Brain activation during fear extinction recall in unmedicated patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder

Specific brain activation patterns during fear conditioning and the recall of previously extinguished fear responses have been associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, further replication studies are necessary. We measured skin-conductance response and blood oxygenation level-de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging 2023-12, Vol.336, p.111733-111733, Article 111733
Hauptverfasser: Diniz, Juliana Belo, Bazán, Paulo Rodrigo, Pereira, Carlos Alberto de Bragança, Saraiva, Erlandson Ferreira, Ramos, Paula Roberta Camargo, de Oliveira, Amanda Ribeiro, Reimer, Adriano Edgar, Hoexter, Marcelo Queiroz, Miguel, Euripedes Constantino, Shavitt, Roseli Gedanke, Batistuzzo, Marcelo Camargo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Specific brain activation patterns during fear conditioning and the recall of previously extinguished fear responses have been associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, further replication studies are necessary. We measured skin-conductance response and blood oxygenation level-dependent responses in unmedicated adult patients with OCD (n = 27) and healthy participants (n = 22) submitted to a two-day fear-conditioning experiment comprising fear conditioning, extinction (day 1) and extinction recall (day 2). During conditioning, groups differed regarding the skin conductance reactivity to the aversive stimulus (shock) and regarding the activation of the right opercular cortex, insular cortex, putamen, and lingual gyrus in response to conditioned stimuli. During extinction recall, patients with OCD had higher responses to stimuli and smaller differences between responses to conditioned and neutral stimuli. For the entire sample, the higher the response delta between conditioned and neutral stimuli, the greater the dACC activation for the same contrast during early extinction recall. While activation of the dACC predicted the average difference between responses to stimuli for the entire sample, groups did not differ regarding the activation of the dACC during extinction recall. Larger unmedicated samples might be necessary to replicate the previous findings reported in patients with OCD.
ISSN:0925-4927
1872-7506
DOI:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2023.111733