Stress And Violence Feed Back In Vicious Cycle
 
<<http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-10/apa-saa092704.php>>

WASHINGTON -- Scientists may be learning why it's so hard to stop the
cycle of violence. The answer may lie in the nervous system. There
appears to be a fast, mutual, positive feedback loop between stress
hormones and a brain-based aggression-control center in rats, whose
neurophysiology is similar to ours. It may explain why, under stress,
humans are so quick to lash out and find it hard to cool down. The
findings, which could point to better ways to prevent pathological
violence, appear in the October issue of Behavioral Neuroscience, which
is published by the American Psychological Association (APA).

In five experiments using 53 male rats, behavioral neuroscientists from
the Netherlands and Hungary studied whether stimulating the brain's
aggression mechanism raised blood levels of a stress hormone and whether
higher levels of the same hormone led to the kind of aggression elicited
by that mechanism. The results showed a fast-acting feedback loop; the
mechanism works in both directions and raising one variable raises the
other. Thus, stress and aggression may be mutually reinforcing, which
could explain not only why something like the stress of traffic jams
leads to road rage, but also why raging triggers an ongoing stress
reaction that makes it hard to stop.

In the study, the scientists electrically stimulated an
aggression-related part of the rat hypothalamus, a mid-brain area
associated with emotion. The rats suddenly released the stress hormone
corticosterone (very like cortisol, which humans release under stress) --
even without another rat present. Normally, rats don't respond like that
unless they face an opponent or another severe stressor.

Says lead author Menno Kruk, PhD, "It is well known that these stress
hormones, in part by mobilizing energy reserves, prepare the physiology
of the body to fight or flee during stress. Now it appears that the very
same hormones 'talk back' to the brain in order to facilitate fighting."

To study the hypothesized feedback loop from the other direction, the
scientists removed the rats' adrenal glands to prevent any natural
release of corticosterone. Then researchers injected the rats with
corticosterone. Within minutes of injection, the hormone facilitated
stimulation-evoked attack behavior.

Thus, in rapid order, stimulating the hypothalamic attack area led to
higher stress hormones and higher stress hormones led to aggression �
evidence of the feedback loop within a single conflict. Write the
authors, "Such a mutual facilitation may contribute to the precipitation
and escalation of violent behavior under stressful conditions."

They add that the resulting vicious cycle "would explain why aggressive
behavior escalates so easily and is so difficult to stop once it has
started, especially because corticosteroids rapidly pass through the
blood-brain barrier." The findings suggest that even when stress hormones
spike for reasons not related to fighting, they may lower attack
thresholds enough to precipitate violent behavior. That argument, if
extended in research to humans, could ultimately explain on the
biological level why a bad day at the office could prime someone for
nighttime violence toward family members. 


------
"I even take the position that sexual orgies eliminate social tensions
and ought to be encouraged,"
--Antonin Scalia (Supreme Court Member)

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