Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Brain Releases Natural Painkillers During Social Rejection



When a person feels physical pain, their brains release chemicals called opioids into the space between neurons, dampening pain signals
PHOTO: When a person feels physical pain, their brains release chemicals called opioids into the space between neurons, dampening pain signals
Posted by zazenlife on 18 January 2014
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http://zazenlife.com/2014/01/18/9-fascinating-neuroscience-studies-reveal-inner-workings-mind/



Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” goes the playground rhyme that’s supposed to help children endure taunts from classmates. But a new study suggests that there’s more going on inside our brains when someone snubs us — and that the brain may have its own way of easing social pain.

The findings, recently published in Molecular Psychiatry by a University of Michigan Medical School team, show that the brain’s natural painkiller system responds to social rejection — not just physical injury.

What’s more, people who score high on a personality trait called resilience — the ability to adjust to environmental change — had the highest amount of natural painkiller activation.



Are you feeling the pain of rejection?
PHOTO: Are you feeling the pain of rejection?
The lonely sad songs on the radio, the Hollywood movies of happy couples, the television shows of wild New Year’s eve parties, couples kissing at 12:00 in Times Square, and looking around your empty room in dismay.
Posted by Tima Vlasto, Holistic Science & Spirit Examineron on 31 December 2010, 9:02 AM MST
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http://www.examiner.com/article/new-year-s-2011-are-you-feeling-the-pain-of-rejection



The team, based at U-M’s Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience Institute, used an innovative approach to make its findings. They combined advanced brain scanning that can track chemical release in the brain with a model of social rejection based on online dating. The work was funded by the U-M Depression Center, the Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research, the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, the Phil F Jenkins Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health.


They focused on the mu-opioid receptor system in the brain — the same system that the team has studied for years in relation to response to physical pain. Over more than a decade, U-M work has shown that when a person feels physical pain, their brains release chemicals called opioids into the space between neurons, dampening pain signals.

By zazenlife on 18 January 2014
ZazenLife.com is a self-development blogging community of higher awareness.


Social rejection
PHOTO: Social rejection
Posted by StigmaChina, Digital Art / Photomanipulation / Emotional, ©2008-2015 StigmaChina
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