For those suffering from PTSD and other related anxiety disorders, there exists a connecting theme in its therapy for those seeking treatments. A core idea in treatment of anxiety is the act of purposefully re-living/recalling the trauma that might serve as a trigger for anxiety response. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) makes use of this exposure-based treatment by helping individuals process and reframe their traumatic memories in a controlled environment. But what of its efficacy?
Hardy et al.’s 2022 study
focuses on the mechanisms of cognitive behavioral therapy, and whether this
exposure-based treatment truly has far-reaching benefits for those who undergo it.
The researchers intended to evaluate the efficacy of CBT, investigating whether
the therapy is both safe and acceptable for individuals suffering from psychosis
and PTSD. They also recognized the worry of potential harm being caused to
those afflicted due to the nature of this exposure-based therapy, giving the
opposite-intended effect. It was found that 68.8% of participants showed
clinically meaningful improvements after therapy. In analyzing patients’ overall
psychological, social, and occupational functioning, researchers were able to
conclude that trauma-focused cognitive-behavior therapy for psychosis can be
safe, acceptable, and effective when smartly integrated in routine care.
Interesting and notable
connections can be made between these findings and Dr. Grella’s published
article on memory modulation in the dorsal and ventral regions of the hippocampus.
To summarize, Chen et al. explores the manner in which reward and fear memories
in the dorsal and ventral hippocampus are able to be either enhanced or
suppressed via chemogenetic and optogenetic manipulation. It is understood that
dorsal and ventral regions of the hippocampus encode different information. The
former is primarily responsible for encoding contextual information and
cognitive aspects of an experience, and the latter for stress-related
behaviors/emotional components of memory. The investigators intended to
reactivate the distinct hippocampal memories along the longitudinal
dorsoventral axis and observe whether context-specific behaviors can be
promoted chronically, differentially, and acutely. With chronic stimulation of
these fear engrams, they found a bi-directional and
context-specific reduction (dorsal) or enhancement (ventral) of animal fear
responses respectively. Repeated stimulation of fear memories in the dorsal
hippocampus led to a long-term reduction in fear responses. This finding can add
meaningful commentary to the aforementioned discussion on cognitive behavioral
therapy.
The fact that chronic
artificial stimulation of fear memories in the dorsal hippocampus to extinction-like
effects suggests that a similar mechanism could be at play in exposure-based
therapies such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Both studies suggest that
through repeated/intentional exposure, whether in therapy or via neural
manipulation, the emotional impact of traumatic memories can be reduced,
highlighting the potential role of the dorsal hippocampus in memory modulation
and CBT in therapeutic outcomes.
References:
Chen, B. K., Murawski, N. J., Cincotta, C.,
McKissick, O., Finkelstein, A., Hamidi, A. B., Merfeld, E., Doucette, E.,
Grella, S. L., Shpokayte, M., Zaki, Y., Fortin, A., & Ramirez, S. (2019).
Artificially Enhancing and Suppressing Hippocampus-Mediated Memories. Current
Biology, 29(11), 1885-1894.e4.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2019.04.065
Hardy, A., Good, S., Dix,
J., & Longden, E. (2022). “It hurt but it helped”: A mixed methods audit of
the implementation of trauma- focused cognitive-behavioral therapy for
psychosis. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 13.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.946615
Chen,
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