| Literature DB >> 24260096 |
Abstract
Disrupting reconsolidation may be promising in the treatment of anxiety disorders but the fear-reducing effects are thus far solely demonstrated in the average organism. A relevant question is whether disrupting fear memory reconsolidation is less effective in individuals who are vulnerable to develop an anxiety disorder. By collapsing data from six previous human fear conditioning studies we tested whether trait anxiety was related to the fear-reducing effects of a pharmacological agent targeting the process of memory reconsolidation--n = 107. Testing included different phases across three consecutive days each separated by 24 h. Fear responding was measured by the eye-blink startle reflex. Disrupting the process of fear memory reconsolidation was manipulated by administering the β-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol HCl either before or after memory retrieval. Trait anxiety uniquely predicted the fear-reducing effects of disrupting memory reconsolidation: the higher the trait anxiety, the less fear reduction. Vulnerable individuals with the propensity to develop anxiety disorders may need higher dosages of propranolol HCl or more retrieval trials for targeting and changing fear memory. Our finding clearly demonstrates that we cannot simply translate observations from fundamental research on fear reduction in the average organism to clinical practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24260096 PMCID: PMC3832500 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Main features of our previous studies on fear memory reconsolidation.
| Experiment |
| STAIT ± SD | Dependent Variables | CSs: IAPS Numbers | US in mA ± SD | Experimental Phases | Pill Administration |
| Kindt et al. 2009 | 20 | 32.9±5.1 | FPS | CS1+ | 14.1±3.3 |
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl |
| Online US Expectancy | IAPS: 1200–1201 | 8 CS1+ - 8 CS2 | placebo-controlled. | ||||
|
| 90 minutes prior to | ||||||
| 1 CS1-R | memory reactivation. | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| 10 CS1 - 10 CS2 | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 3 USs | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 5 CS1 - 5 CS2 | |||||||
| Soeter & Kindt 2010 | 20 | 33.2±7.9 | FPS | CS1+ | 15.9±9.9 |
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl |
| SCR | IAPS: 1200–1201 | 8 CS1+ - 8 CS2 | placebo-controlled. | ||||
| Online US Expectancy |
| 90 minutes prior to | |||||
| 1 CS1-R | memory reactivation. | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| 12 CS1 - 12 CS2 | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 3 USs | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 1 CS1 - 1 CS2 | |||||||
| Soeter & Kindt 2011 | 15 | 36.1±7.2 | FPS | CS1+ | 19.7±8.7 |
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl. |
|
| SCR | IAPS: 1200 - 6210 - 7009 | 5 CS1+ - 5 CS2 - 5 CS3 | 90 minutes prior to | |||
| Online Distress |
| memory reactivation. | |||||
| Retrospective US Expectancy | 1 CS1-R | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| 10 CS1 - 10 CS2 - 10 CS3 | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 3 USs | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 5 CS1 - 5 CS2 - 5 CS3 | |||||||
| Soeter & Kindt 2012a | 30 | 36.9±8.0 | FPS | CS1+ | 15.5±5.8 |
|
|
|
| 10 | 32.0±10.1 | SCR | IAPS: 1200 - 6210 - 7009 | 17.3±5.6 | 5 CS1+ - 5 CS2 - 5 CS3 | 20 mg Yohimbine HCl |
| Retrospective US Expectancy |
| placebo-controlled. | |||||
| 1 CS1-R | 30 minutes prior to | ||||||
|
| fear learning. | ||||||
| 10 CS1 - 10 CS2 - 10 CS3 | AND | ||||||
|
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl. | ||||||
| 1 US | 90 minutes prior to | ||||||
|
| memory reactivation. | ||||||
| 1 CS1 - 1 CS2 - 1 CS3 |
| ||||||
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl. | |||||||
| 5 min | |||||||
| reactivation. | |||||||
| Soeter & Kindt 2012b | 12 | 32.9±5.9 | FPS | CS1+ | Described as a very unpleasant electric stimulus. |
| 40 mg Propranolol HCl |
| Online Subjective Distress | IAPS: 1201 - 6200 | 3 CS1+ - 3 CS2 | placebo-controlled. | ||||
| Retrospective US Expectancy |
| 5 min | |||||
| 1 CS1-R | reactivation. | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| 12 CS1 - 12 CS2 | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| 1 CS1 - 1 CS2 |
FPS: Fear potentiated startle. SCR: Skin conductance responding. CS: Conditioned stimulus. US: Unconditioned stimulus. Note that in our current study the CSa stimulus always represents the CS1+ whereas the CSb stimulus always represents the unreinforced control stimulus, which either consists of the CS2 [Kindt et al. 2009, Soeter & Kindt 2010, 2012b] or the CS3 stimulus [Soeter & Kindt 2011, 2012a].
Figure 1Schematic of the basic experimental procedure.
Mean values (SD) of the systolic and diastolic blood pressure in mmHg and amylase level in U-ml for the combined propranolol HCl conditions.
|
| Pre Pill Intake | Post Pill Intake |
| |
|
| 127.5 (SD = 13.4) | 128.1 (SD = 11.3) | 111.5 (SD = 8.9) | 126.5 (SD = 12.5) |
|
| 74.5 (SD = 7.0) | 73.1 (SD = 8.4) | 67.3 (SD = 7.1) | 73.4 (SD = 7.3) |
|
| 71.7 (SD = 84.1) | 81.1 (SD = 97.5) | 32.7 (SD = 33.6) | 74.2 (SD = 92.3) |
Results from the Hierarchical Multiple Regression analyses.
|
|
| |
|
| ||
| STAI-t | 2.44 | .26 |
|
| ||
| STAI-t | 2.09 | .28 |
| STAI-s | <1 | .06 |
| Systolic BP | <1 | .04 |
| Diastolic BP | 1.17 | .12 |
| sAA Level | <1 | .005 |
| BMI | 1.15 | .13 |
Note that R2 = .09 for Step I (p<0.05) and Δ R2 = .03 for Step II (p>0.05).
p<0.05.
Figure 2Trait anxiety determines the fear-reducing effects of disrupting memory reconsolidation.
Mean startle amplitudes in microvolts during the last trial of acquisition, the first extinction trial and the first test trial for the Low Trait Anxiety and High Trait Anxiety groups. Startle potentiation was calculated by subtracting the startle responding to the control CSb stimulus from the startle responding to the fear conditioned CSa stimulus during the corresponding test trial. Error bars represent SEM.