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© 2005. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://www.psicothema.com/PublicationNorms2022.pdf

Abstract

Pavlovian fear conditioning (PFC) is one of the most used behavioural paradigms for studying the neurobiology of learning and memory. In this study, rats were trained in a conditioned suppression task receiving either three (limited training) or eight conditioning sessions (extended training). Rats in both training conditions came to suppress lever press behaviour as conditioning proceeded. After training, the neuronal metabolism of brain limbic regions was analysed using cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. A significant decrease in the metabolism of particular brain regions including the medial septum, anteroventral thalamus and medial mammillary nucleus, was observed only after extended training. However, no significant differences were detected after extended training in the basolateral amygdala, brain region traditionally involved in the formation and consolidation of aversive memories formed during PFC. Our results provide support for a differential involvement of the studied limbic regions on fear conditioning and anxiety.

Metabolismo cerebral tras el entrenamiento prolongado en una tarea de condicionamiento del miedo. El condicionamiento Pavloviano del miedo (CPM) es uno de los paradigmas conductuales más usados para estudiar la neurobiología del aprendizaje y la memoria. Se entrenaron ratas en una tarea de supresión condicionada, que recibieron tres (entrenamiento limitado) u ocho sesiones de condicionamiento (entrenamiento prolongado). Ambos grupos llegaron a suprimir la conducta de presión de una palanca cuando se estableció el condicionamiento. Posteriormente, se analizó el metabolismo neuronal de regiones límbicas empleando la histoquímica de la citocromo oxidasa. Se observó una disminución significativa del metabolismo cerebral en septum medial, tálamo anteroventral y núcleo mamilar medial tras un entrenamiento prolongado. Sin embargo, no se detectaron diferencias significativas con el entrenamiento prologando en la amígdala basolateral, región cerebral implicada tradicionalmente en la formación y consolidación de recuerdos aversivos establecidos durante el CPM. Nuestros resultados apoyan la implicación diferencial de las regiones límbicas seleccionadas en el condicionamiento del miedo y la ansiedad.

Details

Title
BRAIN METABOLISM AFTER EXTENDED TRAINING IN A FEAR CONDITIONING TASK
Author
Conejo, Nélida M; López, Matías; González-Pardo, Héctor; Cantora, Raúl; Begega, Azucena; López, Laudino
Pages
563-568
Publication year
2005
Publication date
2005
Publisher
Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos (PSICODOC)
ISSN
02149915
e-ISSN
1886144X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English; Spanish
ProQuest document ID
2778394595
Copyright
© 2005. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://www.psicothema.com/PublicationNorms2022.pdf