Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
[Dr. Michael Roy] The memory parts—the hippocampus—
kind of lower parts of the brain—
are gonna tend to be activated
because those are very strong memories.
The amygdala is a part of the brain that we know in PTSD is often different.
It works differently.
It reacts more,
and the amygdala goes way back to the days of the cavemen—
escaping from the saber tooth tiger—
so the fight or flight response.
So people with PTSD tend to have greater reactions in that part of the brain
than people who don't have it—
even if they're exposed to the same sort of trauma.
The frontal lobe—the front part of the brain
is really important for emotions.
So some of the withdrawal features of PTSD—
the numbing, the avoidance kind of features—
we think are more represented there,
and we do see in those with PTSD characteristic differences there—
that they tend to have lesser activations in those areas.