Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh PA, USA.
Neuroimage. 2010 Aug 15;52(2):710-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.04.244. Epub 2010 Apr 27.
Active avoidance involving controlling and modifying threatening situations characterizes many forms of clinical pathology, particularly childhood anxiety. Presently our understanding of the neural systems supporting human avoidance is largely based on nonhuman research. Establishing the generality of nonhuman findings to healthy children is a needed first step towards advancing developmental affective neuroscience research on avoidance in childhood anxiety. Accordingly, this investigation examined brain activation patterns to threatening cues that prompted avoidance in healthy youths. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, fifteen youths (ages 9-13) completed a task that alternately required approach or avoidance behaviors. On each trial either a threatening 'Snake' cue or a 'Reward' cue advanced towards a bank containing earned points. Directional buttons enabled subjects to move cues away from (Avoidance) or towards the bank (Approach). Avoidance cues elicited activation in regions hypothesized to support avoidance in nonhumans (amygdala, insula, striatum and thalamus). Results also highlighted that avoidance response rates were positively correlated with amygdala activation and negatively correlated with insula and anterior cingulate activation. Moreover, increased amygdala activity was associated with decreased insula and anterior cingulate activity. Our results suggest that nonhuman neurophysiological research findings on avoidance may generalize to neural systems associated with avoidance in childhood. Perhaps most importantly, the amygdala/insula activation observed suggests that threat-related responses can be maintained even when aversive events are consistently avoided, which may account for the persistence of avoidance-coping in childhood anxiety. The present approach may offer developmental affective neuroscience a conceptual and methodological framework for investigating avoidance in childhood anxiety.
主动回避涉及控制和改变威胁性情境,这是许多临床病理学形式的特征,尤其是儿童焦虑症。目前,我们对支持人类回避的神经系统的理解主要基于非人类研究。将非人类研究的发现推广到健康儿童,是推进儿童焦虑症回避的发展情感神经科学研究的必要的第一步。因此,本研究考察了健康青少年对引发回避的威胁线索的大脑激活模式。在功能磁共振成像过程中,15 名青少年(9-13 岁)完成了一项任务,该任务交替要求采取接近或回避行为。在每次试验中,要么出现威胁性的“蛇”线索,要么出现“奖励”线索,向包含赚取积分的银行前进。方向按钮使主体能够将线索从(回避)或朝向银行(接近)移动。回避线索引起了回避行为在非人类中被认为支持回避的区域的激活(杏仁核、岛叶、纹状体和丘脑)。结果还表明,回避反应率与杏仁核激活呈正相关,与岛叶和前扣带皮层激活呈负相关。此外,杏仁核活动的增加与岛叶和前扣带皮层活动的减少有关。我们的结果表明,非人类神经生理学研究中关于回避的发现可能推广到与儿童回避相关的神经系统。也许最重要的是,观察到的杏仁核/岛叶激活表明,即使不断回避厌恶事件,与威胁相关的反应也可以维持,这可能解释了儿童焦虑症中回避应对的持续性。目前的方法可能为发展情感神经科学提供了一个概念和方法框架,用于研究儿童焦虑症中的回避。