brain health – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 16 Feb 2026 12:23:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png brain health – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Anxiety is faced by 58 genetic variants, not single gene, says study https://artifex.news/article70638795-ece/ Mon, 16 Feb 2026 12:23:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70638795-ece/ Read More “Anxiety is faced by 58 genetic variants, not single gene, says study” »

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Clarifying the influence of genetic factors that increase the risk of experiencing clinical anxiety may, in the future, help us to identify people who are particularly vulnerable |Image used for representational purpose only
| Photo Credit: DrAfter123

Researchers have found 58 genetic variants linked to an increased risk of anxiety, suggesting that the disorder is not driven by a “single anxiety gene”.

The researchers, led by those from Texas A&M University in the U.S., said that anxiety disorders are influenced by genetic variants from across the human genome, with each variant inherited subtly changing an individual’s genetic risk for developing anxiety-related conditions.

The findings are consistent with the genetic architecture for common medical conditions like hypertension and clinical depression, they said.

The 58 genetic variants analysed in the study, published in the journal Nature Genetics, pointed to 66 genes that the researchers said appear to influence how the brain responds to stress and threat.

The team also found a strong genetic overlap between anxiety disorders and related traits including depression, neuroticism, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and suicide attempts — the results reinforced decades of clinical observations, they said.

“Anxiety disorders and their underlying sources of genetic risk have been understudied compared to other psychiatric conditions, so this study substantially advances this critical knowledge,” senior author Jack Hettema, professor from the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Texas A&M University, said.

“Anxiety disorders have long been recognised as heritable, but until now we lacked a solid link between anxiety and the specific genetic factors involved,” Hettema said.

The researchers analysed genetic data from 122,341 people diagnosed with major anxiety disorders and 729,881 without.

The authors “identified 58 independent genome-wide significant risk variants and 66 genes with robust biological support.” They also found a “substantial genetic correlation between (anxiety) and depression, neuroticism and other internalising phenotypes.” The analysis highlighted genes involved in the regulation of the ‘GABA’ brain chemical as a potential mechanism critical in one’s genetic risk of anxiety — GABA helps calm down activity in the nervous system.

GABA, or gamma-aminobutyric acid, is already targeted by several existing anti-anxiety medications, and thus, the study provides converging evidence for brain circuits and biochemical systems long suspected to be involved in anxiety, the researchers said.

They added that genes alone do not seal a person’s fate.

“Our discoveries highlight underlying biological vulnerability for anxiety, but they don’t diminish the profound influence of lived experience,” co-author Brad Verhulst, research assistant professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Texas A&M University, said.

“Clarifying the influence of genetic factors that increase the risk of experiencing clinical anxiety may, in the future, help us to identify people who are particularly vulnerable. Our findings provide a starting point for developing early intervention strategies and more effective, personalised treatments,” Verhulst said.

The authors said the newly identified variants and implicated pathways provide a roadmap for future research.



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Green Tea May Protect Aging Brains, New Study Suggests https://artifex.news/green-tea-may-protect-aging-brains-new-study-suggests-7478874/ Wed, 15 Jan 2025 09:55:37 +0000 https://artifex.news/green-tea-may-protect-aging-brains-new-study-suggests-7478874/ Read More “Green Tea May Protect Aging Brains, New Study Suggests” »

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A study conducted by the Graduate School of Medical Sciences at Kanazawa University has discovered that regular consumption of green tea may be beneficial for brain health in older adults. The researchers found that three or more glasses of green tea per day are associated with fewer cerebral white matter lesions, which are associated with cognitive decline and conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease.

The results have been drawn from the Japan Prospective Studies Collaboration for Ageing and Dementia across various research centres in the country. Based on MRI data, the team considered the effect of green tea and coffee consumption on brain structure and white matter lesions, hippocampal volume, and total brain size.

While both green tea and coffee are known for their neuroprotective properties, coffee showed no significant effect on brain health in this study. The results, published in the journal npj Science of Food, suggest that incorporating green tea into daily diets could offer long-term benefits for older adults.

“This cross-sectional study found a significant association between lower cerebral white matter lesions and higher green tea consumption, but not coffee consumption, in older adults without dementia, even after adjusting for confounding factors,” write the researchers in their published paper.

“Our findings indicate that drinking green tea, especially three or more glasses per day, may help prevent dementia,” write the researchers. “Nevertheless, further prospective longitudinal studies and basic research are needed to validate our results.”




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