Carlton Corinne N, Sullivan-Toole Holly, Ghane Merage, Richey John A
Clinical Science Program, Department of Psychology, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United States.
Graduate Program in Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United States.
Front Neurosci. 2020 Feb 26;14:154. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00154. eCollection 2020.
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a common and serious psychiatric condition that typically emerges during adolescence and persists into adulthood if left untreated. Prevailing interventions focus on modulating threat and arousal systems but produce only modest rates of remission. This gap in efficacy suggests that most mainstream treatment concepts do not sufficiently target core processes involved in the onset and maintenance of SAD. This idea has further driven the development of new theoretical models that target dopamine (DA)-driven reward circuitry and motivational deficits that appear to be systematically altered in SAD. Most of the available data linking systemic alterations in DA neurobiology to SAD in humans, although abundant, remains at the level of correlational evidence. Accordingly, the purpose of this brief review is to critically evaluate the relevance of experimental work in rodent models that link details of DA function to symptoms of social anxiety. We conclude that, despite certain systematic limitations inherent in animal models, these approaches provide useful insights into human biomarkers of social anxiety including that (1) adolescence may serve as a critical period for the convergence of neurobiological and environmental factors that modify future expectations about social reward through experience dependent changes in DA-ergic circuitry, (2) females may show unique susceptibility to social anxiety symptoms when encountering relational instability that influences DA-related neural processes, and (3) separate from fear and arousal systems, the functional neurobiology of central DA systems contribute uniquely to susceptibility and maintenance of anhedonic factors relevant to human models of SAD.
社交焦虑障碍(SAD)是一种常见且严重的精神疾病,通常在青春期出现,如果不治疗会持续到成年期。现有的干预措施侧重于调节威胁和唤醒系统,但缓解率仅为中等。这种疗效差距表明,大多数主流治疗理念并未充分针对SAD发病和维持过程中的核心机制。这一观点进一步推动了新理论模型的发展,这些模型针对多巴胺(DA)驱动的奖赏回路以及在SAD中似乎发生系统性改变的动机缺陷。尽管大量现有数据将DA神经生物学的系统性改变与人类SAD联系起来,但仍停留在相关证据层面。因此,本简要综述的目的是批判性地评估啮齿动物模型实验工作的相关性,这些工作将DA功能细节与社交焦虑症状联系起来。我们得出结论,尽管动物模型存在某些固有的系统性局限性,但这些方法为社交焦虑的人类生物标志物提供了有用的见解,包括:(1)青春期可能是神经生物学和环境因素交汇的关键时期,这些因素通过依赖经验的DA能回路变化来改变未来对社交奖赏的期望;(2)女性在遇到影响DA相关神经过程的关系不稳定时,可能对社交焦虑症状表现出独特的易感性;(3)与恐惧和唤醒系统不同,中枢DA系统的功能性神经生物学对与人类SAD模型相关的快感缺失因素的易感性和维持有独特贡献。