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Journal Article

Citation

Hoge E, Bui E, Rosencrans P, Orr S, Ross R, Ojserkis R, Simon N. Gen. Psychiatr. 2019; 32(6): e100131.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, New York University Medical Center, New York City, New York, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/gpsych-2019-100131

PMID

31922086

PMCID

PMC6936973

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although recent data in healthy humans suggestthat treatment with intranasal oxytocin (OT) may facilitate extinction recall,to date, little is known about the effects of OT on memory consolidationprocesses.

AIM: To examine the effect of intranasal administration of OT compared with placebo on memory consolidation blockade of a de novo fear memory in a classical 2-day fear conditioning procedure.

RESULTS: There were no significant differences between the OT and the placebo groups on the first two extinction trials (mean (SD)=0.01 (0.39) vs 0.15 (0.31), t=-1.092, p=0.28). Similarly, during early extinction, analysis of variance for repeated measures failed to show significant main effects of extinction trials: trials (F(4, 112)=1.58, p=0.18), drug (F(1, 112)=0.13, p=0.72) or drug × trials interaction (F(4, 112)=0.76, p=0.56).

CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that OT administered in a double-blind fashion immediately after fear conditioning does not significantly reduce consolidation of fear learning as measured by a differential skin conductance response tested at the beginning of extinction.

© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.


Language: en

Keywords

extinction learning; fear conditioning; oxytocin

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