Department of Psychology, Sociology & Criminal Justice, Ohio Northern University, 525 S. Main St., Ada, OH 45810, USA.
Department of Psychology, Sociology & Criminal Justice, Ohio Northern University, 525 S. Main St., Ada, OH 45810, USA.
Horm Behav. 2019 Sep;115:104564. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2019.104564. Epub 2019 Aug 21.
Traumatized women are more likely than traumatized men to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Still, the inclusion of females in animal models of PTSD has largely been avoided, likely due to the variable hormone profile of female rodents. Because a valid animal model of PTSD that incorporates females is still needed, we examined the influence of estrous stage and ovarian hormones on the female rat response to a predator-based psychosocial stress model of PTSD. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to psychosocial stress or control conditions for 31 days. Stressed rats were given two cat exposures and daily social instability; control rats were handled daily. Beginning on Day 32, rats underwent physiological or behavioral testing. In Experiment 1, vaginal smears were collected on days of the first and second cat exposures and each day of behavioral testing to determine estrous stage. In Experiments 2 and 3, ovariectomized or sham control rats were exposed to stress or control conditions. Then, they were given behavioral testing (Exp 2), or their hearts were isolated and subjected to ischemia/reperfusion on a Langendorff isolated heart system (Exp 3). Chronic stress increased anxiety-like behavior, irrespective of estrous stage or ovariectomy condition. Ovariectomized females displayed greater startle responses and anxiety-like behavior than sham rats. Stress had no impact on myocardial sensitivity to ischemic injury; however, ovariectomized females exhibited greater ischemia-induced infarction than sham rats. These findings suggest that ovarian hormones may prevent anxiety-like behavior and be cardioprotective in non-stressed controls, but they do not interact with chronic stress to influence the development of PTSD-like sequelae in female rats.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)更易发生于女性创伤人群中。尽管如此,女性在 PTSD 动物模型中的纳入仍大多被回避,这可能是由于雌性啮齿动物的激素谱存在差异。由于仍需要一种纳入女性的 PTSD 有效动物模型,我们研究了动情期和卵巢激素对雌性大鼠对基于捕食者的 PTSD 心理社会应激模型的反应的影响。雌性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠接受心理社会应激或对照条件 31 天。应激大鼠接受两次猫暴露和每日社会不稳定处理;对照大鼠每日接受处理。从第 32 天开始,大鼠接受生理或行为测试。在实验 1 中,在第一次和第二次猫暴露以及行为测试的每一天收集阴道涂片,以确定动情期。在实验 2 和 3 中,卵巢切除术或假手术对照大鼠接受应激或对照条件。然后,对它们进行行为测试(实验 2),或对它们的心脏进行分离并在 Langendorff 分离心脏系统上进行缺血/再灌注(实验 3)。慢性应激增加了焦虑样行为,而与动情期或卵巢切除术状态无关。卵巢切除术雌性大鼠的惊吓反应和焦虑样行为比假手术大鼠更严重。应激对心肌对缺血损伤的敏感性没有影响;然而,卵巢切除术雌性大鼠的缺血诱导梗死比假手术大鼠更严重。这些发现表明,卵巢激素可能预防焦虑样行为,并在非应激对照中具有心脏保护作用,但它们不会与慢性应激相互作用,从而影响雌性大鼠 PTSD 样后遗症的发展。