Departments of Psychiatry and Anatomy & Neurobiology, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences Campus, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR, 00936, USA.
Nash family Department of Neuroscience and Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Transl Psychiatry. 2020 Jul 3;10(1):212. doi: 10.1038/s41398-020-00892-5.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by compulsive behaviors that often resemble avoidance of perceived danger. OCD can be treated with exposure-with-response prevention (ERP) therapy in which patients are exposed to triggers but are encouraged to refrain from compulsions, to extinguish compulsive responses. The compulsions of OCD are strengthened by many repeated exposures to triggers, but little is known about the effects of extended repetition of avoidance behaviors on extinction. Here we assessed the extent to which overtraining of active avoidance affects subsequent extinction-with-response prevention (Ext-RP) as a rodent model of ERP, in which rats are extinguished to triggers, while the avoidance option is prevented. Male rats conditioned for 8d or 20d produced similar avoidance behavior to a tone paired with a shock, however, the 20d group showed a severe impairment of extinction during Ext-RP, as well as heightened anxiety. Furthermore, the majority of overtrained (20d) rats (75%) exhibited persistent avoidance following Ext-RP. In the 8d group, only a minority of rats (37%) exhibited persistent avoidance, and this was associated with elevated activity (c-Fos) in the prelimbic cortex and nucleus accumbens. In the 20d group, the minority of non-persistent rats (25%) showed elevated activity in the insular-orbital cortex and paraventricular thalamus. Lastly, extending the duration of Ext-RP prevented the deleterious effects of overtraining on extinction and avoidance. These rodent findings suggest that repeated expression of compulsion-like behaviors biases individuals toward persistent avoidance and alters avoidance circuits, thereby reducing the effectiveness of current extinction-based therapies.
强迫症(OCD)的特征是强迫行为,这些行为常常类似于对感知到的危险的回避。OCD 可以通过暴露-反应预防(ERP)疗法来治疗,在这种疗法中,患者会接触到触发因素,但被鼓励不要进行强迫行为,以消除强迫反应。OCD 的强迫行为会因多次接触触发因素而得到强化,但对于回避行为的反复延长对消退的影响知之甚少。在这里,我们评估了过度训练主动回避对随后的 Ext-RP(作为 ERP 的啮齿动物模型,其中大鼠对触发因素进行消退,同时防止回避选择)的影响程度。经过 8 天或 20 天训练的雄性大鼠对与电击配对的音调产生类似的回避行为,然而,20 天组在 Ext-RP 期间表现出严重的消退障碍,以及焦虑增加。此外,大多数过度训练(20 天)的大鼠(75%)在 Ext-RP 后表现出持续的回避。在 8 天组中,只有少数大鼠(37%)表现出持续的回避,这与外侧眶额皮质和伏隔核的活性(c-Fos)升高有关。在 20 天组中,少数非持续性大鼠(25%)表现出岛叶-眶额皮质和室旁核的活性升高。最后,延长 Ext-RP 的持续时间可以防止过度训练对消退和回避的不良影响。这些啮齿动物研究结果表明,反复表达强迫样行为会使个体偏向于持续回避,并改变回避回路,从而降低当前基于消退的治疗方法的有效性。