Abstract

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the fifth most prevalent mental disorder in the United States, is a chronic, debilitating mental illness with as yet limited options for treatment. Hallmark symptoms of PTSD include intrusive memory of trauma, avoidance of reminders of the event, hyperarousal and hypervigilance, emotional numbing, and anhedonia. PTSD is often triggered by exposure to a single traumatic experience, such as a traffic accident, a natural catastrophe, or an episode of violence. This suggests that stressful events have a primary role in the pathogenesis of the disorder, although genetic background and previous life events are likely involved. However, pathophysiology of this mental disorder, as for major depression and anxiety disorders, is still poorly understood. In particular, it is unknown how can a single traumatic, stressful event induce a disease that can last for years or decades. A major shift in the conceptual framework investigating neuropsychiatric disorders has occurred in recent years, from a monoamine-oriented hypothesis (which dominated pharmacological research for over half a century) to a neuroplasticity hypothesis, which posits that structural and functional changes in brain circuitry (largely in the glutamate system) mediate psychopathology and also therapeutic action. Rodent stress models are very useful to understand pathophysiology of PTSD. Recent studies with acute or subacute stress models have shown that exposure to short-time stressors (from several minutes to a few hours) can induce not only rapid, but also sustained changes in synaptic function (glutamate release, synaptic transmission/plasticity), neuroarchitecture (dendritic morphology, synaptic spines), and behavior (cognitive functions). Some of these changes, e.g., stress-induced increased glutamate release and dendrite retraction, are likely connected and occur more rapidly than previously thought. We propose here to use a modified version of a simple and validated protocol of footshock stress to explore different trajectories in the individual response to acute stress. This new conceptual framework may enable us to identify determinants of resilient versus vulnerable response as well as new targets for treatment, in particular for rapid-acting antidepressants. It will be interesting to investigate the putative prophylactic action of ketamine toward the maladaptive effects of acute stress in this new protocol.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Neuropharmacology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Pharmacology

  • This person could develop a serious neuropsychiatric disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), that may last for years or even decades

  • Decreased ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activity was associated with increased amygdala activity. Many of these studies have been the object of meta-analyses, substantially confirming all these alterations (Karl et al, 2006; Kitayama et al, 2006; Hayes et al, 2012a; O’Doherty et al, 2015). These results are in line with neurocircuitry models of Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which posit that reduced top-down control of amygdala by vmPFC is implicated in PTSD symptomology, with increased attentional bias toward threat, increased fear response, and defective extinction of traumatic memories (Rauch et al, 2006; Pitman et al, 2012)

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Summary

Acute Stress Protocols Modeling PTSD

One day a person experiences deep stress caused by a sudden incident (a traffic accident, a natural catastrophe, an episode of violence). Stress is considered a primary risk factor for most neuropsychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety, and PTSD (Duman and Aghajanian, 2012; Pitman et al, 2012; Popoli et al, 2012; McEwen et al, 2015; Duman et al, 2016; Murrough et al, 2017). The latter is probably the single disorder where the relationship with traumatic stress is more evident. A large body of clinical research has investigated the changes observed in brains of people affected by PTSD by using neuroimaging techniques

NEUROIMAGING STUDIES OF PTSD
THE SUSTAINED EFFECTS OF ACUTE STRESS ON SYNAPTIC FUNCTION AND MORPHOLOGY
THE LINK BETWEEN ACUTE STRESS AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
DYNAMIC DISSECTION OF THE ACUTE STRESS RESPONSE
THE KETAMINE REVOLUTION
Findings
KETAMINE FOR PTSD?
Full Text
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