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Repeated Exposure to Conditioned Fear Stress Increases Anxiety and Delays Sleep Recovery Following Exposure to an Acute Traumatic Stressor

机译:反复暴露于有条件的恐惧压力下会增加焦虑并延迟暴露于急性创伤性应激源后的睡眠恢复

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摘要

Repeated stressor exposure can sensitize physiological responses to novel stressors and facilitate the development of stress-related psychiatric disorders including anxiety. Disruptions in diurnal rhythms of sleep–wake behavior accompany stress-related psychiatric disorders and could contribute to their development. Complex stressors that include fear-eliciting stimuli can be a component of repeated stress experienced by human beings, but whether exposure to repeated fear can prime the development of anxiety and sleep disturbances is unknown. In the current study, adult male F344 rats were exposed to either control conditions or repeated contextual fear conditioning for 22 days followed by exposure to no, mild (10), or severe (100) acute uncontrollable tail shock stress. Exposure to acute stress produced anxiety-like behavior as measured by a reduction in juvenile social exploration and exaggerated shock-elicited freezing in a novel context. Prior exposure to repeated fear enhanced anxiety-like behavior as measured by shock-elicited freezing, but did not alter social exploratory behavior. The potentiation of anxiety produced by prior repeated fear was temporary; exaggerated fear was present 1 day but not 4 days following acute stress. Interestingly, exposure to acute stress reduced rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep during the hours immediately following acute stress. This initial reduction in sleep was followed by robust REM rebound and diurnal rhythm flattening of sleep/wake behavior. Prior repeated fear extended the acute stress-induced REM and NREM sleep loss, impaired REM rebound, and prolonged the flattening of the diurnal rhythm of NREM sleep following acute stressor exposure. These data suggest that impaired recovery of sleep/wake behavior following acute stress could contribute to the mechanisms by which a history of prior repeated stress increases vulnerability to subsequent novel stressors and stress-related disorders.
机译:重复的应激源暴露可使新应激源的生理反应敏感,并促进包括焦虑症在内的与压力有关的精神疾病的发展。与压力相关的精神疾病会伴随着睡眠-觉醒行为的昼夜节律紊乱,并可能促进其发展。包括引起恐惧的刺激在内的复杂应激源可能是人类反复遭受压力的一个组成部分,但是,暴露于反复恐惧中是否能引发焦虑和睡眠障碍尚不清楚。在当前的研究中,成年雄性F344大鼠暴露于对照条件或反复的情境恐惧条件下22天,然后暴露于无,轻度(10)或严重(100)的急性不可控制的尾巴休克应激。暴露于急性压力下会产生类似焦虑的行为,这种行为可通过减少青少年的社会探索和夸大的休克引发的结冰来衡量。先前暴露于反复的恐惧中可以增强类似焦虑的行为,如通过休克诱发的冰冻来衡量,但并不能改变社交探索行为。先前反复恐惧产生的焦虑增强是暂时的。急性应激后1天(而非4天)出现夸大的恐惧。有趣的是,在急性应激后的数小时内,暴露于急性应激会减少快速眼动(REM)和非REM(NREM)睡眠。最初的睡眠减少是紧接着的快速REM反弹和睡眠/苏醒行为的昼夜节律平坦。先前的反复恐惧延长了急性应激诱发的REM和NREM睡眠丧失,使REM反弹受损,并延长了急性应激源暴露后NREM睡眠的昼夜节律扁平化。这些数据表明,急性应激后睡眠/苏醒行为恢复能力下降可能是由先前反复应激史增加了对随后新型应激源和应激相关疾病的易感性的机制所致。

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