Skip to content
home Harvard Magazine
Follow Harvard Magazine on Twitter
  • It Runs in the Family: Three Jasanoff Professors at Harvard - All four members of the Jasanoff family—Jay, Sheila, M... http://ow.ly/18mucp 1 day 10 hours ago
  • New Study Finds Long-Lasting Influence of Early Education - Kindergarten teachers and class sizes can affect adult o... http://ow.ly/18mucr 1 day 10 hours ago
E-mail updates

Sign up to be notified of new issues.

View a sample newsletter

 STAY CONNECTED

    

Neural Insulation

Cushioning Hard Memories

by Catherine Dupree

 

The more you love a memory,” Vladimir Nabokov once declared, “the stronger and stranger it is.” Certainly we never forget the details of our beloved moments: first kisses, college graduations, our children’s births. “That kind of thing,” said Nabokov, “is absolutely permanent, immortal.” But some ineradicable memories are of things we desperately want to forget.

For those who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), vivid recollections of the horrific events they survived or witnessed — wars, rapes, accidents, injuries, concentration camp internments — often return relentlessly for years, evoking the same fear, helplessness, horror, and consequent anguish that accompanied the initial experience. This creates a disabling cycle that can be difficult, if not impossible, to break.

But encouraging new research suggests that the beta-blocker drug propranolol, by inhibiting the release of certain stress-related hormones, may stop such unwanted memories from being reinforced in our brains. Unlike the creepy device that erases undesirable recalls just like files on a computer in the recent film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, propranolol won’t cause PTSD sufferers to forget their ghastly memories, “but it can take out the sting,” says professor of psychiatry Roger K. Pitman.

For a double-blind pilot study published in Biological Psychiatry, Pitman recruited 41 emergency-room patients who had just survived a traumatic event (most were car crashes). Eighteen patients received a 10-day course of oral propranolol; the rest received a placebo. When the patients returned one and three months later for psychometric assessments (like measuring their heart rates while they listened to previously tape-recorded descriptions of the initial event), those who had received propranolol were less likely to show signs of PTSD.

The results are promising for PTSD prevention, which has traditionally been limited to psychological debriefing, a method increasingly regarded as ineffective. And although Pitman is excited about the results, he readily admits propranolol is imperfect, particularly because it exacerbates asthma. (Propranolol, a hypertension drug, is widely marketed as Inderal. It is far from winning approval from the Food and Drug Administration for easing stressful memories.)

The biological reason why we never forget significant experiences involves the amygdala, an almond-shaped portion of the temporal lobe. Highly emotional events stimulate the amygdala to release so-called stress hormones, such as adrenaline, into our hippocampus. These hormones strengthen the recollections, gruesome or lovely, of the events that prompted their release. In PTSD, graphic memories — frequently including flashbacks and nightmares — not only remain intense over time, but are self-perpetuating. Each time a sufferer relives the traumatic experiences, the amygdala re-releases stress hormones into the brain, and consequently reinforces already unwanted memories. But propranolol interferes with the amygdala’s receptors and "takes it off-line," Pitman says. "It blocks the consolidation of memory."

Since the amygdala doesn’t release stress hormones in response to ordinary situations, it’s not surprising we forget where we placed our keys or parked our car. “You are likely to remember in fair detail what you were doing on the morning of September 11, 2001,” says Pitman. “But do you remember what you were doing on the morning of September 10?” This reaction, he maintains, is firmly based in natural selection. “If a primitive hominid decided to take a new route to a watering hole and on her way encountered a crocodile,” he says, “should she fail to remember in the future that a crocodile inhabited that route, she would be more likely to take it again and be eliminated from the gene pool.”

As a society, we place tremendous value on recollection — from court testimonies to cherished reminiscences of childhood — so a drug capable of affecting memory may raise thorny legal and ethical concerns. If, for example, a woman takes propranolol following an assault, is she jeopardizing the validity of future testimony because her memory has been altered? Pitman agrees propranolol could threaten successful prosecutions, but "Medical concerns trump legal concerns," he says. "Would you withhold morphine, which can affect memory, from a mugging victim with broken bones?" He emphasizes that propranolol does not eliminate memories, but allows victims "to maintain a level of memory similar to that of a bystander."

But if propranolol, or drugs like it, become an emergency-room staple, will we soon be tinkering with memories of those experiences that, while painful, serve to define who we are, and teach us valuable lessons? “This is a legitimate ethical concern,” says Pitman. “But it is speculative and I wouldn’t let speculation block the ability to help someone. Most people who have PTSD are so debilitated, they would prefer to have their memories tinkered with.”

If tinkering is to be done, then it must be done quickly. Propranolol must reach the amygdala before a memory has had time to settle in; even 24 hours following trauma may be too late. Pitman has yet to determine the size of “the window of opportunity,” but it will almost certainly be too short for emergency-room doctors to evaluate a patient’s likelihood of developing PTSD (some people, such as those with smaller hippocampi, may be predisposed to the disorder). In other words, if propranolol begins to be routinely prescribed, some percentage of those who receive it may not really need it. “You will have to decide,” Pitman says, “if the damage is worse than the benefit.”

~Catherine Dupree

 

Roger K. Pitman e-mail address:
roger_pitman[at]hms [dot] harvard [dot] edu    

2 Comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Anonymous's picture
kayte mccracken wrote:

i think this drug is very interesting. i think that it is amazing for the potential to do good to people who have had such bad in thier lives, and i really don’t see a downside, if a bad person wants to make someone completely forget something, it wont work, it’ll just make the trial go by with less emotion and disruption. it seems like a very good way to tidy up emotions that pointlessly waste energy on themselves.

January 9, 2010
Anonymous's picture
Teresa wrote:

Lei, las notas sobre esta investigacion, y quisiera enterarme si esto puede funcionar con una persona que tenga el sindrome de Asperger, y si se obtienen los mismos resultados, ya que el algun lugar lei; que la bioquimica cerebral si mal no recuerdo, en un autista es diferente, quisiera saberlo por una cuestion personal no por simple conocimiento, si me podria enviar una respuesta estaria tremendamente agradecida .
atentamente espero su respuesta.

January 26, 2010

Add a new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
If you have a Gravatar account, used to display your avatar.
In case we need to contact you to verify your identity.
In most cases, this will not be used, and it will never be shared or made public.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote> <span> <b> <i> <br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • SmartyPants will translate ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.
  • You may use [discuss] or [extra] tags to display icon and optionally linked callout such as "Extra or Join the Conversation".

Copyright ©1996—2010
Harvard Magazine Inc.
Contact the webmaster