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Modulation of Different States of Anxiety-Like Behavior by Chronic Stress.
Authors:Vyas, Ajai   Chattarji, Sumantra
Abstract:Recent studies have identified putative cellular correlates of stress-induced amygdalar plasticity underlying anxiety-like behavior. Chronic immobilization stress (CIS), but not chronic unpredictable stress (CUS), has been reported to induce dendritic remodeling in the basolateral amygdala (BLA). The BLA is also important for consolidation of anxiety in the elevated plus-maze, which is manifested as increased open-arm avoidance on reexposure to the maze. The authors found that CIS, unlike CUS, facilitated anxiety-like behavior in the plus-maze, and this occluded further increase in anxiety when CIS rats were reexposed to the maze 72 hr after the first trial. However, both CUS and control rats exhibited consolidation between trials. Thus, consolidation of anxiety may share common cellular mechanisms that also underlie chronic stress-induced structural plasticity in the amygdala. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:chronic unpredictable stress   chronic immobilization stress   basolateral amygdala   anxiety like behavior   elevated plus maze   neural plasticity   rats
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