Thursday, 19 March 2015

NINETEEN: Get the stress out of my head, Dopamine (Sensory Processing)


Food doesn’t make me feel better, it just temporarily stops me from feeling what I’m feeling.


More about the stress thing.  And eating because I’m stressed. And returning in my mind to the event that caused the stress… an abnormal amount of time and energy spent in imaginary conversations.  Too much dopamine forces my brain to perseverate on the cause of the stress until it is dealt with.  But when the problem is people who don’t act like grown-ups, there is no ‘dealing with it’.  Those people are so much better at being aggressive, illogical and just plain mean. 



Here is a not-so-quick lesson in the neurobiology of behaviour:

Everything you know to be true is learned via your body and brain. The environment is perceived by the five “far” senses (sight, smell, taste, touch, sound) and travels through the body into your brain, specifically the cerebellum. The vermis (or lining of the cerebellum) “gates” information into the cerebellum much as the gates in a horse race ensure everyone is off to a good start. Information travels through specific ventricles (areas) of the vermis en route to the cerebellum. People with autism may have insults (injuries) to the 7th and 8th ventricles (known to be responsible for language) which can be seen on an MRI [Courchesne & al [1988]. Those “language horses” can’t get out of the gates efficiently. In Joubert Syndrome, Dandy Walker and several other cerebellar disorders, many gates are damaged or completely missing. Just imagine a horse race where the gun goes off and some of the horses are not even facing the right way!  

Behaviour is dictated by many different reasons: some behaviour is learned, some is due to reasoning and some is “instinct”. Imagine sitting at a computer and your little brother comes in and yells “BOO!” Your brain is flooded with a biogenic amine (or neurochemical) called dopamine and one of three things will happen: a fright response (Freeze with eyes wide open); a flight response (duck or veer to away from the sound) or a fight response (punch the little rugrat). This response happens immediately: you don’t even think about it. This is dopamine at it’s best. Its job is to get you out of danger immediately.  

Now, if your little brother makes a habit of scaring you at the computer and after a day or two you are typing away and waiting for him to come in: punching him as soon as he comes up behind you is not a dopamine-driven response. You have cognitively learned that it feels good to punish him for his joke and the line “My dopamine made me do it!” is not going to stand up in a “sensory-court” of law. That last punch was definitely a learned response!

Another important neurochemical is norepinephrine. Its main job is to figure out why there is so much dopamine and keep you focused on the problem. This is a very useful tool when walking across the road to the doughnut shop and a big red truck comes barreling down on you. The dopamine will cause you to have a fright response (deer-in-the-headlights) a fight response (yell at the driver) or a flight response (Run away!). The norepinephrine keeps you alert to the dopamine-driven response – rather than planning your next shopping trip for shoes the same colour as the truck!

The fact that norepinephrine keeps your brain focused on the reason for the influx of dopamine is very important when the problem is an obvious, solvable problem. After you realize it was your little brother scaring you, your body releases a third neurochemical called serotonin. Its job is to bring all the dopamine back down to a normal level. As that happens, the norepinephrine also is reabsorbed. After you get out of the path of the truck, it may take several hours for your body to produce enough serotonin to match the dopamine and bring it “back down”. Sometimes, after a particularly devastating situation (accident, death of loved one, etc.) it may take months for you to feel “equal” again. You may even experience “flashbacks” as your body tries to compensate for the large influx of dopamine. Eventually, however, all things go back to normal.

In some cases, the dopamine is elevated for no one observable reason. Perhaps a child’s parents are not acting like grown-ups at home. This child goes home, not knowing if she might get yelled at or hit.... or when.... or why. The dopamine level is always high in order to run or duck as soon as necessary.  

Common Problems
Some children have brains that do not work the same as other’s. If the vermis is missing or compromised, as in many cerebellar disorders, the world is not processed in the same way. This is very confusing for the child. Confusion and stress increase the amount of dopamine. Signals come crashing into the brain in an unorganized way and the brain struggles to make sense of it all. Quite often, “normal” sensory information is perceived as a war-zone of lights, sounds, textures, and smells.

As a result of this constant “dopamine-high”, the child often feels anxious or angry for no apparent reason. If you ask them why they feel angry, they honestly cannot tell you. They just feel it. They may have a heart-wrenching sob at the slightest upset. It may appear that they are overreacting, but in essence, that event was the “last straw” for them to withstand.

The norephinephrine is still there, of course, trying to figure out why there is all that dopamine. It may arbitrarily focus on someone or something. The child may suddenly become angry at the pizza you have served for lunch... the same pizza you serve most days... the same pizza served with exactly four pepperoni, one per slice... at the same temperature as always (routine is very important for kids with sensory processing problems :) But today, the pizza triggers a screaming fit. One reason could be that the norephinephrine has decided that the pizza is the reason for the increase in dopamine and therefore, a fight response is in order. When you try to explain that the pizza is what is for lunch, the dopamine may decide on a flight response... and fling the pizza across the room!

Now, the dopamine and norephinephrine are not sentient beings living inside the child’s head. They are very powerful neurochemicals that drive behaviour and it is extremely difficult to ignore the impulse to act on their commands. Just as it would be almost impossible to stand still while the truck was coming at you or not to duck when someone startles you, to ask a child on a “dopamine-high” to be reasonable is UN-reasonable: they are reacting to a message that is not coming from a learned response.

A sensory processing therapist works under the philosophy that some behaviour is driven by a person’s neurochemicals and these can be manipulated to change behaviour. Bonnie Hanschu spoke of people with special needs as a rose within an onion. A sweet, beautiful person in there, glimpses are caught, but the vision is blurred and opaque. The layers of need can be peeled away with different therapies (sensory processing, cognitive, medication, etc.) until only the person remains. This is the goal of any advocate: ensure that all the child’s needs are addressed.  

How to Increase Serotonin
There are a variety of ways to increase serotonin in the system. There are many different types of drugs which alter the amount to serotonin: Zoloft, Celexa; Paxil are some names of commonly prescribed SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). Also some natural plants such as St. John’s Wort may elevate serotonin. Everyone will have a time in their life when there is a strain on the dopamine/serotonin balancing act: a death; divorce; new child; etc. These events are all very emotional and disrupt your body's normal routine.  

Diabetics constantly need to monitor their sugar levels in order to be able to stay healthy. People with brains which work differently need to have their dopamine “monitored” in order to interact positively with their environment. Just as a diabetic uses insulin to keep their body’s chemistry at an optimum, some people require boosts of serotonin before, during and/or after a stressful event to help their neurochemisty remain efficient.

In a normally functioning brain, a difficult day is usually soothed by a walk in the sun, perhaps sitting in a green field, listening to music, eating chocolate or having a warm bath. All of these coping strategies utilize your far senses to increase serotonin. The effect of the serotonin on your system would be a “few drops” (although it’s not really drops, that is just a convenient visual analogy :)

If you have been experiencing a larger amount of stress over the past few days, you may choose to get a massage or wrap up tightly in a warm, heavy blanket. This strategy uses deep pressure to stimulate the receptors under your skin and serotonin increases. The analogy would be a “full beaker”.  

An incredibly difficult period in your life may cause you to go for a run or begin an exercise program. These activities stimulate the proprioceptive sense of where your body is in space and it has a latency effect of one to two hours. The proprioceptive system has its receptors in muscles, tendons and joints. (Hanschu, 1997) Each time you activate the deep tendons at the joints, your brain makes a better connection to where that part of your body is. Serotonin is also created in this process. There are other aspects of your body chemistry at work here: endorphins, etc. but for this discussion, we will stick to the biogenic amines. The amount in our visual analogy would be a “full teacup”. Because of the latency effect, the running or weight lifting will keep your serotonin elevated for an hour or so after the activity has ended.

The most stimulating sense is your vestibular sense of where your head is in space. It is sensed in your inner ear and has a latency effect of four to eight hours. If you have ever spent a few hours on a boat then closed your eyes on land and still FELT like you were on a boat, you have experienced the latency effect of your vestibular sense. The analogy of the amount of serotonin enhanced by the vestibular sense is a “full bucket”. It is the most alerting and focusing of the seven senses and is particularly beneficial for the special needs population that we are discussing.  

Practical Ideas
In order to meet elevated amounts of dopamine in the brains of people with sensory processing spectrum disorders, there needs to be “buckets” of serotonin available at regular intervals. A physiotherapist or occupational therapist that has sensory integration or sensory processing training can assist the person’s caregivers in setting up a series of activities (also called a sensory diet) that are designed to provide the boosts of serotonin needed.  

A child who screams every time they are put into the family car, may need to bounce on a trampoline for ten minutes before being told it is time to go. A person who refuses to eat may need to spend ten minutes on a vestibular swing followed by some time with an electric toothbrush before going to the supper table. A student who becomes restless in math class may need to carry some textbooks to the book room, preferable one upstairs.


References
Courchesne E, Yeung-Courchesne R, Press G, Hesselink JR, Jernigan TL (1988) Hypoplasia of cerebellar vermal lobules VI and VII in autism, New England Journal of Medicine 318:21:1349-1354

Hanschu, Bonnie, OTR (1997) Evaluation & Treatment of Sensory Processing Disorders Phoenix, AZ: Developmental Concepts p100



Ministry of Ontario: Curriculum Expectations. Math Grade 1-8


Going out of my head over you. 
Out of my head, over you. 
Out of my head, day and night, night and day and night. Wrong or right.
              -----Little Anthony and the Imperials "Going out of my Head"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kq204wG8UfA


Monday, 16 March 2015

EIGHTEEN: BIg FAT Stress












I have no need to put someone down to elevate myself.


I wish stress decreased my appetite. Or at least my appetite for sugary carbs. Like cake.  

 The last six weeks of my return to work have been exhausting. My "re-assimilation" into my daily work day was difficult. The last time I was blessed with a gap in teaching, when the girls were 13/14 years old, I was off for an entire 14 months. I went back to work rested and ready to tackle the education world once again. Not this time. 

I can't decide what is the "straw" that seems to have broken me:
  • I'm 8 years older
  • I had 7 less months
  • My dad needed much more assistance
  • Erin was not at school during the day 
  • The work environment was not what I expected
  • I have changed
The last is the most puzzling to me. I must have changed since I have continued living and life changes you. But I'm not sure why I'm not feeling the familiar energy from my teaching day.  I went back to a school that was an amalgamation of two rival schools. There were many strikes against the success of this new school and when I returned in February many students and staff seemed somewhat shellshocked. I have to admit that February is always a low energy month for me personally so perhaps this is just the first time I was aware that others felt the same as I usually do. 

 Here we are at the Ides of March and I still don't feel comfortable in my workplace. This causes me stress. 

Just today I was speaking with a friend about how important it is for our students to feel accepted and safe in the classroom in order for them to learn effectively. I have to say that this filters into my workplace as well. I do not feel ...... I'm not sure how I feel.

 I definitely feel stressed and I'm not sure it's just because I'm back to work. 



Working 9 to 5. What a way to make a living. Barely getting by, it's all taking and no giving.              -- Dolly Parton  '9 to5'


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LwDMFOLIHxU