2014
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2014.168
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Oxytocin Modulation of Amygdala Functional Connectivity to Fearful Faces in Generalized Social Anxiety Disorder

Abstract: The neuropeptide oxytocin (OXT) is thought to attenuate anxiety by dampening amygdala reactivity to threat in individuals with generalized social anxiety disorder (GSAD). Because the brain is organized into networks of interconnected areas, it is likely that OXT impacts functional coupling between the amygdala and other socio-emotional areas of the brain. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to examine the effects of OXT on amygdala functional connectivity during the processing of fearful faces in GSAD … Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…This is in line with previous studies showing increased amygdala-insula FC in taskrelated paradigms in healthy participants (Riem et al, 2011b;Striepens et al, 2012) and generalized social anxiety disorder patients (Gorka et al, 2015), and may be interpreted as representing increased salience processing after OT administration. However, it should be noted that these previous studies observed OT effects in the anterior insula, which is part of the salience network, whereas the OT effect in our study was located in the posterior insula, which typically does not belong to the salience network (Seeley et al, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This is in line with previous studies showing increased amygdala-insula FC in taskrelated paradigms in healthy participants (Riem et al, 2011b;Striepens et al, 2012) and generalized social anxiety disorder patients (Gorka et al, 2015), and may be interpreted as representing increased salience processing after OT administration. However, it should be noted that these previous studies observed OT effects in the anterior insula, which is part of the salience network, whereas the OT effect in our study was located in the posterior insula, which typically does not belong to the salience network (Seeley et al, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…However, OT-induced enhanced salience network activity was previously not interpreted as reflecting increased anxiety, as increased insula/dACC reactivity and amygdala-insula/dACC FC in response to emotional stimuli occurred in parallel with attenuated amygdala reactivity and/or enhanced functioning of PFC areas involved in emotion regulation (ie, the lateral orbitofrontal cortex and inferior frontal gyrus) in healthy individuals (eg, Riem et al, 2011a;Striepens et al, 2012). Similarly, in males with generalized social anxiety disorder, in addition to dampening amygdala hyperreactivity and enhancing resting-state amygdala-PFC FC (Dodhia et al, 2014;Labuschagne et al, 2010), OT also increased amygdala-insula and amygdala-mid/ dACC FC towards fearful faces (Gorka et al, 2015). Thus, considering OT's effects on salience network activity, and the role of salience processing in responding to emotional stimuli, we also included the insula in our analyses.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This response is not surprising owing to previous findings showing that the ACC has a crucial role within a general neural fear circuit (Hariri et al, 2003) as well as within the framework of Pavlovian fear conditioning (see reviews by Milad et al, 2007;Sehlmeyer et al, 2009). Furthermore, OXT has been found to moderate ACC activity (Gorka et al, 2015;Scheele et al, 2014a), and the ACC is characterized by a high OXT receptor density (Boccia et al, 2013). More specifically, activation in this study was found in the subgenual ACC, which is especially involved in fear responses and shows abnormal activity in mood disorders (Drevets et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Moreover, previous clinical studies have emphasized the relevance of the amygdala-PFC circuits for treatment success, with changes in this pathway predicting symptom reduction after cognitive behavioral therapy [20] and anxiolytic drug treatment [21, 22] in patients with exaggerated anxiety. In line with our hypothesis, successful training of the target pathway resulted in associated decreases in anxiety ratings thereby confirming both the important role of the amygdala-vlPFC pathway in the regulation of anxiety as well as the functional relevance of the training.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Deficits in this top-down regulatory mechanism have been identified across major psychiatric disorders [17], with disorders characterized by exaggerated anxiety exhibiting decreased recruitment of the prefrontal cortex and concomitantly exaggerated amygdala activity in the context of attenuated functional interplay between these regions [17-19]. The therapeutic relevance of these pathways is further emphasized by studies reporting that anxiety reduction following behavioral and pharmacological interventions is accompanied by normalization of deficient amygdala-prefrontal coupling [20-22]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%