Amygdala reactivity and connectivity during social and non-social aversive stimulation in social anxiety disorder

Psychiatry Research. Neuroimaging
Jakub KrausT Furmark

Abstract

Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by exaggerated amygdala reactivity in response to symptom provocation, but it is unclear if such hyper-reactivity is elicited by disorder-specific challenges only or characterizes reactions to aversive stimuli in general. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging in 14 patients with SAD, as compared to 12 healthy controls, we found that amygdala hyper-reactivity is confined to disorder-relevant social stimulation. SAD patients displayed increased amygdala reactivity to fearful as compared to neutral facial pictures, but not in response to generally aversive but mainly non-social stimulation when compared to neutral pictorial stimuli taken from the International Affective Picture System. The increased amygdala reactivity was not mediated by an altered prefrontal inhibition among SAD patients as compared to controls, suggesting increased bottom-up processes rather than attenuated top-down control. In conclusion, the enhanced amygdala reactivity in SAD seems specific to socially relevant stimuli rather than aversive stimuli in general.

Citations

Dec 11, 2019·Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience·Jakub KrausMats Fredrikson
Apr 10, 2020·F1000Research·Janna Marie Bas-Hoogendam, P Michiel Westenberg
Mar 25, 2020·Psychological Medicine·Anne-Kathrin BrehlGuillen Fernández
Jan 5, 2021·Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience·Jun WangHan Xu

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