a class
of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor
antidepressants, or S.S.R.I.'s, drugs like Prozac and Zoloft. It is
well known that patients with the disorder have altered serotonin
function compared with normal controls.
Brain imaging that uses PET scans, or positron emission
topography, has shown that the disorder is associated with
functional hyperactivity of the caudate nucleus, a structure buried
beneath the cerebral cortex. Some researchers hypothesize that the
caudate is part of a subcortical circuit that acts as a kind of
filter, sifting out extraneous thoughts and impulses.
In obsessive compulsive disorder, they theorize, the subcortical
filter malfunctions, allowing the unwanted thoughts to reach the
cortex and then on to consciousness.
In a study by Dr. Lewis Baxter at the U.C.L.A. School of
Medicine, patients with the disorder who responded to either a
reuptake inhibitor like Prozac or cognitive behavior therapy over 10
weeks showed virtually the same changes in their brains, decreases
in the activities of the caudate nuclei and, thus, changes toward
normal function.
When patients improved, the changes in their brains, as shown in
the PET scans, looked the same regardless of whether they had
received antidepressants or psychotherapy.
An S.S.R.I. works, in part, by enhancing the neurotransmitter
serotonin, whose activity is often abnormal in people with obsessive
compulsive disorder and depression. Cognitive behavior therapy
focuses on changing distorted patterns of thinking.
The intriguing finding from the PET scans is not limited to O.C.D.
Two studies of patients with depression, reported last year in The
Archives of General Psychiatry, compared the effects of
interpersonal psychotherapy with an antidepressant on brain
function, as observed in PET scans. In those studies, the depressed
patients received interpersonal therapy, a short-term talk treatment
that focuses on the effects of social relationships and major life
events on mood.
In one study, a 12-week trial that compared an S.S.R.I., Paxil,
to interpersonal psychotherapy, Dr. Arthur Brody, also at U.C.L.A.,
found that depressed patients who responded to either treatment had
nearly identical changes in their brain function, a decrease in the
abnormally high activity seen in the prefrontal cortex before
treatment.
In the second study, Dr. Stephen D. Martin at the research unit
of Cherry Knowle Hospital in Sunderland, England, reported that six
weeks of Effexor, an antidepressant that enhances both serotonin and
norepinephrine, and interpersonal therapy produced similar effects
in those depressed subjects who responded either to medicine or to
psychotherapy. Each had shown an increase in the activity of the
basal ganglia, a subcortical brain structure.
Although the observed changes with psychotherapy and
antidepressant were similar in that study, they were not identical.
Subjects with interpersonal therapy but not Effexor also had
activation of a brain area called the cingulate gyrus, which
responds to serotonin in the brain and has a role in regulating
mood.
The studies show that pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy can
produce remarkably similar effects on functional brain activity. But
does that mean that antidepressants and psychotherapy are really
equivalent?
In a word, no. Psychotherapy alone has so far been largely
ineffective for diseases like schizophrenia, where there is strong
evidence of structural, as well as functional, brain abnormalities.
So it seems that if the brain is severely disordered, then talk
therapy cannot alter it.
But it is clear that talk therapy can alter brain function. The
reason may come from the elegant work of a Nobel Prize-winning
psychiatrist and neurobiologist, Dr. Eric Kandel. Studying the
simple and well-mapped nervous system of a sea slug, Aplysia, Dr.
Kandel showed that learning leads to the production of new proteins
and, in turn, to the remodeling of neurons.
Sea slugs exposed to the controlled-learning condition that
produced long-term memory ended up with double the number of
neuronal connections as the untrained animals. In essence, Dr.
Kandel has proved that learning involves the creation of new
neuronal connections.
The clear implication for humans is that learning literally
changes the structure and function of the brain.
Now it may seem a big leap from a snail to a human. But if
psychotherapy is thought of as a form of learning, then when
therapists talk to patients, they cause them to learn, perhaps
changing their brain function and, perhaps, for the long run.
In the end, Eric chose cognitive behavior therapy and improved
drastically. Through exposure to those situations that he feared
like messy dirty places, he became desensitized to them and lost his
compulsion to wash.
Had he chosen an antidepressant, chances are that he would also
have improved.
If psychotherapy produces nearly the same brain changes as
pharmacotherapy, then the boundary between mind and brain is purely
artificial even unnatural.
The author is a psychiatrist who directs the
Psychopharmacology Clinic at the New York Weill Cornell Medical
Center.
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