June 1, 2011
Drug may help overwrite bad memories
Recalling painful memories while under the influence of the
drug metyrapone reduces the brain’s ability to re-record the negative
emotions associated with them, according to University of Montreal researchers at the Centre for Studies on Human Stress of Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital.
The team’s study challenges the theory that memories cannot be modified
once they are stored in the brain. “Metyrapone is a drug that
significantly decreases the levels of cortisol, a stress hormone that is
involved in memory recall,” explained lead author Marie-France Marin.
Manipulating cortisol close to the time of forming new memories can
decrease the negative emotions that may be associated with them. “The
results show that when we decrease stress hormone levels at the time of
recall of a negative event, we can impair the memory for this negative
event with a long-lasting effect,” said Dr. Sonia Lupien, who directed the research.
Thirty-three men participated in the study, which involved learning a
story composed of neutral and negative events. Three days later, they
were divided into three groups – participants in the first group
received a single dose of metyrapone, the second received double, while
the third were given placebo. They were then asked to remember the
story. Their memory performance was then evaluated again four days
later, once the drug had cleared out.. “We found that the men in the
group who received two doses of metyrapone were impaired when retrieving
the negative events of the story, while they showed no impairment
recalling the neutral parts of the story,” Marin explained. “We were
surprised that the decreased memory of negative information was still
present once cortisol levels had returned to normal.”
The research offers hope to people suffering from syndromes such as
post-traumatic stress disorder. “Our findings may help people deal with
traumatic events by offering them the opportunity to ‘write-over’ the
emotional part of their memories during therapy,” Marin said. One major
hurdle, however, is the fact that metyrapone is no longer commercially
produced. Nevertheless, the findings are very promising in terms of
future clinical treatments. “Other drugs also decrease cortisol levels,
and further studies with these compounds will enable us to gain a better
understanding of the brain mechanisms involved in the modulation of
negative memories.”
About the study
The University of Montreal is officially known as Université de
Montréal. The study received funding from the Canadian Institutes for
Health Research and was published in the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology & Metabolism on May 18.
Media contact
William Raillant-Clark
International Press Attaché
University of Montreal (officially Université de Montréal)
Tel: 514-343-7593 | w.raillant-clark@umontreal.ca
Twttter: @uMontreal_News