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Implications of memory modulation for post-traumatic stress and fear disorders

  • Emory University
  • Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

375 Scopus citations

Abstract

Post-traumatic stress disorder, panic disorder and phobia manifest in ways that are consistent with an uncontrollable state of fear. Their development involves heredity, previous sensitizing experiences, association of aversive events with previous neutral stimuli, and inability to inhibit or extinguish fear after it is chronic and disabling. We highlight recent progress in fear learning and memory, differential susceptibility to disorders of fear, and how these findings are being applied to the understanding, treatment and possible prevention of fear disorders. Promising advances are being translated from basic science to the clinic, including approaches to distinguish risk versus resilience before trauma exposure, methods to interfere with fear development during memory consolidation after a trauma, and techniques to inhibit fear reconsolidation and to enhance extinction of chronic fear. It is hoped that this new knowledge will translate to more successful, neuroscientifically informed and rationally designed approaches to disorders of fear regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)146-153
Number of pages8
JournalNature Neuroscience
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2013

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