Sharp W G, Allen A G, Stubbs K H, Criado K K, Sanders R, McCracken C E, Parsons R G, Scahill L, Gourley S L
Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Pediatric Psychology and Feeding Disorders Program, The Marcus Autism Center, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Transl Psychiatry. 2017 Jun 20;7(6):e1157. doi: 10.1038/tp.2017.126.
Pediatric feeding disorders affect up to 5% of children, causing severe food intake problems that can result in serious medical and developmental outcomes. Behavioral intervention (BI) is effective in extinguishing feeding aversions, and also expert-dependent, time/labor-intensive and not well understood at a neurobiological level. Here we first conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial comparing BI with BI plus d-cycloserine (DCS). DCS is a partial N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor agonist shown to augment extinction therapies in multiple anxiety disorders. We examined whether DCS enhanced extinction of feeding aversion in 15 children with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ages 20-58 months). After five treatment days, BI improved feeding by 37%. By contrast, BI+DCS improved feeding by 76%. To gain insight into possible mechanisms of successful intervention, we next tested the neurobiological consequences of DCS in a murine model of feeding aversion and avoidance. In mice with conditioned food aversion, DCS enhanced avoidance extinction across a broad dose range. Confocal fluorescence microscopy and three-dimensional neuronal reconstruction indicated that DCS enlarged dendritic spine heads-the primary sites of excitatory plasticity in the brain-within the orbitofrontal prefrontal cortex, a sensory-cognition integration hub. DCS also increased phosphorylation of the plasticity-associated extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2. In summary, DCS successfully augments the extinction of food aversion in children and mice, an effect that may involve plasticity in the orbitofrontal cortex. These results warrant a larger-scale efficacy study of DCS for the treatment of pediatric feeding disorders and further investigations of neural mechanisms.
小儿喂养障碍影响着多达5%的儿童,会导致严重的食物摄入问题,进而可能引发严重的医学和发育后果。行为干预(BI)在消除喂养厌恶方面是有效的,但它依赖专家,耗时/费力,且在神经生物学层面上尚未得到充分理解。在此,我们首先进行了一项双盲、安慰剂对照试验,比较BI与BI加d - 环丝氨酸(DCS)的效果。DCS是一种部分N - 甲基 - d - 天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体激动剂,已显示在多种焦虑症中可增强消退疗法的效果。我们研究了DCS是否能增强15名患有回避/限制性食物摄入障碍(年龄在20 - 58个月)儿童的喂养厌恶消退。经过五个治疗日,BI使喂养改善了37%。相比之下,BI + DCS使喂养改善了76%。为了深入了解成功干预的可能机制,我们接下来在喂养厌恶和回避的小鼠模型中测试了DCS的神经生物学后果。在有条件性食物厌恶的小鼠中,DCS在广泛的剂量范围内增强了回避消退。共聚焦荧光显微镜和三维神经元重建表明,DCS扩大了眶额前额叶皮质(一个感觉 - 认知整合中枢)内的树突棘头部——大脑中兴奋性可塑性的主要部位。DCS还增加了与可塑性相关的细胞外信号调节激酶1/2的磷酸化。总之,DCS成功增强了儿童和小鼠食物厌恶的消退,这种效应可能涉及眶额皮质的可塑性。这些结果为DCS治疗小儿喂养障碍的大规模疗效研究以及神经机制的进一步研究提供了依据。