14.1.2011 - Stress-induced Out-of-Context Activation of Memory. PLoS Biol 8(12):
Article published in prestige journal - PLoS Biology (IF13)
This work identifies a powerful effect of stressful experiences on memories.
Jezek, K - Lee, B.- Kelemen, E.- McCarthy, K.- McEwen, B.S.– Fenton,A.A.:
Stress-induced Out-of-Context Activation of Memory. PLoS Biol 8(12): e1000570. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000570
This work identifies a powerful effect of stressful experiences on memories. We report that a single intensely stressful experience can activate memories in a situation that has essentially no physical or motivational relationship to the stressful experience. Using a forced-swim test as a stressor in rats, we find that this treatment was able to activate unrelated memories formed 24 hours earlier. We also find that the hippocampus of the brain is required for this effect of stress but that recall of the memories themselves does not. The ability of stress to activate memories that are unrelated to the stressful event may help to explain how memories can sometimes become pathological and uncontrollable following traumatic events, as in post-traumatic stress disorder. Our findings suggest the novel hypothesis that the stress of the traumatic event activates neutral, unrelated memories, which then become associated with the traumatic event. Subsequent normal recall of the neutral memories can more easily trigger inappropriate recall of the traumatic event, initiating another bout of stress and inappropriate associations of neutral and traumatic memories.
Author: karel.jezek@biomed.cas.cz
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08.6.2010 - Prof. Bohuslav Ostadal, MD, PhD, has been awarded by the Gold Medal of Prof. Vaclav Libensky
– in the recognition of his lifetime scientific achievements in experimental cardiology
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