Rush Hour in the Mind

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Do you ever have racing thoughts?

Some people who suffer from racing thoughts also experience anxiety disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), bipolar disorder or depression. There is no exact figure that shows how many people are impacted. However, over 60 million people suffer from anxiety in the United States, and a significant number of them report racing thoughts.

Mind-wandering is the mind’s tendency to move away from a task to something completely unrelated. Racing thoughts, in contrast, are associated with emotional lability (changeability, or the opposite of stability), which is more directly linked to several mental health conditions, including OCD.

LEARN MORE: Prevalence of Any Anxiety Disorder Among Adults

LEARN MORE: Disentangling racing thoughts from mind wandering in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

LEARN MORE: Where Is My Mind…? The Link between Mind Wandering and Prospective Memory

LEARN MORE: Racing and crowded thoughts in mood disorders: A data-oriented theoretical reappraisal

LEARN MORE: Beyond motor hyperactivity: Racing thoughts are an integral symptom of adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

LEARN MORE: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: When Unwanted Thoughts or Repetitive Behaviors Take Over

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LEARN MORE: What is OCD?

Where does it start?

The basal ganglia are a set of interconnected gray matter structures located subcortically (below the cortex) deep in the cerebral hemispheres of the brain, extending from the base of the forebrain to the top of the midbrain. The basal ganglia contribute to our movement, motivation, and decision-making. They are also critical for when we start or stop movements and thoughts, and how fast these go.

LEARN MORE: Neuroanatomy, Basal Ganglia

LEARN MORE: Functional Neuroanatomy of the Basal Ganglia

There are several names for basal ganglia structures, many derived from Latin. The putamen and the globus pallidus are collectively termed the lentiform nucleus, due to the shape they form, a lens-shaped body. The globus pallidus can be further divided into the globus pallidus internus and the globus pallidus externus.

Additional basal ganglia structures include the substantia nigra and the subthalamic nucleus.

LEARN MORE: There’s a tail in your brain!

How does it work?

All three pathways converge on the thalamus, where neuronal projections to motor cortex (including primary motor cortex, or M1, in the frontal lobes) can excite and allow for movement to proceed.

The direct pathway activates the thalamus. The corpus striatum, globus pallidus internal and substantia nigra pars reticulata act to turn off inhibition of the thalamus, which lets thalamus excite the cortex, resulting in movement – and thought!

The indirect pathway generally leads to the inaction of the thalamus, and a reduction in action. However, there is a lot of active research on this topic, and the contributions of both direct and indirect pathways may be more complex depending on other aspects of your current situation.

It takes the same route as the indirect pathway but skips over the corpus striatum.

LEARN NORE: The Cortico-Basal Ganglia-Cerebellar Network: Past, Present and Future Perspectives

LEARN MORE: Multiple dynamic interactions from basal ganglia direct and indirect pathways mediate action selection

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LEARN MORE:  Functional Neuroanatomy of the Basal Ganglia

How to slow them down?

LEARN MORE: Slowing down racing thoughts

LEARN MORE: How To Stop Your Mind From Racing and Get To Sleep

LEARN MORE: ADHD Racing Thoughts: Understanding, Managing, and Overcoming Mental Hyperactivity

LEARN MORE: Attempts to control unwanted thoughts in the night

LEARN MORE: I can’t sleep, my mind is racing!

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