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Meditation Can Help Reduce Stress and Anxiety

Mass General researchers are using MRI scans to measure the impact of meditation on the brain.

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Meditation Can Help Reduce Stress and Anxiety

Brain imaging data shows that regularly practicing meditation can reduce activity in the part of the brain involved with stress and anxiety in as little as eight weeks.

by
Sara Lazar, PhD
February 17, 2018

If you want to reduce your level of stress and anxiety, our imaging studies have shown that the regular practice of meditation can change how the brain works.

When you engage in a behavior over and over again, it creates structural changes in your brain …

When you engage in a behavior over and over again, it creates structural changes in your brain in a process known as neuroplasticity. You can detect these changes through MRI brain scans.

Our research team recruited participants who had no previous meditation experience and put them into an MRI scanner to get baseline readings of their brains.

Meditation Program Results

One group participated in an eight-week mediation based stress reduction program where they were asked to spend 40 minutes each day practicing mindfulness exercises. We then compared them to another group of people who had signed up for the same class, but were willing to wait a few months to start the meditation program.

When we scanned both groups eight weeks later, we found that the participants in the meditation program had developed more gray matter in both the hippocampus, an area important for learning, memory and emotion regulation, and the tempo-parietal junction, an area important for perspective-taking, empathy and compassion.

There was an actual neurobiological reason why they were feeling less stress.

Fight or Flight Response

The meditation participants also had a reduction in the amount of gray matter in the amydgala — the part of the body associated with the fight or flight response.
The results of these scans helped to confirm the reductions in stress and improvements in well being that the participants reported after participating in the mediation program.

It wasn’t just that they were telling us they felt better, or that they were experiencing the placebo effect. There was an actual neurobiological reason why they were feeling less stress.

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This story first appeared on the Mass General Research Institute blog.

Sara Lazar, PhD, is an investigator in the Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her laboratory is using brain imaging technology to measure the effects of meditation on brain structure.

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