Not logged in.

Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Inhibiting human aversive memory by transcranial theta-burst stimulation to the primary sensory cortex
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Karita E Ojala
  • Matthias Staib
  • Samuel Gerster
  • Christian Ruff
  • Dominik R Bach
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title Biological Psychiatry
Publisher Elsevier
Geographical Reach international
ISSN 0006-3223
Volume 92
Number 2
Page Range 149 - 157
Date 2022
Abstract Text BACKGROUND: Predicting adverse events from past experience is fundamental for many biological organisms. However, some individuals suffer from maladaptive memories that impair behavioral control and well-being, e.g., after psychological trauma. Inhibiting the formation and maintenance of such memories would have high clinical relevance. Previous preclinical research has focused on systemically administered pharmacological interventions, which cannot be targeted to specific neural circuits in humans. Here, we investigated the potential of noninvasive neural stimulation on the human sensory cortex in inhibiting aversive memory in a laboratory threat conditioning model. METHODS: We build on an emerging nonhuman literature suggesting that primary sensory cortices may be crucially required for threat memory formation and consolidation. Immediately before conditioning innocuous somatosensory stimuli (conditioned stimuli [CS]) to aversive electric stimulation, healthy human participants received continuous theta-burst transcranial magnetic stimulation (cTBS) to individually localized primary somatosensory cortex in either the CS-contralateral (experimental) or CS-ipsilateral (control) hemisphere. We measured fear-potentiated startle to infer threat memory retention on the next day, as well as skin conductance and pupil size during learning. RESULTS: After overnight consolidation, threat memory was attenuated in the experimental group compared with the control cTBS group. There was no evidence that this differed between simple and complex CS or that CS identifi- cation or initial learning were affected by cTBS. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that cTBS to the primary sensory cortex inhibits threat memory, likely by an impact on postlearning consolidation. We propose that noninvasive targeted stimulation of the sensory cortex may provide a new avenue for interfering with aversive memories in humans.
Digital Object Identifier 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.01.021
Other Identification Number merlin-id:22405
PDF File Download from ZORA
Export BibTeX
EP3 XML (ZORA)
Keywords Biological psychiatry, aversive memory, consolidation, continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS), fear conditioning, somatosensory cortex, transcranial magnetic stimulation