A positron emission tomographic study of simple phobic symptom provocation.

BACKGROUND The goal of this study was to determine the mediating neuroanatomy of simple phobic symptoms. METHODS Positron emission tomography and oxygen 15 were used to measure normalized regional cerebral blood flow in seven subjects with simple phobia during control and provoked states. Stereotactic transformation and statistical parametric mapping techniques were employed to determine the locations of significant activation. RESULTS Statistical parametric maps demonstrated significant increases in normalized regional blood flow for the symptomatic state compared with the control state in the anterior cingulate cortex, the insular cortex, the anterior temporal cortex, the somatosensory cortex, the posterior medial orbitofrontal cortex, and the thalamus. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that anxiety associated with the simple phobic symptomatic state is mediated by paralimbic structures. Moreover, activation of somatosensory cortex may reflect tactile imagery as one component of the phobic symptomatic condition.

[1]  J. W. Papez A PROPOSED MECHANISM OF EMOTION , 1937 .

[2]  R. C. Oldfield The assessment and analysis of handedness: the Edinburgh inventory. , 1971, Neuropsychologia.

[3]  M. Mesulam,et al.  Insula of the old world monkey. III: Efferent cortical output and comments on function , 1982, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[4]  P Pietrini,et al.  Cerebral glucose metabolism in childhood-onset obsessive-compulsive disorder. Revisualization during pharmacotherapy. , 1992, Archives of general psychiatry.

[5]  A. Beck,et al.  An inventory for measuring depression. , 1961, Archives of general psychiatry.

[6]  Monte S. Buchsbaum,et al.  PET in generalized anxiety disorder , 1991, Biological Psychiatry.

[7]  J. Gorman,et al.  A neuroanatomical hypothesis for panic disorder. , 1989, The American journal of psychiatry.

[8]  P T Fox,et al.  Neuroanatomical correlates of a lactate-induced anxiety attack. , 1989, Archives of general psychiatry.

[9]  B. Doane,et al.  The Limbic System: Functional Organization and Clinical Disorders , 1986 .

[10]  Peter Herscovitch,et al.  A focal brain abnormality in panic disorder, a severe form of anxiety , 1984, Nature.

[11]  T Greitz,et al.  Regional cerebral blood flow during experimental phobic fear. , 2007, Psychophysiology.

[12]  G C Curtis,et al.  Neurophysiologic dysfunction in basal ganglia/limbic striatal and thalamocortical circuits as a pathogenetic mechanism of obsessive-compulsive disorder. , 1989, The Journal of neuropsychiatry and clinical neurosciences.

[13]  A J Rush,et al.  Cerebral blood flow changes during sodium-lactate-induced panic attacks. , 1988, The American journal of psychiatry.

[14]  S. Rauch,et al.  Neurobiological models of obsessive-compulsive disorder. , 1993, Psychosomatics.

[15]  M. Torrens Co-Planar Stereotaxic Atlas of the Human Brain—3-Dimensional Proportional System: An Approach to Cerebral Imaging, J. Talairach, P. Tournoux. Georg Thieme Verlag, New York (1988), 122 pp., 130 figs. DM 268 , 1990 .

[16]  T. Insel,et al.  Anxiety and cerebral blood flow during behavioral challenge. Dissociation of central from peripheral and subjective measures. , 1989, Archives of general psychiatry.

[17]  J. Mazziotta,et al.  Caudate glucose metabolic rate changes with both drug and behavior therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder. , 1992, Archives of general psychiatry.

[18]  M. Buchsbaum,et al.  The effect of anxiety and hostility in silent mentation on localized cerebral glucose metabolism. , 1992, Comprehensive psychiatry.

[19]  L. Baxter,et al.  Neuroimaging studies of obsessive compulsive disorder. , 1992, The Psychiatric clinics of North America.

[20]  M. Raichle,et al.  PET images of blood flow changes during anxiety: correction. , 1992, Science.

[21]  D E Kuhl,et al.  Positron emission tomographic evaluation of cerebral blood flow during state anxiety in simple phobia. , 1989, Archives of general psychiatry.

[22]  T. Insel,et al.  Toward a neuroanatomy of obsessive-compulsive disorder. , 1992, Archives of general psychiatry.

[23]  R. Hichwa,et al.  Anxiety and cerebral cortical metabolism in normal persons , 1990, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging.

[24]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Comparing Functional (PET) Images: The Assessment of Significant Change , 1991, Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism.

[25]  S. Southwick,et al.  Psychobiologic mechanisms of posttraumatic stress disorder. , 1993, Archives of general psychiatry.

[26]  E. Rota Kops,et al.  Performance characteristics of an eight-ring whole body PET scanner. , 1990, Journal of computer assisted tomography.

[27]  K H PRIBRAM,et al.  Respiratory and vascular responses in monkeys from temporal pole, insula, orbital surface and cingulate gyrus; a preliminary report. , 1949, Journal of neurophysiology.

[28]  N. Alpert,et al.  Regional cerebral blood flow measured during symptom provocation in obsessive-compulsive disorder using oxygen 15-labeled carbon dioxide and positron emission tomography. , 1994, Archives of general psychiatry.