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Home Exclusive Mental Health

Brief treatments based on psychoanalytic principles may change the brain

by Journal of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
July 7, 2014
in Mental Health
Photo credit: Bruce Blaus (Creative Commons)

Photo credit: Bruce Blaus (Creative Commons)

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In an article published in the current issue of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics the effects of brief psychodynamic psychotherapy on the brain are analyzed.

The clinical efficacy of psychodynamic psychotherapy (PDT) has undergone extensive study and review  to describe the findings of all neuroimaging studies of any form of PDT treatment.

An extensive literature search through databases along with surveying of research groups were undertaken to acquire all available published studies.

Eleven series were included in the final sample, consisting of 2 randomized controlled trials, 5 controlled trials and 4 case series, altogether involving 210 people: 94 healthy controls and 116 people with mood disorders, panic disorder, somatoform disorders and borderline personality disorder.

A variety of neuroimaging techniques were used to examine regional metabolic activity and synaptic neurotransmission before and after treatment.

The common finding was normalization of synaptic or metabolic activity in limbic, midbrain and prefrontal regions, occurring in association with improved clinical outcomes. PDT has demonstrable effects on brain function in diverse clinical populations as evidenced by a modest group of mixed neuroimaging studies.

 

https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/358841

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