Research Service, Long Beach VA Healthcare System, 5901 East 7(th) Street, Long Beach, CA, 90822, United States; Science 37, 12121 Bluff Creek Drive, Los Angeles, CA, 90094, United States.
Neuroscience Center for Anxiety, Stress, and Trauma (NeuroCAST), Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, Wayne State University School of Medicine, 3901 Chrysler Service Drive, Detroit, MI, 48201, United States.
Behav Brain Res. 2021 Apr 23;404:113172. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113172. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a respiratory condition characterized by interrupted sleep due to repeated, temporary collapse of the soft tissue of the upper airway that can lead to a cascade of physiological and psychological adverse health outcomes. The most common therapeutic interventions for OSA patients include the application of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) which acts to keep the airway open and, as such, provides less interrupted and more restorative sleep. Improved sleep has been linked to more efficacious treatments for psychiatric conditions most notably those that include cognitive-behavioral elements, new learning, and memory consolidation. In the current study, we investigated the acquisition, inhibition, and extinction of conditioned fear in OSA patients, before and after CPAP therapy, using an established fear-potentiated startle paradigm. Patients with OSA displayed an intact ability to acquire, inhibit, and extinguish fear prior to CPAP treatment and this ability was significantly enhanced following CPAP usage. In addition, those patients with more severe OSA, as measured by apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), were more likely to show improved fear inhibition and extinction. Lastly, we observed impairments in discrimination between reinforced and nonreinforced conditioned stimuli, in the inhibition of fear, and in fear extinction in a subset of patients with OSA and co-morbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These data suggest that evolving treatment algorithms for PTSD should address disrupted sleep problems prior to initiation of inhibition/extinction-based exposure therapies.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)是一种呼吸系统疾病,其特征是由于上呼吸道软组织反复、暂时塌陷而导致睡眠中断,从而导致一系列生理和心理不良健康后果。OSA 患者最常见的治疗干预措施包括应用持续气道正压通气(CPAP),该方法可保持气道开放,从而提供更少中断和更恢复性的睡眠。改善睡眠与精神疾病的更有效治疗相关,尤其是那些包括认知行为元素、新学习和记忆巩固的治疗。在当前研究中,我们使用已建立的恐惧增强性惊跳范式,在 CPAP 治疗前后,研究 OSA 患者条件性恐惧的获得、抑制和消退。在 CPAP 治疗之前,OSA 患者表现出完整的获得、抑制和消退恐惧的能力,并且在使用 CPAP 后,这种能力明显增强。此外,那些通过呼吸暂停低通气指数(AHI)测量患有更严重 OSA 的患者,更有可能显示出恐惧抑制和消退的改善。最后,我们观察到一部分 OSA 合并创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的患者在条件性刺激的辨别、恐惧抑制和恐惧消退方面存在障碍。这些数据表明,在开始基于抑制/消退的暴露疗法之前,针对 PTSD 的不断发展的治疗算法应该解决睡眠障碍问题。