Publication | Closed Access
Stress-Induced Enhancement of Auditory Startle: An Animal Model of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
61
Citations
32
References
2001
Year
PsychopathologyAffective NeuroscienceAuditory StartleClinical PtsdSocial SciencesPsychologyStressPosttraumatic Stress DisorderPersistent NonhabituationHealth SciencesPsychoneuroimmunologyStress HormonePsychiatryRehabilitationHuman HearingStress-induced EnhancementAuditory PhysiologyNeuroscienceSpeech PerceptionDeveloped NonhabituationPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
An innovative animal model of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is proposed in which nonhabituation of the acoustic startle response is developed in rats subsequent to tailshock exposure. Subjects (n = 31) received 30 minutes of intermittent tail shock on 2 days followed by exposure to the tailshock apparatus on the third day. Compared to baseline startle reactions, 9 of 31 tailshock-exposed rats developed nonhabituation of startle response reactions during the subsequent 3 weeks of testing. No control rats developed nonhabituation of startle reactions over a similar time period. These data suggest that this system models useful aspects of clinical PTSD emphasizing nonhabituation of startle reactions as a dependent variable. The method consistently identifies a subgroup of rats that develop persistent nonhabituation of startle in response to a tailshock-stress paradigm.
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