The anxiety disorder spectrum: Fear imagery, physiological reactivity, and differential diagnosis

Abstract This review considers recent research assessing psychophysiological reactivity to fear imagery in anxiety disorder patients. As in animal subjects, fear cues prompt in humans a state of defensive motivation in which autonomic and somatic survival reflexes are markedly enhanced. Thus, a startle stimulus presented in a fear context yields a stronger (potentiated) reflex, providing a quantitative measure of fearful arousal. This fear potentiation is further exaggerated in specific or social phobia individuals when viewing pictures or imagining the phobic object. Paradoxically, fear imagery studies with more severe anxiety disorder patients – panic disorder with agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder, or anxious patients with comorbid depression – show a blunted, less robust fear potentiated response. Furthermore, this reflex blunting appears to systematically be more pronounced over the anxiety disorder spectrum, coincident with lengthier chronicity, worsening clinician-based judgments of severity and prognosis, and increased questionnaire-based indices of negative affectivity, suggesting that normal defensive reactivity may be compromised by an experience of long-term stress.

[1]  Michael Davis,et al.  Role of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis versus the amygdala in fear, stress, and anxiety. , 2003, European journal of pharmacology.

[2]  G. Dichter,et al.  The chronometry of affective startle modulation in unipolar depression. , 2008, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[3]  H. Xian,et al.  A twin study of generalized anxiety disorder symptoms, panic disorder symptoms and post-traumatic stress disorder in men , 2001, Psychiatry Research.

[4]  P. Lang,et al.  Emotional imagery in simple and social phobia: fear versus anxiety. , 1993, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[5]  D. Watson,et al.  Negative affectivity: the disposition to experience aversive emotional states. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[6]  Gregory A. Miller,et al.  Individual differences in imagery and the psychophysiology of emotion , 1987 .

[7]  Michael W. Otto,et al.  Anxiety and Its Disorders: The Nature and Treatment of Anxiety and Panic , 1989 .

[8]  E. Walker,et al.  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , 2013 .

[9]  P. Lang,et al.  Emotion, motivation, and the brain: reflex foundations in animal and human research. , 2006, Progress in brain research.

[10]  S. Maier,et al.  Chemical lesion of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis blocks the behavioral consequences of uncontrollable stress. , 2004, Behavioral neuroscience.

[11]  S. Maier,et al.  The role of the amygdala and dorsal raphe nucleus in mediating the behavioral consequences of inescapable shock. , 1993, Behavioral neuroscience.

[12]  R. Shelton,et al.  Early- and late-onset startle modulation in unipolar depression. , 2004, Psychophysiology.

[13]  P. Lang,et al.  Psychophysiology of fear imagery: differences between focal phobia and social performance anxiety. , 1978, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[14]  N. Frijda Emotion, cognitive structure and action tendency , 1987 .

[15]  S. Mineka,et al.  Comorbidity of anxiety and unipolar mood disorders. , 1998, Annual review of psychology.

[16]  I. Kovalenko,et al.  A Model of Anxious Depression: Persistence of Behavioral Pathology , 2005, Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology.

[17]  M. Tsuang,et al.  Evidence for genetic influences common and specific to symptoms of generalized anxiety and panic. , 2000, Journal of affective disorders.

[18]  A. Buss,et al.  Two anxiety factors in psychiatric patients. , 1962, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[19]  J. Gross,et al.  Emotion context insensitivity in major depressive disorder. , 2005, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[20]  S. Reiss Expectancy model of fear, anxiety, and panic , 1991 .

[21]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  Parallel amygdala and inferotemporal activation reflect emotional intensity and fear relevance , 2005, NeuroImage.

[22]  Michael Davis,et al.  Conditioned fear and startle magnitude: effects of different footshock or backshock intensities used in training. , 1978, Journal of experimental psychology. Animal behavior processes.

[23]  E. Fischer Conditioned Reflexes , 1942, American journal of physical medicine.

[24]  S. Reiss,et al.  Anxiety sensitivity, anxiety frequency and the prediction of fearfulness. , 1986, Behaviour research and therapy.

[25]  Joseph E LeDoux The Emotional Brain, Fear, and the Amygdala , 2003, Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology.

[26]  N. Fox,et al.  Affect-modulated startle in adults with childhood-onset depression: Relations to bipolar course and number of lifetime depressive episodes , 2005, Psychiatry Research.

[27]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  A Bio‐Informational Theory of Emotional Imagery , 1979 .

[28]  Christopher J Patrick,et al.  The psychophysiology of anxiety disorder: fear memory imagery. , 2003, Psychophysiology.

[29]  Fearful Imagery and the Anxiety Disorder Spectrum. , 2006 .

[30]  John P. Aggleton,et al.  The amygdala: Neurobiological aspects of emotion, memory, and mental dysfunction. , 1992 .

[31]  Rudolf Hoehn-Saric,et al.  Somatic symptoms and physiologic responses in generalized anxiety disorder and panic disorder: an ambulatory monitor study. , 2004, Archives of general psychiatry.

[32]  S. Ochs Integrative Activity of the Brain: An Interdisciplinary Approach , 1968 .

[33]  Michael C Neale,et al.  The structure of genetic and environmental risk factors for anxiety disorders in men and women. , 2005, Archives of general psychiatry.

[34]  Phil A. Silva,et al.  The structure and stability of common mental disorders (DSM-III-R): a longitudinal-epidemiological study. , 1998, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[35]  J Ormel,et al.  The structure and stability of common mental disorders: the NEMESIS study. , 2001, Archives of general psychiatry.

[36]  Emotional imagery and the differential diagnosis of anxiety. , 1989, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[37]  Qiyong Gong,et al.  Evaluation of the effective connectivity of the dominant primary motor cortex during bimanual movement using Granger causality , 2008, Neuroscience Letters.

[38]  George Mandler,et al.  THE RESPONSE TO THREAT - RELATIONS AMONG VERBAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL INDEXES , 1961 .

[39]  G. A. Miller,et al.  Fear behavior, fear imagery, and the psychophysiology of emotion: the problem of affective response integration. , 1983, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[40]  K Merikangas,et al.  Fear-potentiated startle in humans: effects of anticipatory anxiety on the acoustic blink reflex. , 1991, Psychophysiology.

[41]  R. Krueger The structure of common mental disorders. , 1999, Archives of general psychiatry.

[42]  R. Krueger,et al.  Using item response theory to understand comorbidity among anxiety and unipolar mood disorders. , 2001, Psychological Assessment.

[43]  Dc Washington Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Ed. , 1994 .

[44]  S. Rauch,et al.  An fMRI study of anterior cingulate function in posttraumatic stress disorder , 2001, Biological Psychiatry.

[45]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotional learning, hedonic change, and the startle probe. , 1993, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[46]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  Appetitive and Defensive Motivation Is the Substrate of Emotion , 2008 .

[47]  M. Bradley,et al.  Affective startle modulation in anticipation and perception. , 2001, Psychophysiology.

[48]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotion and motivation I: defensive and appetitive reactions in picture processing. , 2001, Emotion.

[49]  L. H. Gliedman Emotional Hazards in Animals and Man , 1958 .

[50]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotion and motivation II: sex differences in picture processing. , 2001, Emotion.

[51]  P. Lang,et al.  Fear imagery and the startle-probe reflex. , 1990, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[52]  J. Pearce Amygdala , 2008, European Neurology.

[53]  Thomas H. Ollendick,et al.  Concurrent Validity and Informant Agreement of the ADHD Module of the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV , 2007 .

[54]  P. Lang,et al.  Fear, Anxiety, Depression, and the Anxiety Disorder Spectrum: A Psychophysiological Analysis , 2007 .

[55]  Jr. Russell Noyes,et al.  Anxiety and Its Disorders: The Nature and Treatment of Anxiety and Panic , 1990 .

[56]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  The motivational organization of emotion: Affect-reflex connections. , 1994 .

[57]  B. Cuthbert,et al.  Fear and the startle reflex: blink modulation and autonomic response patterns in animal and mutilation fearful subjects. , 1997, Psychophysiology.

[58]  T. Gray Autonomic Neuropeptide Connections of the Amygdala , 1989 .

[59]  C. Spielberger,et al.  Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory , 1970 .

[60]  P. Lang Imagery in therapy: an information processing analysis of fear , 1977 .

[61]  M. Bradley,et al.  The neural basis of narrative imagery: emotion and action. , 2006, Progress in brain research.

[62]  Lisa M. McTeague,et al.  Fearful Imagery in Social Phobia: Generalization, Comorbidity, and Physiological Reactivity , 2009, Biological Psychiatry.

[63]  K. Kendler,et al.  The structure of genetic and environmental risk factors for common psychiatric and substance use disorders in men and women. , 2003, Archives of general psychiatry.