Why do depression, insomnia, and anxiety disorders often occur together?

A study reveals that depression, insomnia, and anxiety disorders share a common brain mechanism, explaining why they often co-occur. Researchers identified overlapping neural circuit vulnerabilities and disorder-specific abnormalities.

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Depression, insomnia, and anxiety disorders are three common mental health conditions that affect many people in society. Interestingly, these conditions often co-occur. Why is that?

Although these are the most prevalent mental health disorders, treatments are often only moderately effective, and symptoms frequently return. Researchers from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam investigated whether a shared brain mechanism might underlie these conditions.

Their study, published in Nature Mental Health, found that reduced cortical surface area, a smaller thalamus volume, and weaker connectivity between brain regions are common across all three disorders. These regions are part of the same neural circuit (amygdala-hippocampus-medial prefrontal cortex), suggesting a shared vulnerability.

Specific abnormalities were also identified for each disorder, such as smaller reward-related brain areas in insomnia and a thinner cortex in language and emotion regions for depression.

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