Menstrual pain may cause abnormal changes in brain structure
August 11th, 2010 - 3:56 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 11 (ANI): Scientists have reported that menstrual cramps, or Primary dysmenorrhea (PDM) may cause abnormal changes in the brain structure.
These changes occur irrespective of whether PDM patients actually experience pain or not, says the study conducted by Professor Jen-Chuen Hsieh, Institute of Brain Science, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan.
“Although the functional consequences remain to be established, these results indicate that the adolescent brain is vulnerable to menstrual pain,” said Hsieh.
Researchers found significant GM (gray matter) volume changes in the patients’ anatomical maps.
Abnormal decreases were found in regions involved in pain transmission, higher level sensory processing, and affect regulation while increases were found in regions involved in pain modulation and in regulation of endocrine function.
The study is scheduled for publication in the September issue of PAIN. (ANI)
- Female brains flip-flop to mitigate pre-menstrual stress - Nov 20, 2008
- Relief from chronic back pain normalises brain activity - May 18, 2011
- Irritable bowel syndrome causes structural brain alterations in patients - Jul 23, 2010
- Chinese woman hammers nails into boy's head - Sep 14, 2011
- Obstructive sleep apnea may shrink brain's gray matter - Nov 13, 2010
- Carbon nanotubes bring 'synthetic' brains closer to reality - Apr 24, 2011
- Nerve cell memory holds key erasing pain - Feb 14, 2012
- Brain's 'visual reading' part does not require vision at all: Study - Feb 18, 2011
- Poor brain connectivity behind many faces of depression - Feb 28, 2012
- Flu during pregnancy may raise baby's schizophrenia risk - Mar 12, 2010
- Scientists clue into why people suffer poor self-image - May 27, 2011
- Paes-Bhupathi give India 2-1 lead in Davis Cup - Mar 07, 2009
- Why normal kids with Rett syndrome become abnormal later? - Apr 14, 2011
- Meditation helps decrease stress, suppress info overload - Apr 22, 2011
- How blind people fearlessly cross busy roads - Nov 19, 2009
Tags: abnormal changes, adolescent brain, brain science, brain structure, decreases, experience pain, functional consequences, gray matter, hsieh, maps, menstrual cramps, menstrual pain, national yang ming university, pain modulation, pain transmission, pdm, september issue, taipei taiwan, volume changes, yang ming