Not a member?

Home My Profile Professional Development Research Center CEU's Community Market Place

Professional Development
Research Center
CEU's
Community
Local Resources
News
Streaming Videos
Newsletters
Market Place
Feedback
Featured Columns
» Conditions » Children's Conditions » Featured Columns

Anxious and Healthy Adolescents Respond Differently to an Anxiety-provoking Situation


Brain scans show heightened activity among anxious adolescents exposed to an anxiety-provoking situation when compared with normal controls, according to an NIMH study published in the November 2008 issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.

In the new study by Amanda Guyer, PhD., of NIMH and colleagues at Georgia State University, Catholic University, NIMH, and the University of Maryland, 14 adolescents with significant anxiety about social situations and 14 healthy adolescents were told that they were going to participate in Internet chat rooms. Each participant would chat with a peer whom the participant wanted to chat with and who wanted to chat with the participant.

To select those they wanted to chat with, participants looked at photographs of peers and sorted them into categories of less desirable or more desirable. Then the participants were photographed. They were told that the peers would receive their photographs and would find out how the participants rated their desirability. The peers would similarly rate how interested they were in chatting with the participants.

Two weeks later, the participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging scans of their brain activity while looking at pictures of the peers they had rated. Participants were asked to describe how they thought the peers rated them in return.

When anxious adolescents were anticipating evaluation from peers whom they had rated as less desirable—an anxiety-provoking situation—their scans showed increased activation of the amygdala, a fear processing, almond-shaped hub deep in the brain. This increase was much greater than that noted in the scans of healthy adolescents anticipating evaluation from peers whom they had rated as less desirable.

The scans also revealed a perturbed engagement of the amygdala and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain thought to regulate emotion, in the anxious adolescents when compared with the healthy participants. Disturbances in the association between the amygdala and the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, which is located behind the eyes and the forehead, are thought to influence anxiety.

Reference:

Guyer AE, Lau JYF, McClure-Tone EB, Parrish J, Shiffrin ND, Reynolds RC, Chen G,Blair RJR, Leibenluft E, Fox NA, Ernst M, Pine DS, Nelson EE. Amygdala and Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex Function during Anticipated Peer Evaluation in Pediatric Social Anxiety. Archives of General Psychiatry. 2008; 65(11):1303-1312.

Source: National Institute for Mental health

Link: Find a Therapist

 

See also:




Related Topics

ADHD

Autism

Conduct Disorders

Depression

Medications

Related Products

Parenting Teens With Love & Logic: Preparing Adolescents for Responsible Adulthood





Related Links

Drug Rehab
ADHD Treatment
Rapid Opiate Detox
Eating Disorders
Anorexia Nervosa Treatment
Copd Treatment
Treatment Center
Eating Disorder Treatment
Insomnia Sleep Disorder
Binge Eating Disorder Drug Rehabilitation
Depression
Cocaine Rehabilitation
Diabetes Symptom
Senior Living
Alzheimer's
Drug Treatment Center

   

eHealthCare Awards

Affiliate Links

Drug Rehab Programs
California Drug Rehab
Drug Addiction Treatment Center
Senior Assisted Living
Senior Living Help
Heroin Detox Center
Cocaine Addiction Help
Drug Rehabs
Alzheimer's Homes
Drug Rehabilitation Program
Prescription Drug Abuse Treatment
Senior Assisted Living



Find the right Psychologist Drug Rehabilitation Center therapist marriage counselor or drug rehab ideally suited to your specific needs. The information provided on the 4therapy.com web site is for informational purposes only and should not be treated as medical, psychiatric, psychological or behavioral health care advice. Nothing contained on the 4therapy.com web site is intended to be used for medical diagnosis or treatment or as a substitute for consultation with a qualified health care professional. Find a qualified Psychologist in your area.

Copyright © 1998 - 2010 4therapy.com NETWORK, INC. - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.