0:00:07.375,0:00:13.333 In this talk, I'm going to give you[br]the single most important lesson 0:00:13.334,0:00:18.751 my colleagues and I have learned[br]from looking at 83,000 brain scans. 0:00:19.331,0:00:23.386 But first, let me put[br]the lesson into context. 0:00:23.387,0:00:25.874 I am in the middle of seven children. 0:00:25.875,0:00:29.202 Growing up, my father called me a maverick 0:00:29.203,0:00:32.473 which to him was not a good thing. 0:00:32.475,0:00:33.862 (Laughter) 0:00:33.863,0:00:37.279 In 1972, the army called my number, 0:00:37.280,0:00:42.376 and I was trained as an infantry medic[br]where my love of medicine was born. 0:00:43.284,0:00:49.711 But since I truly hated the idea[br]of being shot at or sleeping in the mud, 0:00:50.331,0:00:53.731 I got myself retrained[br]as an X-ray technician 0:00:53.732,0:00:57.687 and developed a passion[br]for medical imaging. 0:00:57.688,0:01:02.823 As our professors used to say:[br]"How do you know, unless you look?" 0:01:03.393,0:01:07.217 In 1979, when I was[br]a second-year medical student, 0:01:07.218,0:01:11.286 someone in my family[br]became seriously suicidal, 0:01:12.136,0:01:14.678 and I took her to see[br]a wonderful psychiatrist. 0:01:15.148,0:01:20.896 Over time, I realized[br]if he helped her, which he did, 0:01:20.897,0:01:24.003 it would not only save her life, 0:01:24.004,0:01:29.689 but it would also help her children[br]and even her future grandchildren, 0:01:29.690,0:01:35.942 as they would be shaped by someone[br]who is happier and more stable. 0:01:36.505,0:01:38.763 I fell in love with psychiatry 0:01:38.764,0:01:45.363 because I realized it had the potential[br]to change generations of people. 0:01:47.000,0:01:51.334 In 1991, I went to my first lecture[br]on brain SPECT imaging. 0:01:51.353,0:01:56.836 SPECT is a nuclear medicine study[br]that looks at the blood flow and activity, 0:01:56.837,0:02:00.168 it looks at how your brain works. 0:02:00.748,0:02:04.193 SPECT was presented[br]as a tool to help psychiatrists 0:02:04.194,0:02:08.896 get more information[br]to help their patients. 0:02:09.538,0:02:13.337 In that one lecture,[br]my two professional loves, 0:02:13.338,0:02:15.829 medical imaging and psychiatry, 0:02:15.830,0:02:20.505 came together, and quite honestly,[br]revolutionized my life. 0:02:21.045,0:02:24.977 Over the next 22 years,[br]my colleagues and I would build 0:02:24.978,0:02:29.609 the world's largest database[br]of brain scans related to behavior 0:02:29.610,0:02:32.854 on patients from 93 countries. 0:02:33.592,0:02:37.528 SPECT basically tells us[br]three things about the brain: 0:02:37.529,0:02:41.071 good activity, too little, or too much. 0:02:41.072,0:02:43.756 Here's a set of healthy SPECT scans. 0:02:43.757,0:02:48.199 The image on the left shows[br]the outside surface of the brain, 0:02:48.200,0:02:53.176 and a healthy scan shows full,[br]even, symmetrical activity. 0:02:53.177,0:02:58.146 The color is not important,[br]it's the shape that matters. 0:02:58.147,0:03:03.521 In the image on the right,[br]red equals the areas of high activity, 0:03:03.522,0:03:08.837 and in a healthy brain, they're typically[br]in the back part of the brain. 0:03:10.241,0:03:14.128 Here's a healthy scan compared[br]to someone who had two strokes. 0:03:14.129,0:03:16.796 You can see the holes of activity. 0:03:17.502,0:03:19.284 Here's what Alzheimer's looks like, 0:03:19.285,0:03:23.108 where the back half[br]of the brain is deteriorating. 0:03:23.109,0:03:28.419 Did you know that Alzheimer's disease[br]actually starts in the brain 0:03:28.420,0:03:33.014 30 to 50 years before[br]you have any symptoms? 0:03:34.171,0:03:36.514 Here's a scan[br]of a traumatic brain injury. 0:03:36.515,0:03:40.232 Your brain is soft,[br]and your skull is really hard. 0:03:41.002,0:03:42.844 Or drug abuse. 0:03:42.845,0:03:47.059 The real reason not to use drugs -[br]they damage your brain. 0:03:48.059,0:03:49.753 Obsessive–compulsive disorder 0:03:49.754,0:03:52.925 where the front part of the brain[br]typically works too hard, 0:03:53.745,0:03:56.736 so that people cannot[br]turn off their thoughts. 0:03:57.406,0:04:03.379 An epilepsy where we frequently[br]see areas of increased activity. 0:04:04.473,0:04:08.822 In 1992, I went to an all-day conference[br]on brain SPECT imaging, 0:04:08.823,0:04:11.959 it was amazing and mirrored 0:04:11.960,0:04:17.899 our own early experience[br]using SPECT in psychiatry. 0:04:17.901,0:04:23.202 But at that same meeting,[br]researchers started to complain loudly 0:04:23.203,0:04:27.667 that clinical psychiatrists like me[br]should not be doing scans, 0:04:27.668,0:04:31.699 that they were only for their research. 0:04:32.519,0:04:37.196 Being the maverick[br]and having clinical experience, 0:04:37.197,0:04:40.251 I thought that was a really dumb idea. 0:04:40.252,0:04:41.527 (Laughter) 0:04:42.177,0:04:44.198 Without imaging, 0:04:44.199,0:04:49.913 psychiatrists then and even now[br]make diagnosis like they did in 1840, 0:04:49.914,0:04:52.800 when Abraham Lincoln was depressed, 0:04:52.801,0:04:57.533 by talking to people and looking[br]for symptom clusters. 0:04:58.323,0:05:01.630 Imaging was showing us[br]there was a better way. 0:05:01.631,0:05:06.748 Did you know that psychiatrists[br]are the only medical specialists 0:05:06.749,0:05:10.275 that virtually never look[br]at the organ they treat? 0:05:10.276,0:05:11.414 Think about it! 0:05:11.894,0:05:17.399 Cardiologists look, neurologists look,[br]orthopedic doctors look, 0:05:17.400,0:05:21.665 virtually every other[br]medical specialties look - 0:05:21.666,0:05:23.579 psychiatrists guess. 0:05:24.589,0:05:25.937 Before imaging, 0:05:25.938,0:05:31.798 I always felt like I was throwing[br]darts in the dark at my patients 0:05:31.799,0:05:37.170 and had hurt some of them[br]which horrified me. 0:05:37.760,0:05:39.191 There is a reason 0:05:39.192,0:05:42.674 that most psychiatric medications[br]have black box warnings. 0:05:43.274,0:05:49.230 Give them to the wrong person,[br]and you can precipitate a disaster. 0:05:51.722,0:05:56.082 Early on, our imaging work[br]taught us many important lessons, 0:05:56.083,0:06:00.166 such as illnesses, like ADHD,[br]anxiety, depression, and addictions, 0:06:00.183,0:06:04.403 are not simple or single[br]disorders in the brain, 0:06:04.404,0:06:07.040 they all have multiple types. 0:06:07.041,0:06:09.263 For example, here are two patients 0:06:09.264,0:06:12.542 who have been diagnosed[br]with major depression, 0:06:12.543,0:06:18.105 that had virtually the same symptoms,[br]yet radically different brains. 0:06:18.106,0:06:24.199 One had really low activity in the brain,[br]the other one had really high activity. 0:06:25.464,0:06:31.235 How would you ever know what to do[br]for them, unless you actually looked? 0:06:31.662,0:06:34.428 Treatment needs to be tailored 0:06:34.429,0:06:39.276 to individual brains,[br]not clusters of symptoms. 0:06:40.352,0:06:42.276 Our imaging work also taught us 0:06:42.277,0:06:48.514 that mild traumatic brain injury[br]was a major cause of psychiatric illness 0:06:48.515,0:06:50.684 that ruin people's lives, 0:06:50.685,0:06:55.713 and virtually no one knew about it[br]because they would see psychiatrists 0:06:55.714,0:07:00.690 for things like temper problems,[br]anxiety, depression, and insomnia, 0:07:00.691,0:07:03.918 and they would never look,[br]so they would never know. 0:07:04.838,0:07:07.921 Here's a scan of a 15-year-old boy 0:07:07.922,0:07:11.615 who felt down a flight of stairs[br]at the age of three. 0:07:12.335,0:07:17.204 Even though he was unconscious[br]for only a few minutes, 0:07:18.554,0:07:24.543 there was nothing mild[br]about the enduring effect 0:07:24.544,0:07:27.549 that injury had on this boy's life. 0:07:27.550,0:07:32.123 When I met him at the age of 15,[br]he had just been kicked out 0:07:32.124,0:07:36.525 of his third residential[br]treatment program for violence. 0:07:36.526,0:07:40.077 He needed a brain rehabilitation program, 0:07:40.078,0:07:45.044 not just more medication[br]thrown at him in the dark, 0:07:45.045,0:07:50.504 or behavioral therapy which,[br]if you think about it, is really cruel. 0:07:50.505,0:07:52.984 To put him on a behavioral therapy program 0:07:52.985,0:07:58.437 when behavior is really an expression[br]of the problem, it's not the problem. 0:07:59.500,0:08:02.921 Researchers have found[br]that undiagnosed brain injuries 0:08:02.922,0:08:08.130 are a major cause of homelessness,[br]drug and alcohol abuse, depression, 0:08:08.131,0:08:11.617 panic attacks, ADHD, and suicide. 0:08:12.126,0:08:15.496 We are in for a pending disaster 0:08:15.497,0:08:18.156 with the hundreds[br]and thousands of soldiers 0:08:18.157,0:08:20.565 coming back from Iraq and Afganistan, 0:08:20.566,0:08:25.342 and virtually no one is looking[br]at the function of their brain. 0:08:26.749,0:08:30.815 As we continued our work with SPECT, 0:08:30.816,0:08:35.318 the criticism grew louder,[br]but so did the lessons. 0:08:36.140,0:08:40.576 Judges and defense attorneys sought[br]our help to understand criminal behavior. 0:08:40.577,0:08:43.822 Today, we have scanned[br]over 500 convicted felons 0:08:43.823,0:08:46.415 including 90 murderers. 0:08:46.956,0:08:49.750 Our work taught us[br]that people who do bad things 0:08:49.751,0:08:52.055 often have troubled brains. 0:08:52.056,0:08:54.133 That was not a surprise. 0:08:54.134,0:08:56.708 But what did surprise us 0:08:56.709,0:09:02.293 was that many of these brains[br]could be rehabilitated. 0:09:03.540,0:09:05.544 So here's a radical idea. 0:09:05.545,0:09:08.529 What if we evaluated[br]and treated troubled brains 0:09:08.530,0:09:13.558 rather than simply warehousing them[br]in toxic, stressful environments? 0:09:13.559,0:09:19.625 In my experience, we could save[br]tremendous amounts of money 0:09:20.345,0:09:23.299 by making these people more functional, 0:09:23.300,0:09:27.238 so when they left prison, they could work, 0:09:27.239,0:09:31.049 support their families and pay taxes. 0:09:32.389,0:09:35.538 Dostoyevsky once said:[br]"A society should be judged 0:09:35.539,0:09:38.805 not by how well it treats[br]its outstanding citizens, 0:09:39.905,0:09:42.737 but by how it treats its criminals." 0:09:43.277,0:09:47.481 Instead of just crime and punishment, 0:09:47.482,0:09:53.686 we should be thinking[br]about crime evaluation and treatment. 0:09:53.687,0:09:55.191 (Applause) 0:10:00.074,0:10:04.528 So after 22 years and 83,000 scans, 0:10:05.378,0:10:10.077 the single most important lesson[br]my colleagues and I have learned 0:10:10.078,0:10:12.495 is that you can literally[br]change people's brains. 0:10:13.365,0:10:16.242 And when you do, you change their life. 0:10:16.243,0:10:18.548 You are not stuck with the brain you have, 0:10:18.549,0:10:21.874 you can make it better,[br]and we can prove it. 0:10:22.524,0:10:26.798 My colleagues and I performed[br]the first and largest study 0:10:26.799,0:10:29.881 on active and retired NFL players, 0:10:29.882,0:10:34.275 showing high levels of damage[br]in these players at the time 0:10:34.276,0:10:38.045 when the NFL said they didn't know 0:10:38.046,0:10:40.742 if playing football caused[br]long-term brain damage. 0:10:41.562,0:10:44.106 The fact was they didn't want to know. 0:10:44.107,0:10:45.327 That was not a surprise. 0:10:45.334,0:10:48.210 I think, if you get the most thoughtful[br]9-year-olds together, 0:10:48.217,0:10:52.334 and you talk about the brain is soft,[br]about the consistency of soft butter, 0:10:52.335,0:10:56.423 it's housed in a really hard skull[br]that has many sharp, bony ridges, 0:10:56.424,0:10:59.765 you know, 28 out of 30[br]nine-year-olds would go: 0:10:59.766,0:11:02.259 "Probably a bad idea for your life." 0:11:02.260,0:11:03.932 (Laughter) 0:11:04.812,0:11:09.801 But what really got us excited[br]was the second part of the study 0:11:09.802,0:11:14.736 where we put players[br]on a brain-smart program 0:11:14.737,0:11:20.019 and demonstrated[br]that 80% of them could improve 0:11:20.020,0:11:23.845 in the areas of blood flow,[br]memory, and mood, 0:11:23.846,0:11:27.148 that you are not stuck[br]with the brain you have, 0:11:27.149,0:11:31.329 you can make it better[br]on a brain-smart program. 0:11:31.330,0:11:33.038 How exciting is that? 0:11:33.039,0:11:34.829 I am so excited. 0:11:34.834,0:11:39.126 Reversing brain damage[br]is a very exciting new frontier, 0:11:39.127,0:11:42.709 but the implications[br]are really much wider. 0:11:42.710,0:11:47.163 Here is this scan[br]of a teenage girl who has ADHD, 0:11:47.164,0:11:52.240 who was cutting herself, failing[br]in school, and fighting with her parents. 0:11:52.880,0:11:55.306 When we improved her brain, 0:11:55.307,0:12:00.096 she went from D's and F's to A's and B's, 0:12:00.097,0:12:02.799 and was much more emotionally stable. 0:12:03.389,0:12:05.485 Here is the scan of Nancy. 0:12:05.486,0:12:08.693 Nancy had been diagnosed with dementia, 0:12:08.694,0:12:13.332 and her doctor told her husband[br]that he should find a home for her 0:12:13.333,0:12:17.517 because within a year,[br]she would not know his name. 0:12:18.377,0:12:24.984 But on an intensive,[br]brain-rehabilitation program, 0:12:25.814,0:12:30.407 Nancy's brain was better,[br]as was her memory, 0:12:30.408,0:12:35.987 and four years later,[br]Nancy still knows her husband's name. 0:12:36.969,0:12:41.253 Or my favorite story[br]to illustrate this point: Andrew, 0:12:41.253,0:12:45.160 a 9-year-old boy who attacked[br]a little girl on the baseball field 0:12:45.161,0:12:47.399 for no particular reason, 0:12:47.400,0:12:50.758 and at the time,[br]was drawing pictures of himself 0:12:50.759,0:12:55.041 hanging from a tree[br]and shooting other children. 0:12:56.308,0:13:00.204 Andrew was Columbine, Aurora, 0:13:01.664,0:13:04.490 and Sandy Hook waiting to happen. 0:13:04.491,0:13:06.956 Most psychiatrists[br]would have medicated Andrew, 0:13:06.957,0:13:11.491 as they did Eric Harris[br]and the other mass shooters 0:13:11.492,0:13:14.355 before they committed their awful crimes, 0:13:14.356,0:13:19.060 but SPECT imaging taught me[br]that I had to look at his brain 0:13:19.061,0:13:23.885 and not throw darts in the dark at him[br]to understand what he needed. 0:13:24.465,0:13:30.209 His SPECT scan showed[br]a cyst, the size of a golf ball, 0:13:30.210,0:13:34.005 occupying the space[br]of his left temple lobe. 0:13:34.006,0:13:37.737 No amount of medication or therapy[br]would have helped Andrew. 0:13:37.738,0:13:40.075 When the cyst was removed, 0:13:41.685,0:13:45.150 his behavior completely[br]went back to normal, 0:13:45.151,0:13:50.863 and he became the sweet, loving boy[br]he always wanted to be. 0:13:51.738,0:13:55.510 Now 18 years later,[br]Andrew, who is my nephew, 0:13:56.520,0:14:01.237 owns his own home,[br]is employed and pays taxes. 0:14:01.238,0:14:03.309 (Laughter) 0:14:03.310,0:14:07.418 Because someone bothered[br]to look at his brain, 0:14:07.419,0:14:10.530 he has been a better son, 0:14:10.531,0:14:16.480 and will be a better husband,[br]father, and grandfather. 0:14:17.781,0:14:22.563 When you have the privilege[br]of changing someone's brain, 0:14:22.564,0:14:25.660 you not only change his or her life 0:14:25.661,0:14:30.745 but you have the opportunity[br]to change generations to come. 0:14:31.627,0:14:33.569 I'm Dr. Daniel Amen. Thank you. 0:14:33.570,0:14:35.255 (Applause)