monthly tiips
Tuesday, March 10, 2009 by Dr. Kaminski
Integrative Approaches
Do we have to understand how the brain works in order to promote
integrative approaches?
I am often asked how we can discuss the body/mind connections
when we do not understand the workings of the brain. After all the
brain is the location where presumably the body/mind interaction
takes place.
This is of course a very valid point. The short answer is
it makes sense to operate with some unknowns, rather than not move
forward at all.
To answer that more broadly, the advent of modern medicine has
afforded formidable progress in our understanding of anatomy,
physiology, pathology and disease formation. Those discoveries have
shed important light on the structural and physiological aspects of
the brain and its unique position regulating itself and the rest of
the body. However, despite heroic efforts by neuroscientists,
the way the physical brain interacts with the more abstract aspect
of its function such as memory, thoughts, and feelings, remains for
the most part elusive and poorly understood.
Needless to say the brain is distinct from all other elements of
the body since, to put it simply, your brain IS you. The aspects of
the brain that make you who you are, your memories, experiences,
moods, thoughts, feelings do not yield their secrets easily to our
sophisticated exploratory tools. It is already clear that
modern medicine will eventually be able to replace (or grow) almost
any organ of the body. But there is no question that your brain
cannot be transplanted without killing what makes you who you
are. If you get a new, different brain you simply stop
existing.
Since all attempts to link the abstract workings of the brain to
their material basis have so far been thwarted, rather than "wait"
for the brain to become comprehensible, medicine has forged ahead
without this complete knowledge. As a result, the idea that
medical models can be explained without the role of the brain,
especially as it pertains to the mind, has become the prevailing
principle of contemporary medicine. It is not based on
science but rather on convenience. It is the "looking under
the lamppost" phenomenon of medicine.
It is conceivable that the brain would remain an unsolved
mystery for a very long time. But Integrative Psychiatry is
not presuming to unlock the mysteries of the brain. Rather,
it proposes to examine, and integrate the dialogue between the
brain and the body in health and illness. For that we do not
need to know how the brain works. We need to know how it
interacts with the body and how, through the brain, our thoughts
and feelings influence the body and vice versa. For instance,
we know that premenstrual hormonal changes cause irritability and
depression in women. We do not know how mood and thoughts are
influenced by hormonal changes: but we can examine the
connection. Indeed, after millennia of misunderstanding or
ignoring the monthly emotional suffering of countless women,
recognizing the phenomenon resulted in research and effective
treatments while the exact mechanisms in the brain remain unknown.
By focusing on the interplay between the brain and the body, we
can identify numerous cross influences (i.e., the influence of the
body on the thoughts and feelings and vice versa) and their effects
on health, and recovery. While such observations have been
made sporadically throughout medical history, we would like to come
up with a coherent, encompassing approach to such integration, and
help medicine recognize and incorporate that crucial "missing
link".