4.7 Review

Causally mapping human threat extinction relevant circuits with depolarizing brain stimulation methods

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2022.105005

Keywords

Threat extinction; Threat reconsolidation; Clinical anxiety; Brain stimulation; Transcranial magnetic stimulation; Deep brain stimulation

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Laboratory threat extinction and exposure-based therapy both involve repeated, safe confrontation with previously threatening stimuli. However, efforts to improve exposure outcomes using rodent extinction techniques have largely failed due to differences between rodent and human neurobiology. This review proposes a comprehensive pre-clinical human research agenda to overcome these failures, using connectivity guided depolarizing brain stimulation methods and dual threat reconsolidation-extinction paradigms to map extinction relevant circuits and inform optimal integration with exposure-based therapy.
Laboratory threat extinction paradigms and exposure-based therapy both involve repeated, safe confrontation with stimuli previously experienced as threatening. This fundamental procedural overlap supports laboratory threat extinction as a compelling analogue of exposure-based therapy. Threat extinction impairments have been detected in clinical anxiety and may contribute to exposure-based therapy non-response and relapse. However, efforts to improve exposure outcomes using techniques that boost extinction - primarily rodent extinction - have largely failed to date, potentially due to fundamental differences between rodent and human neurobiology. In this review, we articulate a comprehensive pre-clinical human research agenda designed to overcome these failures. We describe how connectivity guided depolarizing brain stimulation methods (i.e., TMS and DBS) can be applied concurrently with threat extinction and dual threat reconsolidation-extinction paradigms to causally map human extinction relevant circuits and inform the optimal integration of these methods with exposure-based therapy. We highlight candidate targets including the amygdala, hippocampus, ventromedial prefrontal cor-tex, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, and mesolimbic structures, and propose hypotheses about how stimulation delivered at specific learning phases could strengthen threat extinction.

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