Fragkaki Iro, Roelofs Karin, Stins John, Jongedijk Ruud A, Hagenaars Muriel A
Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University , Nijmegen , Netherlands.
Behavioural Science Institute and Donders Institute for Brain Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University , Nijmegen , Netherlands.
Front Psychiatry. 2017 Mar 14;8:39. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00039. eCollection 2017.
Besides fight and flight responses, animals and humans may respond to threat with freezing, a response characterized by bradycardia and physical immobility. Risk assessment is proposed to be enhanced during freezing to promote optimal decision making. Indeed, healthy participants showed freezing-like responses to threat cues. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients are characterized by hypervigilance and increased threat responsiveness. We propose that threat responses will be characterized by decreased freezing in PTSD, eliminating possibilities for rejecting cognitive distortions, such as harm expectancy, and thereby contributing to the maintenance of the disorder. However, freezing responses have hardly been investigated in PTSD. Using a stabilometric platform to assess body sway as an indicator of freezing-like behavior, we examined whether veterans with PTSD would show diminished freezing responses to unpleasant versus neutral and pleasant pictures. Fourteen PTSD patients and 14 healthy matched controls watched the pictures, while body sway and heart rate (HR) were continuously assessed. Replicating previous findings, healthy controls showed decreased body sway and HR in response to unpleasant pictures, indicative of freezing-like behavior. In contrast, this response pattern was not observed in PTSD patients. The results may indicate a reduced freezing response in PTSD. As reduced freezing may hinder appropriate risk assessment, it may be an important factor in the maintenance of PTSD. Future research might clarify whether impaired freezing is a PTSD-specific or a transdiagnostic symptom, being present in threat-related disorders.
除了战斗和逃跑反应外,动物和人类可能会通过冻结反应来应对威胁,这种反应的特征是心动过缓和身体静止不动。有人提出,在冻结反应期间进行风险评估,以促进做出最佳决策。事实上,健康参与者对威胁线索表现出类似冻结的反应。创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)患者的特征是过度警觉和威胁反应性增加。我们提出,PTSD患者的威胁反应将以冻结反应减少为特征,从而消除了拒绝认知扭曲(如伤害预期)的可能性,进而导致该疾病的持续存在。然而,PTSD患者的冻结反应几乎没有得到研究。我们使用一个稳定测量平台来评估身体摆动,作为类似冻结行为的指标,研究了患有PTSD的退伍军人对不愉快图片与中性和愉快图片的冻结反应是否会减弱。14名PTSD患者和14名健康匹配对照组观看图片,同时持续评估身体摆动和心率(HR)。重复先前的研究结果,健康对照组对不愉快图片的身体摆动和心率下降,表明存在类似冻结的行为。相比之下,PTSD患者中未观察到这种反应模式。结果可能表明PTSD患者的冻结反应减少。由于冻结反应减少可能会阻碍适当的风险评估,它可能是PTSD持续存在的一个重要因素。未来的研究可能会阐明,冻结反应受损是PTSD特有的症状还是一种跨诊断症状,是否存在于与威胁相关的疾病中。