Test-retest reliability of a functional MRI anticipatory anxiety paradigm in healthy volunteers

Purpose To evaluate the reproducibility of neural activations induced by an anticipatory anxiety provocation challenge in healthy volunteers. Materials and Methods Fourteen healthy male volunteers participated in two separate functional MRI (fMRI) sessions in which they underwent a paradigm based on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of magnetic resonance imaging 2008-03, Vol.27 (3), p.459-468
Hauptverfasser: Schunck, Thérèse, Erb, Gilles, Mathis, Alexandre, Jacob, Nathalie, Gilles, Christian, Namer, Izzie Jacques, Meier, Dieter, Luthringer, Rémy
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container_end_page 468
container_issue 3
container_start_page 459
container_title Journal of magnetic resonance imaging
container_volume 27
creator Schunck, Thérèse
Erb, Gilles
Mathis, Alexandre
Jacob, Nathalie
Gilles, Christian
Namer, Izzie Jacques
Meier, Dieter
Luthringer, Rémy
description Purpose To evaluate the reproducibility of neural activations induced by an anticipatory anxiety provocation challenge in healthy volunteers. Materials and Methods Fourteen healthy male volunteers participated in two separate functional MRI (fMRI) sessions in which they underwent a paradigm based on anticipation of aversive transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulations. This paradigm consisted of alternating presentation of red circles associated with the likelihood that aversive stimuli may be given and blue circles during which the subjects knew that no shock could be given. Anxiety state was compared before the fMRI sessions and during the threat periods using clinical scales (Hamilton, STAI‐Y1), the Bond and Lader Visual Analogue Scale, and self‐rating scales of apprehension and stimulus aversivity. Results The selected paradigm induced anticipatory anxiety of moderate intensity as suggested by clinical scales and apprehension rating, without any habituation to the somatosensory stimulus across sessions. Compared to rest periods, threat of the aversive stimulus induced clear brain activation in anticipatory anxiety‐related areas: frontal/prefrontal cortex, insula, lentiform nucleus, temporal pole, and cingulate cortex. Anxiety symptoms and cerebral activity were reproducible across sessions. Conclusion The fMRI paradigm and its assessment method include all criteria to speed up the evaluation and the development of new anxiolytics. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2008;27:459–468. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jmri.21237
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Materials and Methods Fourteen healthy male volunteers participated in two separate functional MRI (fMRI) sessions in which they underwent a paradigm based on anticipation of aversive transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulations. This paradigm consisted of alternating presentation of red circles associated with the likelihood that aversive stimuli may be given and blue circles during which the subjects knew that no shock could be given. Anxiety state was compared before the fMRI sessions and during the threat periods using clinical scales (Hamilton, STAI‐Y1), the Bond and Lader Visual Analogue Scale, and self‐rating scales of apprehension and stimulus aversivity. Results The selected paradigm induced anticipatory anxiety of moderate intensity as suggested by clinical scales and apprehension rating, without any habituation to the somatosensory stimulus across sessions. Compared to rest periods, threat of the aversive stimulus induced clear brain activation in anticipatory anxiety‐related areas: frontal/prefrontal cortex, insula, lentiform nucleus, temporal pole, and cingulate cortex. Anxiety symptoms and cerebral activity were reproducible across sessions. Conclusion The fMRI paradigm and its assessment method include all criteria to speed up the evaluation and the development of new anxiolytics. J. Magn. Reson. 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Magn. Reson. Imaging</addtitle><description>Purpose To evaluate the reproducibility of neural activations induced by an anticipatory anxiety provocation challenge in healthy volunteers. Materials and Methods Fourteen healthy male volunteers participated in two separate functional MRI (fMRI) sessions in which they underwent a paradigm based on anticipation of aversive transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulations. This paradigm consisted of alternating presentation of red circles associated with the likelihood that aversive stimuli may be given and blue circles during which the subjects knew that no shock could be given. Anxiety state was compared before the fMRI sessions and during the threat periods using clinical scales (Hamilton, STAI‐Y1), the Bond and Lader Visual Analogue Scale, and self‐rating scales of apprehension and stimulus aversivity. Results The selected paradigm induced anticipatory anxiety of moderate intensity as suggested by clinical scales and apprehension rating, without any habituation to the somatosensory stimulus across sessions. Compared to rest periods, threat of the aversive stimulus induced clear brain activation in anticipatory anxiety‐related areas: frontal/prefrontal cortex, insula, lentiform nucleus, temporal pole, and cingulate cortex. Anxiety symptoms and cerebral activity were reproducible across sessions. Conclusion The fMRI paradigm and its assessment method include all criteria to speed up the evaluation and the development of new anxiolytics. J. Magn. Reson. 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Anxiety state was compared before the fMRI sessions and during the threat periods using clinical scales (Hamilton, STAI‐Y1), the Bond and Lader Visual Analogue Scale, and self‐rating scales of apprehension and stimulus aversivity. Results The selected paradigm induced anticipatory anxiety of moderate intensity as suggested by clinical scales and apprehension rating, without any habituation to the somatosensory stimulus across sessions. Compared to rest periods, threat of the aversive stimulus induced clear brain activation in anticipatory anxiety‐related areas: frontal/prefrontal cortex, insula, lentiform nucleus, temporal pole, and cingulate cortex. Anxiety symptoms and cerebral activity were reproducible across sessions. Conclusion The fMRI paradigm and its assessment method include all criteria to speed up the evaluation and the development of new anxiolytics. J. Magn. Reson. 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subjects Adolescent
Adult
anticipatory anxiety
Anxiety - physiopathology
Brain - physiopathology
Electric Stimulation
fMRI
Heart Rate
human models
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Psychometrics
reliability
Reproducibility of Results
Stress, Psychological - physiopathology
title Test-retest reliability of a functional MRI anticipatory anxiety paradigm in healthy volunteers
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