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Form of brain damage may spark creative talent

WASHINGTON (April 30, 1998 8:31 p.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) - A rare form
of dementia that causes the loss of many brain functions can also heighten the
artistic talents of those afflicted, a study said Thursday.

Damage to one part of the brain may somehow release functions that were
previously suppressed, said neurologist Dr. Bruce Miller, from the University
of California at Los Angeles, who conducted the study.

Miller described the case of a stockbroker who left his firm to become an
artist and a man with no previous musical training who started composing
quartets.

"Paradoxically, for these people a period of exceptional creativity heralded
the beginnings of a tragic disease," Miller said.

"It sort of emphasizes that we have to focus on the strengths of our patients
instead of their deficits," he added in a telephone interview.

Patients who have frontotemporal dementia have lost cells in parts of the
brain that regulate social behavior.

This often causes personality changes.

It is often genetic, and develops in people in their 50s.

Encouraging creativity in patients in the early stages of the disease has
healthy benefits.

It may be therapeutic for them mentally to know that they can develop new
abilities despite the disease and it is possible that the creative stimulation
of the brain could slow the progress of the disease, Miller said.

The disease normally attacks the brain's frontal lobes -- responsible for
complex thought and planning -- and the front part of the temporal lobes.

Miller studied 80 patients and found 24 of them had unaffected frontal lobes.

Half of the patients with unaffected frontal lobes showed increased creative
ability, ranging from writing music to inventing chemical detectors.

The patients' talents increased as their diseases progressed, according to the
study, which Miller presented to the American Academy of Neurology's annual
meeting in Minneapolis.

One man won a patent for a chemical detector he invented at a time when he
could name only one out of 15 items on a word test.

Another designed a home sprinkler system although he had lost his ability to
speak.

Miller began to study creativity in dementia patients when a patient's son
told him that that his father had started painting, and that the paintings
were improving as the disease worsened.

Copyright 1998 Nando.net
Copyright 1998 Reuters News Service

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