Brain Scans~A Lesson to Learn

Hamna Qasim
6 min readFeb 15, 2020
Image source: labmanager.com

Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT imaging)

SPECT fundamentally discloses to us three things about the mind:

  1. Good activity
  2. Excessively little
  3. To an extreme

Below is a set of healthy SPECT scans:

The picture on the left shows the outside surface of the cerebrum and a healthy scan shows full, even, balanced movement or activity. The colour is not important, it’s the shape that matters.

In the image on the right, the red equals the area of high activity and in a healthy brain, they’re typically in the back part of the brain.

You can see the holes of activity as here’s a comparison between a healthy scan and someone who had two strokes.

Here’s what Alzheimer’s looks like, where the half-back of the brain is deteriorating.

Alzheimer’s usually starts in the brain 30 to 50 years before you have any side effects!

Scan of traumatic brain damage:

Your brain is soft and delicate; whereas, your skull is really hard. Or drug abuse. The real reason not to use drugs is they damage our brains.

OCD

Obsessive-compulsive disorder-where the front part of the brain typically works really hard, so that people cannot turn off their thoughts.

Epilepsy-where we frequently observe regions of expanded movement.

Solutions served without seeing

Psychiatrists make a diagnosis by talking to people and looking for symptom clusters without imaging. Imaging was showing that there was a better way.

Did you ever think that the only medical specialists that virtually never look at the organ they treat? Yes, the psychiatrists.

Cardiologists look, neurologists look, orthopaedic doctors look-virtually every other medical speciality look, but psychiatrists guess!

Before imaging, it was like throwing darts in the dark at the patients which hurts.

It taught many important lessons such as illnesses like ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder), anxiety, depression and addictions are not simple or single disorders in the brain, they all have multiple types.

For example, here are 2 patients who have been diagnosed with major depression that had virtually the same symptoms, yet radically different brains. One had really low activity and the other had really high activity in the brain.

Unless you actually looked, how would you ever know what to do for them? Treatment needs to be tailored to individual brains rather than on clusters of symptoms.

Imagery Work

Imagery treatments also teach us that mild traumatic brain injury was a major cause of psychiatric illness that destroys people’s lives. Therefore, no one knew about it — because everyone sees psychiatrists for temper problems, anxiety, depression and insomnia. And they would never look, so they would never know.

The image above is a scan of a 15-year-old boy, who fell down a flight of stairs at the age of 3. Even though he was unconscious for only a few minutes. There was nothing lenient about the enduring effect that injury had on the boy’s life.

After some time, at the age of 15, he had just been kicked out of his third residential treatment program for violence. He needed a brain rehabilitation program, not just more medication or behavioural therapy was thrown at him in the dark. To put him on a behavioural therapy program when behaviour is an expression of the problem, it’s not the problem.

According to…

Researchers have suggested that undiagnosed brain injuries are a major cause of:

  • homelessness
  • drug and alcohol abuse
  • depression
  • panic attacks
  • ADHD and suicide

NFL (National Football League) Players and their Brain Function

We are in for a pending disaster with the 100s and 1000s of soldiers coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan and virtually no one is looking at their brain function.

At SPECS, they performed the first and largest study on active and retired NFL-players, showing high levels of damage in these players.

These players were then examined through a brain-smart program and demonstrated that 80% of them could improve in the areas of blood flow, memory and mood. This means you are not stuck with the brain that you have, you can make it better.

How exciting is that?

Reversing brain damage has a wide range of implications and is a very exciting new frontier.

Here is a scan of a teenage girl who has ADHD. She was cutting herself, flopping in school and battling with her parents. When her brain was improved, she moved from D’s and F’s to A’s and B’s and was much more emotionally stable.

Criminals and the Brain Function

Judges and defence attorneys sought SPECT’s help to understand criminal behaviour. They scanned over 500 convicted felons including 90 murderers. SPECT taught us that people who do bad things often have troubled brains.

That was not a surprise. Yet, what surprised us was that a considerable lot of these minds could be restored. So here is an extreme thought: imagine a scenario in which we assessed and treated disturbed minds instead of essentially warehousing them in toxic, stressful environments.

We can save a colossal measure of cash by making these individuals more functional, so when they left prison they could work, look after their families and make good on the expenses.

Dostoyevsky point of view

Fyodor Dostoyevsky once said, “A society should be judged not by how well it treats outstanding citizens, but by how it treats its criminals.”

We should be thinking about crime evaluation and treatment instead of just crime and punishment.

According to the colleagues at SPECS, you can literally change people’s brains. And when you do, you change their lives. Remember, when you have the privilege of changing someone’s brain, you not only change his or her life, but you have the opportunity to change generations to come.

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Hamna Qasim

A Millionaire in the Making || Driven Entrepreneur || COO at Inteliract