Encoding-Retrieval Similarity Reveals Distinct Neural Reinstatement of Safety Memories Following Counterconditioning in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

IF 4.8
Elizabeth A Bauer, Samuel E Cooper, Nicole E Keller, Josh M Cisler, Joseph E Dunsmoor
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Abstract

Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by deficits in the ability to retrieve extinction memories, which likely contribute to symptom relapse over time. Adapting a hybrid Pavlovian conditioning and episodic memory paradigm, we examined whether counterconditioning produces a more stable and persistent long-term neural memory trace of safety compared with standard extinction in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC)-a region associated with the learning and retrieval of safety.

Methods: Participants consisted of 32 individuals (27 female) who met diagnostic criteria for PTSD and 21 healthy (13 female) comparison participants. Participants completed a multiday Pavlovian conditioning and episodic memory paradigm with standard extinction/counterconditioning.

Results: In healthy adults, we identified overlapping multivariate patterns of functional magnetic resonance imaging activity in the vmPFC associated with the formation and 24-hour retrieval of stimuli that underwent counterconditioning, but neural reinstatement diminished after ∼1 month. This pattern was reversed in PTSD, such that neural reinstatement of counterconditioning was not observed the day after safety learning but did emerge a month later. Interestingly, participants with PTSD showed reinstatement of standard extinction memories in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex-a region associated with learning and retrieval of threat-both 24 hours and 1 month after safety learning.

Conclusions: These results provide the first evidence that counterconditioning may stabilize a long-term safety memory trace in PTSD. These effects seem to emerge over longer time scales, suggesting that counterconditioning could be an effective strategy for sustained treatment gains.

编码-检索相似性揭示了创伤后应激障碍中对抗条件作用后安全记忆的明显神经恢复。
背景:创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的特征是恢复消失记忆的能力不足,可能导致症状随着时间的推移而复发。采用巴甫洛夫条件反射和情景记忆的混合模式,我们研究了在与安全学习和检索相关的腹内侧前额叶皮层(vmPFC)中,与标准消退相比,对抗条件反射是否会产生更稳定和持久的长期安全神经记忆痕迹。方法:参与者包括32名符合PTSD诊断标准的个体(27名女性)和21名健康的对照组(13名女性)。参与者完成了为期多日的巴甫洛夫条件反射和情景记忆范式,其中包括标准的消退/对抗条件反射。结果:在健康成人中,我们在vmPFC中发现了重叠的多变量fMRI活动模式,这些模式与经过对抗条件的刺激的形成和24小时恢复有关,但神经恢复在1个月后减弱。这种模式在创伤后应激障碍中被逆转,因此在安全学习后的第二天没有观察到对抗条件作用的神经恢复,但在一个月后确实出现了。有趣的是,创伤后应激障碍参与者在安全学习后24小时和1个月,在背前扣带皮层(dACC)——一个与学习和恢复威胁相关的区域——显示了标准消失记忆的恢复。结论:这些结果提供了第一个证据,证明对抗条件可能稳定PTSD患者的长期安全记忆痕迹。这些影响似乎在更长的时间尺度上出现,这表明对抗条件作用可能是持续治疗效果的有效策略。
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