Islamabad, Feb 7 : When a patient
afflicted with schizophrenia hears inner voices something is taking place inside
the brain that prevents the individual from perceiving real voices. A simple
electronic application may help the patient learn to shift focus.
"The
patient experiences the inner voices as 100 per cent real, just as if someone
was standing next to him and speaking" explains Professor Kenneth Hugdahl of the
University of Bergen. "At the same time, he can't hear voices of others actually
present in the same room."
Auditory hallucinations are one of the most
common symptoms associated with schizophrenia.
Dr Hugdahl's research
group has made use of a variety of neuroimaging techniques, including functional
magnetic resonance imaging technology (fMRI) to enable them quite literally to
see what happens inside the brain when the inner voices make their presence
known. The project received funding under the NevroNor national initiative on
neuroscientific research administered under the auspices of the Research Council
of Norway
Images of patients' brains reveal a spontaneous activation of
neurons in a particular area of the brain -- specifically the rear, upper region
of the left temporal lobe. This is the area responsible for speech perception,
and when healthy people hear speech it becomes activated. So what happens when
patients with schizophrenia hear a real voice and a hallucinatory one at the
same time?
"It would be natural to assume that neural activity would
increase somewhat -- even twofold. But quite the opposite takes place; we
actually observed that the activity ceased altogether," states Professor
Hugdahl.
In order to learn more about what was happening, Hugdahl and his
colleagues Kristiina Kompus and René Westerhausen carried out a meta-analysis of
23 studies. These studies focused either on spontaneous inner-voice triggered
neural activation in subjects with schizophrenia or the stimulatory reaction
prompted by actual sounds in both healthy and schizophrenic subjects.
It
emerged that many researchers had observed either that a spontaneous activation
of neurons occurs in patients hearing inner voices or that the patients'
perception of actual voices becomes suppressed when these are heard
simultaneously with inner voices. No one had seen the connection between these
findings.
"Previously, we thought these were two separate phenomena. But
our analyses revealed that the one causes the other: when neurons become
activated by inner voices it inhibits perception of outside speech. The neurons
become 'preoccupied' and can't 'process' voices from the outside," explains
Professor Hugdahl.
"This may explain why schizophrenic patients close
themselves off so completely and lose touch with the outside world when
experiencing hallucinations," he purports.
Electronic app designed to
improve impulse control
Hugdal and his colleagues made yet another
discovery that may well help explain how the lives of these individuals become
consumed by inner voices. It turns out that the frontal lobe in the brains of
schizophrenia patients does not function exactly the way it should. As a result,
these patients have a lesser degree of impulse control and are unable to filter
out their inner voices.
"Every one of us hears inner voices or melodies
from time to time. The difference between non-afflicted individuals and
schizophrenia patients is that the former manage to tune these out better," the
professor points out.
If patients could learn to stifle inner noise it
could have a huge impact on our ability to treat schizophrenia, he states. To
this end, Professor Hugdahl's research group has developed an application that
can be used on mobile phones and other simple electronic devices, to help
patients improve their filters.
Wearing headphones, the patient is
exposed to simple speech sounds with different sounds played in each ear. The
task is to practice hearing the sound in one ear while blocking out sound in the
other. The application has only been tested on two patients with schizophrenia
so far. The response from these patients is promising, Dr Hugdahl
relates.
"The voices are still there, but the test subjects feel that
they have control over the voices instead of the other way around. The patient
feels it is a breakthrough since it means he can actively shift his focus from
the inner voices over to the sounds coming from the outside," the professor
explains.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Schizophrenia: When hallucinatory voices suppress real ones, new electronic application may help
Schizophrenia: When hallucinatory voices suppress real ones, new electronic application may help
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