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{NEWS} Fear Stops Here... /more/...


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Posted by 2nd Lt Aimee On 2002-11-10 14:18:15

2nd Lt
2nd Lt Aimee

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Source:

ABCNEWS.com

October 23, 2002

Nov. 7 — In a time when the national terror alert rating lingers at yellow

and communities around Washington, D.C., are recovering from a series of sniper

shootings, fear has become a prominent part of Americans' lives.
as an

append I'd have to say the worlds lives, aswell

But what, exactly, is fear, and how can people shrug off its often paralyzing

effects?
A study on rats is shedding light on the sensation that isn't just an emotion,

but a biological instinct designed to help us survive. By zeroing in on how the

brain processes fear — and quells it — scientists hope to develop treatments for

people with runaway fear responses.

"What was clinically interesting was we could reduce fear in rats by stimulating

a particular area of the brain," says Gregory Quirk, a physiologist at the Ponce

School of Medicine in Puerto Rico who authored the study in this week's issue of

Nature. "Someday we hope to use what we learn to help people with anxiety

disorders."


The Fear Center
For years scientists have believed that the so-called "hub" of fear lies in a

peanut-sized part of the brain called the amygdala. The amygdala assesses whether

a situation is dangerous, then fires signals to other parts of the brain. This

triggers the release of hormones, including cortisol, which causes reactions like

sweating and a tensing of the muscles.

Now Quirk and others have taken a closer look at another region of the brain —

the prefrontal cortex — where they believe one's sense of safety is generated.

To analyze this region, Quirk and his student Mohammed Milad trained rats to fear

a tone by following the sound with an electric shock to their feet. Rats

conditioned to fear the tone froze at the sound in anticipation of pain.

Next the team reconditioned some of the rats using the same tone followed by no

electric shocks. Over time most of these rats no longer froze when they heard the

tone. In another set of rats, Quirk and Milad did not retrain the animals so they

would no longer fear the tone, but instead electrically stimulated neurons in the

prefrontal cortex of the rats' brains.

Quirk says the rats whose brains had been stimulated "acted like they had never

been conditioned to fear the tone at all," — even when the tone was repeatedly

followed by shocks.

"We know that fear is not erased — it's always there," says Quirk. "Instead there

seems to be a system that actively inhibits the response. That's what we've

discovered."


Sending the 'All Clear'
What happens, Quirk believes, is when the brain senses conditions similar to ones

that previously produced fear, the prefrontal cortex assesses the situation and

if all seems OK, sends what he calls an "all clear" signal to the brain's fear

center. This signal reins in the fear response that would otherwise emanate from

the amygdala. The 'all clear' signal is likely based on the context of the

situation.

"If I yell 'Fire!' in a movie theater, people may run, but if I yell 'Fire!' in

an outside county fair, people are a lot less likely to feel afraid and react,"

explains Michael Bouton, a psychologist at the University of Vermont.

It's this soothing signal that people with anxiety disorders may have trouble

accessing. And just as Quirk was able to electrically stimulate the "all clear"

signal in rats, he hopes the same can be done in people using magnetic pulses.

Rats and people are a big leap apart, he admits, but those working with human

anxiety disorders say the research is promising.

"We're very interested in animal studies," says Thomas Neylan, medical director

of the Post Traumatic Stress Program at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs

Medical Center in California.

Neylan adds that current research is revealing that neurons in the prefrontal

cortexes of people with post-traumatic stress disorder are not as active as in

normal patients.

"If you can enhance frontal lobe function, it may have therapeutic effects,"

Neylan says. "But it is all speculative at this point."

Traumatic Times

Today about 5.2 million Americans suffer from PTSD and recent traumatic events

may well have caused that number to spike.

A post-Sept. 11 study done for the New York City Board of Education found that

10.5 percent of schoolchildren in the city show multiple symptoms consistent with

post-traumatic stress disorder. Among adults, a New York Academy of Medicine

survey in January found that 40 percent to 45 percent of New Yorkers have at

least one symptom of post-traumatic stress. Nearly 6 percent of Americans outside

of New York City reported post-traumatic stress symptoms six months after the

attacks according to a University of California at Irvine study.

A common method of treatment for post-traumatic stress is to have patients

repeatedly experience the conditions of a traumatic event through psychotherapy

in an effort to reprogram their associations. Neylan says that while the

treatment is often effective, it's usually not long lasting.

A treatment using magnetic stimulation of the brain might offer more long-term

cures, says Quirk. Still, he adds, nothing can completely erase the memory of

fear.

"It's not about erasing fear from memory, but replacing it with a memory of

safety," he says, adding, "It's good we can't erase fear, we need it. Fear keeps

you alive."


2nd.Lt.

Aimee


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