4.4 Article

Neural responding during uncertain threat anticipation in pediatric anxiety

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INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
卷 183, 期 -, 页码 159-170

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2022.07.006

关键词

Threat anticipation; Threat uncertainty; Pediatric anxiety; Reliability; Fmri

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Excessive fear responses to uncertain threat are a key feature of anxiety disorders, and this study aims to explore the neural mechanisms behind it in both youth and adults. The findings suggest that certain brain regions are involved in fear regulation, response inhibition, and cognitive control, which may provide insights for treatment development and research in youth mental health.
Excessive fear responses to uncertain threat are a key feature of anxiety disorders (ADs), though most mecha-nistic work considers adults. As ADs onset in childhood and confer risk for later psychopathology, we sought to identify conditions of uncertain threat that distinguish 8-17-year-old youth with AD (n = 19) from those without AD (n = 33), and assess test-retest reliability of such responses in a companion sample of healthy adults across three sites (n = 19). In an adapted uncertainty of threat paradigm, visual cues parametrically signaled threat of aversive stimuli (fear faces) in 25 % increments (0 %, 25 %, 50 %, 100 %), while participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We compared neural response elicited by cues signaling different degrees of probability regarding the subsequent delivery of fear faces. Overall, youth displayed greater engagement of bilateral inferior parietal cortex, fusiform gyrus, and lingual gyrus during uncertain threat anticipation in general. Relative to healthy youth, AD youth exhibited greater activation in ventrolateral pre-frontal cortex (vlPFC)/BA47 during uncertain threat anticipation in general. Further, AD differed from healthy youth in scaling of ventral striatum/sgACC activation with threat probability and attenuated flexibility of responding during parametric uncertain threat. Complementing these results, significant, albeit modest, cross-site test-retest reliability in these regions was observed in an independent sample of healthy adults. While preliminary due to a small sample size, these findings suggest that during uncertainty of threat, AD youth engage vlPFC regions known to be involved in fear regulation, response inhibition, and cognitive control. Findings highlight the potential of isolating neural correlates of threat anticipation to guide treatment development and translational work in youth.

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