Elischa Krause1, Christoph Benke1, Julian Koenig2, Julian F Thayer3, Alfons O Hamm1, Christiane A Pané-Farré4. 1. Department of Physiological and Clinical Psychology/Psychotherapy, University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany. 2. Centre for Psychosocial Medicine, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Section for Translational Psychobiology in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany. 3. Department of Psychology, Emotions and Quantitative Psychophysiology, College of Arts and Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 4. Department of Physiological and Clinical Psychology/Psychotherapy, University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany. Electronic address: christiane.pane-farre@uni-greifswald.de.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Excessive fear and anxiety are core features of anxiety disorders. Defensive response mobilization varies dynamically with threat proximity. METHODS: We analyzed defensive responses in 48 healthy students to an approaching external, predator-like threat (an electric shock resembling a predator attack) versus an approaching threat from inside the body (feeling of dyspnea as evoked by forced breath-holding). Threats either were inevitable or could be avoided by button press. RESULTS: Autonomic changes (heart rate, skin conductance), defensive reflex priming (startle eyeblink response), respiratory responses, and event-related potentials were assessed. Regardless of its source, when an approaching threat was inevitable, a defensive pattern emerged characterized by an increase in skin conductance, a potentiation of the startle reflex, and bradycardia. Minute ventilation increased only with approaching dyspnea. In preparation for active avoidance of either threat, startle magnitudes were inhibited and probe-elicited P3 wave amplitudes were reduced. Moreover, generation of avoidant action resulted in heart rate acceleration. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates common and specific defensive activation patterns for approaching external and respiratory threats. The specific modulation in respiration in response to an inevitable respiratory threat may have important implications for our understanding of the etiology of anxiety disorders, especially panic disorder.
BACKGROUND: Excessive fear and anxiety are core features of anxiety disorders. Defensive response mobilization varies dynamically with threat proximity. METHODS: We analyzed defensive responses in 48 healthy students to an approaching external, predator-like threat (an electric shock resembling a predator attack) versus an approaching threat from inside the body (feeling of dyspnea as evoked by forced breath-holding). Threats either were inevitable or could be avoided by button press. RESULTS: Autonomic changes (heart rate, skin conductance), defensive reflex priming (startle eyeblink response), respiratory responses, and event-related potentials were assessed. Regardless of its source, when an approaching threat was inevitable, a defensive pattern emerged characterized by an increase in skin conductance, a potentiation of the startle reflex, and bradycardia. Minute ventilation increased only with approaching dyspnea. In preparation for active avoidance of either threat, startle magnitudes were inhibited and probe-elicited P3 wave amplitudes were reduced. Moreover, generation of avoidant action resulted in heart rate acceleration. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates common and specific defensive activation patterns for approaching external and respiratory threats. The specific modulation in respiration in response to an inevitable respiratory threat may have important implications for our understanding of the etiology of anxiety disorders, especially panic disorder.
Authors: Sahib S Khalsa; Ralph Adolphs; Oliver G Cameron; Hugo D Critchley; Paul W Davenport; Justin S Feinstein; Jamie D Feusner; Sarah N Garfinkel; Richard D Lane; Wolf E Mehling; Alicia E Meuret; Charles B Nemeroff; Stephen Oppenheimer; Frederike H Petzschner; Olga Pollatos; Jamie L Rhudy; Lawrence P Schramm; W Kyle Simmons; Murray B Stein; Klaas E Stephan; Omer Van den Bergh; Ilse Van Diest; Andreas von Leupoldt; Martin P Paulus Journal: Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging Date: 2017-12-28