2009
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2009.83
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The Neurocircuitry of Fear, Stress, and Anxiety Disorders

Abstract: Anxiety disorders are a significant problem in the community, and recent neuroimaging research has focused on determining the brain circuits that underlie them. Research on the neurocircuitry of anxiety disorders has its roots in the study of fear circuits in animal models and the study of brain responses to emotional stimuli in healthy humans. We review this research, as well as neuroimaging studies of anxiety disorders. In general, these studies have reported relatively heightened amygdala activation in resp… Show more

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Cited by 1,663 publications
(1,008 citation statements)
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References 384 publications
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“…In short, emotional stimuli provoke an increase in the amygdala's reactivity, which overwhelms the inhibitory activity in prefrontal top‐down control regions, resulting in an impaired capacity of individuals to self‐regulate. This mechanism, which echoes the basic neuroanatomy of fear‐conditioning (LeDoux, 2000; Phelps, Delgado, Nearing, & LeDoux, 2004), likely contributes to increased risk for later psychological disorders like PTSD and major depression (Shin & Liberzon, 2010). However, this mechanism of dysregulated amygdala activity has previously been studied without taking into account the often‐reported broader cognitive deficits in executive functions that are seen in many individuals exposed to I‐ELT (van der Kolk, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…In short, emotional stimuli provoke an increase in the amygdala's reactivity, which overwhelms the inhibitory activity in prefrontal top‐down control regions, resulting in an impaired capacity of individuals to self‐regulate. This mechanism, which echoes the basic neuroanatomy of fear‐conditioning (LeDoux, 2000; Phelps, Delgado, Nearing, & LeDoux, 2004), likely contributes to increased risk for later psychological disorders like PTSD and major depression (Shin & Liberzon, 2010). However, this mechanism of dysregulated amygdala activity has previously been studied without taking into account the often‐reported broader cognitive deficits in executive functions that are seen in many individuals exposed to I‐ELT (van der Kolk, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Connectivity between the PAG and the hypothalamus, amygdala, and PFC are derived predominantly from the vlPAG rather than the dlPAG. These structures are key to processing fear, stress and anxiety [Shin and Liberzon, 2010], which influence the homeostatic neurobiological roles of the PAG. This suggests that the vlPAG maybe involved in these processes and would certainly tie in with the hindbrain connectivity seen, relating to anxiety and aversion processing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Functional neuroimaging findings using positron emission topography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) suggest that individuals with PTSD exhibit hyperresponsive amygdala activity to trauma or fear-related stimuli (for review, see Shin and Liberzon, 2010), during emotionally neutral tasks (Bryant et al, 2005;Shin et al, 2004b), and even at rest (Chung et al, 2006;Semple et al, 2000). A hyperresponsive amygdala contributes to the exaggerated fear response characteristic of PTSD (Anderson et al, 2003).…”
Section: Clinicalmentioning
confidence: 99%