Traumatic stress impacts brains of boys, girls differently

New York, Nov 12: Traumatic stress may have different impact in the brains of adolescent boys and girls, according to a new brain-scanning study. The study found structural differences between the sexes in one part of the insula — a brain region — among the youth with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) — a mental health condition triggered by experiencing or seeing a terrifying event. “The insula appears to play a key role in the development of PTSD. The difference we saw between the brains of boys and girls who have experienced psychological trauma is important because it may help explain differences in trauma symptoms between sexes,” said Victor Carrion, Professor at Stanford University in California. “Our findings suggest it is possible that boys and girls could exhibit different trauma symptoms and that they might benefit from different approaches to treatment,” added Megan Klabunde, psychologist from Stanford University. In the study, the research team conducted MRI scans of the brains of 59 study participants aged 9-17. Thirty of them — 14 girls and 16 boys — had trauma symptoms, and 29 others — the control group of 15 girls and 14 boys — did not.  (IANS)

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