From love to pain: is oxytocin the key to grief complications?

Encephale

Paris Brain Institute - Institut du Cerveau (ICM), UMR 7225/UMRS 1127, CNRS, Inserm, Paris, France; Department of Psychiatry, Saint-Antoine Hospital, DMU Neuroscience, AP-HP, Sorbonne University, Paris, France.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • About 10-20% of individuals facing the death of a loved one develop complicated or pathological grief, which can lead to long-lasting distress and social difficulties.
  • Recent research indicates that the hormone oxytocin, known for its role in social bonding and emotional regulation, may play a significant role in these grief complications.
  • The article proposes a neurocognitive model suggesting that issues with oxytocin signaling in the brain may hinder emotional recovery and bonding, offering potential insights for new treatments for complicated grief.

Article Abstract

While most adults confronted with the death of a loved one manage to grieve, about 10-20% of individuals develop complicated grief, characterized by persistent distress and impaired social skills, or pathological grief, defined by the onset or decompensation of a psychiatric disorder. Little is known about the biological causes of these grief complications. Recent work suggests that oxytocin, a major neuroendocrine hormone regulating many neurocognitive mechanisms, may be involved in this process. Oxytocin is widely studied and well known for its impact on the mother-child bond and hormonal and brain systems related to attachment and social interactions. In this article, we propose a neurocognitive model of grief complications based on existing data on the role of oxytocin in interpersonal attachment and its impact on brain activity. We suggest that complicated grief is associated with dysfunctional cerebral oxytocinergic signaling and persistent hyperactivation of the nucleus accumbens. This mechanism is involved in limiting the reduction of interpersonal attachment to the deceased during acute phases and in searching for new interpersonal relationships during the recovery phase. We show how the exploration of cerebral oxytocinergic signaling would improve the understanding of physiological grief mechanisms in the general population and could allow the development of new therapeutic perspectives against the complications of grief.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.encep.2023.08.006DOI Listing

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