Le Dorze Claire, Gisquet-Verrier Pascale
Neuro-PSI, Université Paris-Sud, CNRS UMR9197, Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France.
Neuro-PSI, Université Paris-Sud, CNRS UMR9197, Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France.
Brain Res. 2016 Dec 1;1652:71-80. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2016.10.002. Epub 2016 Oct 4.
Intrusive re-experiencing of a trauma is a core symptom in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and is often triggered by contextual cues associated with the event. It is not yet established if intrusive re-experiencing is the consequence of PTSD, or if it could contribute to the development of PTSD following a traumatic event. The present study (1) examined the impact of repeated brief re-exposures to trauma reminders on the strength of PTSD-like symptoms, as well as on their time-development and (2) investigated the reactivity over time to these cues in trauma resilient and vulnerable rats, defined on the basis of the PTSD-like symptoms they demonstrated. Rats were exposed to a Single Prolonged Stress, combining three different stresses (2-h restraint, 20-min forced swim and CO unconsciousness) delivered together with tone and odor cues and preceded by an inhibitory avoidance conditioning or a control procedure. During the following two weeks, reminded rats were briefly re-exposed to trauma-associated cues either 4 or 8 times. The results indicated that 4 re-exposures to the same cue strengthened PTSD-like symptoms (anxiety, arousal, fear to trauma-cue). However 8 re-exposures to similar or different trauma-cues did not alter PTSD-like symptoms and led to a rapid extinction of the fear reactivity to these cues. The present results further indicated that shortly after trauma, both resilient and vulnerable rats strongly reacted to trauma-associated cues, while only vulnerable rats reacted long after the trauma, suggesting a slower loss of fear responses to trauma cues in these rats. We concluded that re-experiencing may participate in, but cannot be solely responsible for, the development of long-term PTSD effects.
创伤的侵入性重现是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的核心症状,通常由与该事件相关的情境线索触发。目前尚不清楚侵入性重现是PTSD的结果,还是它可能在创伤事件后促成PTSD的发展。本研究(1)考察了反复短暂暴露于创伤提示对PTSD样症状强度及其时间发展的影响,以及(2)研究了根据所表现出的PTSD样症状定义的创伤恢复力强和易受创伤的大鼠对这些线索随时间的反应性。大鼠接受单一长期应激,将三种不同的应激(2小时束缚、20分钟强迫游泳和一氧化碳致昏迷)与音调及气味线索一起施加,并在之前进行抑制性回避条件训练或对照程序。在接下来的两周内,受提示的大鼠被短暂地再次暴露于创伤相关线索4次或8次。结果表明,对相同线索进行4次再暴露会增强PTSD样症状(焦虑、觉醒、对创伤线索的恐惧)。然而,对相似或不同创伤线索进行8次再暴露并没有改变PTSD样症状,反而导致对这些线索的恐惧反应迅速消退。目前的结果还表明,创伤后不久,恢复力强和易受创伤的大鼠对创伤相关线索都有强烈反应,而只有易受创伤的大鼠在创伤后很长时间仍有反应,这表明这些大鼠对创伤线索的恐惧反应消退较慢。我们得出结论,重现可能参与但不能单独导致长期PTSD效应的发展。