Oxytocin reportedly decreases anxious feelings in humans and may therefore have therapeutic value for anxiety disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). As PTSD patients have exaggerated startle responses, a fear-potentiated startle paradigm in rats may have face validity as an animal model to examine the efficacy of oxytocin in treating these symptoms. Oxytocin (0, 0.01, 0.1, or 1.0 mg, subcutaneously) was given either 30 min before fear conditioning, immediately after fear conditioning, or 30 min before fear-potentiated startle testing to assess its effects on acquisition, consolidation, and expression of conditioned fear, respectively. Startle both in the presence and absence of the fear-conditioned light was significantly diminished by oxytocin when administered at acquisition, consolidation, or expression. There was no specific effect of oxytocin on light fear-potentiated startle. In an additional experiment, oxytocin had no effects on acoustic startle without previous fear conditioning. Further, in a context-conditioned test, previous light-shock fear conditioning did not increase acoustic startle during testing when the fear-conditioned light was not presented. The data suggest that oxytocin did not diminish cue-specific conditioned nor contextually conditioned fear, but reduced background anxiety. This suggests that oxytocin has unique effects of decreasing background anxiety without affecting learning and memory of a specific traumatic event. Oxytocin may have antianxiety properties that are particularly germane to the hypervigilance and exaggerated startle typically seen in PTSD patients.
Oxytocin is known to have anti-anxiety and anti-stress effects. Using a fear-potentiated startle paradigm in rats, we previously demonstrated that subcutaneously administered oxytocin suppressed acoustic startle following fear conditioning compared with startle before fear conditioning (termed background anxiety), but did not have an effect on cue-specific fear-potentiated startle. The findings suggest oxytocin reduces background anxiety, an anxious state not directly related to cue-specific fear, but sustained beyond the immediate threat. The goal of the present study was to compare the effects of centrally and peripherally administered oxytocin on background anxiety and cue-specific fear. Male rats were given oxytocin either subcutaneously (SC) or intracerebroventricularly (ICV) into the lateral ventricles before fear-potentiated startle testing. Oxytocin doses of 0.01 and 0.1 mg/kg SC reduced background anxiety. ICV administration of oxytocin at doses from 0.002 to 20 mg oxytocin had no effect on background anxiety or cue-specific fearpotentiated startle. The 20 mg ICV dose of oxytocin did reduce acoustic startle in non-fear conditioned rats. These studies indicate that oxytocin is potent and effective in reducing background anxiety when delivered peripherally, but not when delivered into the cerebroventricular system. Oxytocin given systemically may have anti-anxiety properties that are particularly germane to the hypervigilance and exaggerated startle typically seen in many anxiety and mental health disorder patients.
Rationale
Oxytocin has antianxiety properties in humans and rodents. However,
the antianxiety effects have been variable.
Objectives
To reduce variability and strengthen to the antianxiety effect of
oxytocin in fear-potentiated startle, two experiments were performed. First,
different amounts of light-shock pairings were given to determine the
optimal levels of cue-specific fear conditioning and non-predictable startle
(background anxiety). Second, the antianxiety effects of oxytocin were
examined in rats with high and low pre-fear conditioning baseline startle to
determine if oxytocin differentially affects high and low trait anxiety
rats.
Methods
Baseline pre-fear conditioning startle responses were first measured.
Rats then received 1, 5 or 10 light-shock pairings. Fear-potentiated startle
was then tested with two trial types: light-cued startle and non-cued
startle trials. In the second experiment, rats fear conditioned with 10
light-shock pairings were administered either saline or oxytocin before a
fear-potentiated startle test. Rats were categorized as low or high
startlers by their pre-fear conditioning startle amplitude.
Results
Ten shock-pairings produced the largest non-cued startle responses
(background anxiety), without increasing cue-specific fear-potentiated
startle compared to 1 and 5 light-shock pairings. Cue-specific
fear-potentiated startle was unaffected by oxytocin. Oxytocin reduced
background anxiety only in rats with low pre-fear startle responses.
Conclusions
Oxytocin has population selective antianxiety effects on non-cued
unpredictable threat, but only in rats with low pre-fear baseline startle
responses. The low startle responses are reminiscent of humans with low
startle responses and high trait anxiety.
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