The brain circuits that subserve fearful responses in animals are well worked out and will be the subject of intensive research within this proposed Center. It is now possible to study the degree to which the same neural circuits are involved in pathological human fear. We will study five groups of human patients (in addition to the normal subjects studied with identical paradigms in Project 1 by LeDoux and Phelps above): patients with panic disorder (off SSRIs), patients with panic disorder (successfully treated with SSRIs) (or CBT), patients with post traumatic stress disorder, acutely paranoid patients with schizophrenia, and non-paranoid patients with schizophrenia. We will use fMRI and targeted neurocognitive probes to evaluate the hypothesis that specific abnormal patterns of activation in fear circuitry (including ventromedial prefrontal cortex, amygdala and hippocampus) are associated with each of the three fear-related conditions--panic disorder, post traumatic stress disorder and paranoid schizophrenia. These probes will include both fear conditioning and syndrome-specific emotional memory tasks that have been designed and piloted in human subjects in collaboration with (and based upon preclinical and psychological models of) our basic science and cognitive psychology colleagues in the Center. These include LeDoux and Phelps from Project 1 and McEwen from Project 3. The resources and services of the Functional Neuroimaging Core will be used extensively by this project.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
3P50MH058911-03S1
Application #
6570528
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1)
Project Start
2001-09-01
Project End
2002-08-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
New York University
Department
Type
DUNS #
004514360
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10012
McEwen, Bruce S (2017) Neurobiological and Systemic Effects of Chronic Stress. Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks) 1:
McEwen, Bruce S; Gray, Jason; Nasca, Carla (2015) Recognizing Resilience: Learning from the Effects of Stress on the Brain. Neurobiol Stress 1:1-11
Ostroff, Linnaea E; Manzur, Mustfa K; Cain, Christopher K et al. (2014) Synapses lacking astrocyte appear in the amygdala during consolidation of Pavlovian threat conditioning. J Comp Neurol 522:2152-63
Burghardt, Nesha S; Sigurdsson, Torfi; Gorman, Jack M et al. (2013) Chronic antidepressant treatment impairs the acquisition of fear extinction. Biol Psychiatry 73:1078-86
Diaz-Mataix, Lorenzo; Ruiz Martinez, Raquel Chacon; Schafe, Glenn E et al. (2013) Detection of a temporal error triggers reconsolidation of amygdala-dependent memories. Curr Biol 23:467-72
Isogawa, Koichi; Bush, David E A; LeDoux, Joseph E (2013) Contrasting effects of pretraining, posttraining, and pretesting infusions of corticotropin-releasing factor into the lateral amygdala: attenuation of fear memory formation but facilitation of its expression. Biol Psychiatry 73:353-9
Kamphausen, Susanne; Schröder, Patricia; Maier, Simon et al. (2013) Medial prefrontal dysfunction and prolonged amygdala response during instructed fear processing in borderline personality disorder. World J Biol Psychiatry 14:307-18, S1-4
Bloss, Erik B; Puri, Rishi; Yuk, Frank et al. (2013) Morphological and molecular changes in aging rat prelimbic prefrontal cortical synapses. Neurobiol Aging 34:200-10
Debiec, Jacek; Diaz-Mataix, Lorenzo; Bush, David E A et al. (2013) The selectivity of aversive memory reconsolidation and extinction processes depends on the initial encoding of the Pavlovian association. Learn Mem 20:695-9
Popoli, Maurizio; Yan, Zhen; McEwen, Bruce S et al. (2012) The stressed synapse: the impact of stress and glucocorticoids on glutamate transmission. Nat Rev Neurosci 13:22-37

Showing the most recent 10 out of 158 publications