Medical Xpress on MSN
Fear memories form differently in male and female brains, study finds
Women are twice as likely as men to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)—and new research may offer a biological ...
Patients with PTSD vs control individuals demonstrate stronger connectivity between the left amygdala, right hippocampus, and bilateral lingual gyri.
Trauma can leave people shifting between fear, submission, rage, and guilt without recognizing these patterns and their impact on relationships. Therapy can address these patterns.
Mental health is not just about emotions, experts say. Neurologist Dr Neha Pandita explains how brain function, neurotransmitters, stress, sleep and lifestyle habits deeply influence emotional ...
No-nonsense rules that, if observed with some regularity, can significantly contribute to a healthy mind in a healthy body ...
The neurologist Orlando Swayne doesn’t suggest everyone can recover. But he does argue that early, targeted and intense therapy can sometimes bring about life-changing improvements – and we have a mor ...
How structured SKY breathwork may help retrain the brain for resilience by improving focus, emotional regulation, sleep, and ...
Depression is one of the leading causes of disability in the world: according to WHO, more than 280 million people suffer from the disorder. The disease changes not only the mood, but it rebuilds the ...
Medindia on MSN
Scientists Discover Why Some Brains Crave Nicotine More
India, May 31 -- Why do some people become addicted to nicotine after relatively little exposure, while others are able to ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Texas A&M just built a nasal spray that reverses brain aging in mice — calming inflammation and restoring the brain’s energy systems with each sniff
A team at Texas A&M University has shown that tiny biological particles, sprayed into the noses of aged mice, can quiet the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Researchers just identified sequentially firing molecular 'timers' inside the brain that decide which experiences get stored as memories and which slip away
You walk into a room, meet someone new, taste an unfamiliar dish, narrowly avoid a car accident. Days later, one of those moments is vivid; the others have vanished. Scientists have long known the ...
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