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Extinction of a conditioned fear response during anesthesia

Extinction of a conditioned fear response during anesthesia. Sarah E. Reichert Baldwin-Wallace College. Introduction. Pearson (1961) therapeutic suggestions decrease post-surgical recovery time. Follow-up experiments have yielded mixed results. -limited to older adults

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Extinction of a conditioned fear response during anesthesia

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  1. Extinction of a conditioned fear response during anesthesia Sarah E. Reichert Baldwin-Wallace College

  2. Introduction • Pearson (1961) therapeutic suggestions decrease post-surgical recovery time. • Follow-up experiments have yielded mixed results. -limited to older adults -small sample size -few studies done

  3. Animal analogues • Few controlled studies with animals have also yielded mixed results. • Fear acquisition in mice (Pang et al, 1996) • Fear acquisition in rats required epinephrine (Gold et al, 1985) • Taste aversion in rats (Bermudez-Rattoni et al, 1988)

  4. Purpose • To investigate whether extinction of a fear can take place under general anesthesia. • To investigate whether a taste aversion can develop when the sickness occurs under anesthesia.

  5. Experiment 1 • Tone  Shock (12 pairings over 6 days) • Tone elicits freezing response • Pentobarbitol  reflex tests  extinction • Extinction involved either tone and shocks (EU), tones only (E), shocks only (U) or no stimuli (FC) • Tone only to see if extinction under anesthesia had any effect on freezing.

  6. Results • Acquisition rate did not differ among the groups. • No group differences were found in the test session.

  7. Experiment 2 • Baseline for consumption (2 days) • Rats matched on baseline consumption • 5 minutes access  Pentobarbitol  reflex tests • Half of rats get LiCl, others do not • 5 minutes access to test for aversion to flavor

  8. Results • Consumption during conditioning was similar in the two groups, but differed significantly in the test • Group X Trial, F(1,11 = 6.18, p< .03)

  9. Conclusions • No evidence for extinction of fear under anesthesia. In a subsequent study, evidence for acquisition of fear under anesthesia was also lacking. • Evidence for the development of a taste aversion forming during anesthesia. • Future research will investigate extinction of a taste aversion under anesthesia.

  10. Implications • The findings of this study have expanded our understanding of information processing under anesthesia. • Help refine behavioral therapy to more successfully treat phobias and taste aversions.

  11. References • Bermudez-Rattoni, F., Forthman, D., Sanchez, M., Perez, J., Garcia, J. (1988). Odor and taste aversions conditioned in anesthetized rats. Behavioral Neuroscience, 102(5),726-732. • Gold, P., Weinberger, N., Sternberg, D. (1985). Epinephrine-induced learning under anesthesia: retention performance at several training- testing intervals. Behavioral Neuroscience, 99(5), 1019-1022. • Pang, R., Turndorf, H., Quartermain, D. (1996). Pavlovian fear conditioning in mice anesthetized with halothane. Physiology & Behavior, 59(4/5), 873-875. • Pearson, R.E. (1961). Response to suggestions given under general anesthesia. In Memory and Awareness in Anaesthesia III: Proceedings of Third International Symposium. Anaesthesia, amnesia, and the cognitive unconscious (pp. 21-45). Rockland: Swets & Zeitlinger.

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