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ERASING THE PAIN OF THE PAST -- Scientists are
developing drugs that could eliminate
traumatic events from our memories.

Story here...
http://abcnews.go.com/
Health/story?id=2964509&page=1
Story below:
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Erasing the Pain of the Past
Scientists Are Developing Drugs That Could
Eliminate Traumatic Events From Our Memories
By RUSSELL GOLDMAN
"I'd take it in a second," said Sgt. Michael Walcott, an Iraq War
veteran, referring to an experimental drug with the potential to target
and erase traumatic memories.
Walcott, who served in a Balad-based transportation unit that regularly
took mortar fire, now suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. Since
returning to the United States two years ago, he has been on
antidepressants and in group therapy as he tries to put his life back
together and heal from the psychological scars of war. "There are
moments," he said, "when you just want be alone and don't want to deal
with everyone telling you that you've changed."
There are many others like Walcott. The Army estimates that one in eight
soldiers returning home from Iraq suffers from post-traumatic stress
disorder. Symptoms of the disorder, once known as shell shock, include
flashbacks, nightmares, feelings of detachment, irritability, trouble
concentrating and sleeplessness.
Much about why painful memories come back to haunt soldiers and those
who live through other traumatic experiences remains unknown. Scientists
say that is because little is known about how the brain stores and
recalls memories.
But in their early efforts to understand the way in which short-term
memories become long-term memories, researchers have discovered that
certain drugs can interrupt that process. Those same drugs, they
believe, can also be applied not just in the immediate aftermath of a
traumatic event — like a mortar attack, rape or car accident — but years
later, when an individual is still haunted by memories of event.
The hope is that a post-traumatic stress disorder patient can work with
a psychiatrist and focus a traumatic event, take one of these drugs and
then slowly forget that event. With that hope, however, comes a series
of ethical concerns. What makes up our personalities — the essence of
who we are as individuals — if not the collected memories of our
experiences?
"This is all very preliminary," said Dr. Roger Pitman, a Harvard Medical
School psychiatrist. "We're just getting started. There is some
promising preliminary data but no conclusions."
Much of the research Pitman is currently conducting on human subjects at
Massachusetts General Hospital focuses on altering memories in the
immediate aftermath of a specific type of trauma — automobile accidents.
Subjects who arrive in the hospital's emergency room are prescribed
either the drug propranolol or a placebo.
Propranolol was originally developed to treat high blood pressure, but
its effect on the hormone adrenaline has made it popular among actors
dealing with severe stage fright, and scientists are now using it in
their research on memory.
"There is a period of time after you first learn something before it's
retained," Pitman explained. "This is called consolidation."
Some research has shown that stress hormones, particularly adrenaline,
make that process faster and more intense.
"That's why you remember what you were doing the morning of Sept. 11,
better than August 11," he said.
Some scientists believe that post-traumatic stress disorder is the
result of too much adrenaline entering the brain at the moment the
memory of a traumatic event is being consolidated, or stored, for the
first time.
But "the real hot topic," Pitman said, is not consolidation but
reconsolidation, the process by which an old memory is recalled and the
same "window of opportunity" to alter it with drugs is opened for a
second time.
By getting soldiers, or others who have lived through harrowing
experiences, to remember their traumatic experiences through talking
therapy, the theory goes, the chance to target and erase those memories
presents itself.
Reconsolidation remains a "controversial" theory according to Pitman,
but Joseph LeDoux, a psychologist at New York University's Center for
Neural Science, said his recent experiments with rats adds to evidence
that it's real.
LeDoux is not trying to create a drug to treat humans. For him, the
specific drug isn't important. What is important is understanding the
process by which memories are retained and altered.
"The idea is that memories are vulnerable. They can be improved or
weakened. The main point is that we're trying to understand how this all
works rather than come up with a drug."
An Ethical Firestorm -- 'A Genie in the Bottle'
But the idea of improving or weakening people's memories gives many
medical ethicists pause. The President's Council on Bioethics has
condemned memory-altering research. The National Institutes of Health,
however, has funded some experiments that use propranalol for
post-traumatic stress disorder treatment, and Pitman said he has
received a grant from the Army to begin conducting similar research with
Iraq veterans.
"There are several major concerns" about creating these kinds of drugs,
said Felicia Cohn, a medical ethicist at University of California at
Irvine's School of Medicine. "Is the act of altering memories even an
appropriate medical intervention?" she asked.
Another set of "issues is related to consequences. What are the effects
of altering a particular person's memory but not changing the context
the person is living in. We might erase a young girl's memory of a rape,
but people around her will still know and inadvertently remind her,"
Cohn said.
"It becomes a genie in the bottle question. Once a drug is available for
use, it gets used appropriately and inappropriately. People could start
going to physicians to forget they love chocolate. … Is it just for
post-traumatic stress disorder and rape victims? Where do we draw the
line? Who gets to decide what is horrific enough?"
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Larry Scott --