Dreams seemed to help ease the painful memories, the study
suggested
Scientists have used scans to shed more light on how the
brain deals with the memory of unpleasant or traumatic events during sleep.
The University of California , Berkeley
team showed emotional images to volunteers, then scanned them several hours
later as they saw them again.
Those allowed to sleep in between showed less activity in
the areas of the brain linked to emotion.
Instead, the part of the brain linked to rational thought was
more active.
The study, published in the journal Current Biology, said it
showed the links between dreams and memory.
Most people have to deal with traumatic events at some point
in their lives, and, for some, these can produce post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD), leaving them emotionally disturbed long after the event itself.
There is significant evidence that the 20% of sleep in which
we dream, also called REM sleep, plays a role in the processing of recent
memories, and researchers believe that better understanding of this could
eventually help PTSD patients.
The researchers recruited 35 volunteers, splitting them into
two groups.
After showing them 150 images designed to provoke an
emotional reaction, half were allowed a good night's sleep.
While inside an MRI scanner to map blood flow in the brain -
a good way to work out which regions are most active - the volunteers were
shown the images a second time.
Those who had slept properly had less activity in the
amygdala, a part of the brain associated with heightened emotions, and more
activity in the prefrontal cortex, a brain region linked to more rational
thinking.
The non-sleepers reported a far more emotional response to
seeing the pictures again.
The scientists believe that chemical changes in the brain
during REM sleep may help explain how the body makes this change.
Dr Matthew Walker, who led the study, said: "We know
that during REM sleep there is a sharp decrease in norepinephrine, a brain
chemical associated with stress.
"By reprocessing previous emotional experiences in this
neurochemically safe environment of low norepinephrine during REM sleep, we
wake up the next day, and those experiences have been softened in their
emotional strength.
"We feel better about them, we feel we can cope."
Consultant clinical psychologist Dr Roderick Orner said that
although sleep was believed by many to play a crucial role in the processing of
traumatic memories, there were likely to be many other factors at work in PTSD
patients.
He said: "In cases of more severe trauma, it may be
just too difficult for the patient to process it during sleep, especially if
the event has had a significant impact on that person's day to day life."
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