Response to Anxiety Linked to Brain’s Movement Control Areas

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The response to anxiety in teenagers may include not only the parts of the brain which deal with emotions (the limbic system), as has been long understood but also movement control centers in the brain, which may be associated with movement inhibition when stressed (“freezing”), researchers have discovered. The small longitudinal study was presented at the 29th annual ECNP conference.

A group of Italian and Canadian researchers have followed a selection of socially anxious and control group children from childhood to adolescence. The researchers tested 150 children at the ages of 8/9, for signs of social inhibition.

Some of these children were shown to have early signs of social anxiety and showed an increased tendency to withdraw from social situations. They also had more difficulty recognizing emotions, particularly angry faces.

The anxious children, plus controls, were then followed into adolescence. At the ages of 14 to 15, they were tested again to see if signs of social anxiety had developed.

The researchers also used fMRI brain scans to test how the teenage brains responded to angry facial expressions.

Premotor Cortex

As lead researcher Laura Muzzarelli said,

“We found that when presented with an angry face the brain of socially anxious adolescents showed increased activity in the amygdala, which is the brain area concerned with emotions, memory and how we respond to threats. Surprisingly, we also found this produced inhibition of some motor areas of the brain, the premotor cortex. This is an area which ‘prepares the body for action’, and for specific movements. This is the first hard proof that strong emotions produce a response in brain areas concerned with movement.

Adolescents who don’t show social anxiety tend not to show the inhibition in the movement centers. We don’t yet know how this inhibition feeds into movement – it may be that this has something to do with why we sometimes ‘freeze’ when we are frightened or under strong emotional stress, this still has to be tested. What it does give us is a possible explanation for some motor inhibition associated with emotional stress.

We need to acknowledge that there are some limitations to this work. We started this six-year study with 150 children, but by the time we reached adolescence we had narrowed down the field to just 5 children with social anxiety, and five with less severe (subthreshold) social anxiety, so it’s a small sample.”

Social anxiety is a mental health condition characterized by excessive fear and avoidance of the judgement of others. It is the most common anxiety disorder, affecting around 6 percent to 8 percent of people during their life, meaning around 50 million Europeans are affected by the condition.

It can occur at any age, but most commonly, the onset is in adolescence, with early signs already visible during infancy. In the early stages, social anxiety can be mistaken for shyness.

Reference:
  1. L. Muzzarelli, M. Tettamanti, M. Taddei, M. Battaglia Conference Abstract: P.1.j.009. The emotional processing network at the onset of social anxiety disorder: a combined diffusion tensor imaging and functional connectivity study. Presented at the annual ECNP Congress 17th to 20th September, Vienna

Last Updated on February 16, 2023