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You are here: Home / Quynhhx / Why broken hearts hurt — and what heals them

Why broken hearts hurt — and what heals them

9 Tháng 8, 2024 by admin

I’m Yoram Youvel. I’m psychiatrist and neuroscientist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. when I was 14 years old, my father died. I was sitting in class when my mother and my grandfather knocked on the door and asked me to the corridor.

“Your father’s very sick,” my mother said. “Your father is dead.” then I felt it. A crushing pain in my chest. I can still feel a glimpse of it I think of my father.

He was a doctor, a scientist, a paratrooper. He was a young, strong, happy, healthy man. He my hero. And his death broke my heart.

Do you remember pain you felt when someone broke your heart? When your best friend or your mother died? Or the you loved told you that he doesn’t love you anymore. You do.

But why do we feel mental pain at all? And what’s the relationship between physical and mental pain? And importantly, how can we make mental pain better? Together with many scientists and physicians, I spent years searching for to these questions.

Now, growing up, I never heard the words, “We you to be a doctor and a brain scientist your father.” But somehow that’s what happened. Twelve years after my father died, I was a graduate student at Dr. Eric Kandel’s lab at Columbia University. Eric, won the Nobel Prize for his work on the basis of memory, was the ultimate mentor. Passionate, energetic and inspiring.

Under his guidance, I studied a receptor. It’s a protein that’s part of a synapse. And synapses are structures through which nerve cells communicate each other. Now that receptor was a GPCR. That’s a G protein coupled receptor. I’ll explain what this means in a minute and then you’ll understand what this stack of markers is here.

And when I did that, I didn’t really realize that work on that receptor, which seemed completely to my future work as a clinical psychiatrist, would one day help us in search for better treatments for physical and mental pain.

Now a big along that way was the work of Jaak Panksepp, my other great mentor. In a classical experiment, Panksepp separated puppies from their mothers for 15 minutes. Never more than that because he loved animals. When puppies lose their mothers, they make a which is called the separation distress cry. And it goes like this.

(Imitates puppy wailing)

Puppies do it, do it, babies do it. All young mammals do it they’re in pain or when they miss their mothers. And we all know how this cry makes us feel inside.

Panksepp and his colleagues then traced the brain circuits that produce these cries in guinea pigs, and they made a discovery. That these are the very same circuits that are active when humans sad and when they experience depression. And these circuits are also part of the brain’s pain matrix mediates our sensations of physical and mental pain.

But why are we born this terrible gift hardwired into our brains? Well, probably like any pain, mental pain is an alarm system. Its task is to damage. When babies lose their mothers, they hurt and they cry. Which their mothers back, and it also makes them seek their mothers. the wild, this is life-saving. Puppies and babies cannot survive without their mothers.

So now we know why we mental pain. It is the glue that keeps us together in couples, in families and communities. And when someone we love goes away or is taken away us, it’s this pain which draws us back together. And once realize this, then we can answer an age-old question that poets and have been asking for thousands of years.

Does love always hurt? What do you think? Does love always hurt? Yes, always hurts, of course. Because that’s what it’s supposed to do. Mental pain is simply the price, the very high price, that we pay for our ability to love. And personally, and, you know, I’ve around the block a couple of times, personally, I think it’s worth it.

But we’re not defenseless against pain because our brains produce endorphins or endogenous opioids, very own feel-good molecules, the natural remedy for both physical and mental pain. Endorphins are released in the brain during exercise or when we’re close to someone we love, immediately after severe injuries.

And we now know what endorphins do, they attach to special receptors in the brain, and the most among them are mu opioid receptors. And just like the receptor I worked in Kandel’s lab, mu opioid receptors are GPCR.

Here’s they work. Like all GPCRs, mu opioid receptors are of seven spirals or loops that are stacked together, sticking through both sides of the cell membrane. Like this, OK.

And endorphins attach to mu opioid receptors from the outside, they cause them to change their shape. this, OK? And this triggers a series of events inside the neurons which eventually ease the pain.

Now, forget the for a second. When you hug someone you love who is suffering from severe physical or mental pain, you actually cause brain to release endorphins. They attach to mu opioid receptors in her synapses turn them on, and they soothe her pain.

And yet, sometimes mental pain gets so that no amount of love can soothe it. But medicine has powerful drugs that can ease any physical pain. are the narcotics or opioids like morphine. Narcotics work mainly by activating mu opioid receptors.

footnote
But if so, can narcotics also treat the pain of separation? was Jaak Panksepp who found the answer. Panksepp gave his puppies a separation experiment tiny, tiny doses of morphine, lower than the lowest doses that are used treat physical pain, and his puppies immediately stopped crying started playing with each other as if they no longer miss mothers.

Let’s go to humans now. When mental pain in humans becomes too intense to bear people, some people, do anything to stop it, even try to kill themselves. Indeed, and I’m this as a clinical psychiatrist, unbearable mental pain is a huge risk factor for suicide.

footnote
But narcotics treat physical pain, and if they can soothe the mental pain of separation, can they also help suicidal people become less suicidal? A few years ago, together with Panksepp and other colleagues, my team conducted a clinical trial. We gave people who were severely suicidal very low doses of a narcotic drug, called buprenorphine, for four weeks.

We discovered that tiny, doses of buprenorphine, which are too low to treat physical pain, helped many of them become suicidal. But narcotics are extremely dangerous drugs. They may cause addiction, and they’re lethal in overdose. In contrast, endorphins are not lethal in overdose, and they’re much less likely cause addiction. So narcotics and endorphins probably activate mu opioid in different ways.

Now, if we could find drugs that activate mu opioid receptors in a way that how endorphins activate them, we might be able to physical and mental pain without some of the dangerous side effects of narcotics. And my research team came to this conclusion, I suddenly what I had learned in Kandel’s lab many, many years ago.

footnote
GPCRs can be activated by two different drugs at the same time. And this happens, the result may be different from what happens when they’re activated by just one drug. our research team then used molecular computing technologies to create detailed virtual model of the human mu opioid receptor. And then, with the of programs known as molecular docking algorithms, we screened thousands of drugs on a virtual model of the receptor.

Eventually, we found a way to teach an old dog, that’s the human opioid receptor, some new tricks. We found two drugs that are narcotics, and they work together in very, very small doses to activate the human mu opioid receptor.

I’m not you their names, because we still have to run many tests and clinical trials before we can certain that their combination does exactly what we think does. But both of these drugs have been around many, many years, and they’ve been used by millions of people. So we know they’re safe for humans.

Here’s our bottom line. Let’s summarize we’ve seen. First and foremost, mental pain is real. It’s into our brains. And mental pain is an essential part of mourning depression and sadness. And when it gets severe enough, can actually make people suicidal. Endorphins are brain’s natural remedy for physical mental pain, and they work mainly, not exclusively, but mainly activating mu opioid receptors.

Now, narcotics also activate mu opioid receptors, but a way that causes addiction and can lead to death. And this is why are so dangerous. New computational technologies have helped us identify existing drugs that together may treat physical and mental pain without some of the severe effects of narcotics. However, this is still a work in progress. It would be a few years before it may become approved treatment.

But, and this is the last thing I’m going to say, regardless of drugs, you the ability to help family and friends who are in severe physical or mental pain.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)
Footnotes

note
“Panksepp his puppies, in a separation experiment, tiny, tiny doses of morphine – lower than the doses that are used to treat physical pain. And his puppies immediately stopped crying and started playing with other as if they no longer miss their mothers.”

According to results this 1978 study, morphine-treated puppies were quite alert and moved about while isolated from their mothers.

note
“Unbearable mental pain is a huge risk for suicide.”

For more information about why mental pain is a significant factor for suicide, see here.

note
“A few years ago, with Panksepp and other colleagues, my research team conducted clinical trial. We gave people who were severely suicidal, very low doses of a narcotic drug, buprenorphine car buprenorphine for four weeks. We discovered tiny, tiny doses of buprenorphine, which are too low to treat physical pain, help many of them become less suicidal.”

For more about these study results, see here.

note
“Some GPCRs can be activated by two different drugs at the same time. And when this happens, the result may be for what happens when they’re activated by just one drug.”

For information about how GPCRs may be activated by two drugs at the same time, see here.

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