• Title of article

    Repeated Ethanol Exposure and Withdrawal Impairs Human Fear Conditioning and Depresses Long-Term Potentiation in Rat Amygdala and Hippocampus

  • Author/Authors

    David N. Stephens، نويسنده , , Tamzin L. Ripley، نويسنده , , Gilyana Borlikova، نويسنده , , Manja Schubert، نويسنده , , Doris Albrecht، نويسنده , , Lee Hogarth، نويسنده , , Theodora Duka، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    392
  • To page
    400
  • Abstract
    Background In rats, repeated episodes of alcohol consumption and withdrawal (RWD) impair fear conditioning to discrete cues. Methods Fear conditioning was measured in human binge drinkers as the increased startle response in the presence of a CS+ conditioned to aversive white noise. Secondly, the ability of tone CSs, paired with footshock, to induce c-fos expression, a marker of neuronal activity, in limbic structures subserving emotion was studied in rats. Additionally, consequences of RWD on subsequent induction of long term potentiation (LTP) in external capsule/lateral amygdala and Schaffer collateral/hippocampus CA1 pathways were studied in rat brain slices. Results Fear conditioning was impaired in young human binge drinkers. The ability of fear-conditioned CSs to increase c-fos expression in limbic brain areas was reduced following RWD, as was LTP induction. Rats conditioned prior to RWD, following RWD showed generalization of conditioned fear from the tone CS+ to a neutral control stimulus, and a novel tone. Conclusions Binge-like drinking impairs fear conditioning, reduces LTP, and results in inappropriate generalization of learned fear responses. We propose a mechanism whereby RWD-induced synaptic plasticity reduces capacity for future learning, while allowing unconditioned stimuli access to neuronal pathways underlying conditioned fear.
  • Keywords
    stimulus generalization , binge drinking , Plasticity , fear conditioning , Repeated withdrawal
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Record number

    502779