General and anxiety-linked influences of acute serotonin reuptake inhibition on neural responses associated with attended visceral sensation

Author:

Livermore James J. A.,Skora Lina I.,Adamatzky Kristian,Garfinkel Sarah N.,Critchley Hugo D.ORCID,Campbell-Meiklejohn DanielORCID

Abstract

AbstractOrdinary sensations from inside the body are important causes and consequences of our affective states and behaviour, yet the roles of neurotransmitters in interoceptive processing have been unclear. With a within-subjects design, this experiment tested the impacts of acute increases of endogenous extracellular serotonin on the neural processing of attended internal sensations and the links of these effects to anxiety using a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) (20 mg citalopram) and a placebo. Twenty-one healthy volunteers (fourteen female, mean age 23.9) completed the Visceral Interoceptive Attention (VIA) task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with each treatment. The VIA task required focused attention on the heart, stomach, or visual sensation. The relative neural interoceptive responses to heart sensation [heart minus visual attention] (heart-IR) and stomach sensation [stomach minus visual attention] (stomach-IR) were compared between treatments. Visual attention subtraction controlled for the general effects of citalopram on sensory processing. Citalopram was associated with lower interoceptive processing in viscerosensory (the stomach-IR of bilateral posterior insular cortex) and integrative/affective (the stomach-IR and heart-IR of bilateral amygdala) components of interoceptive neural pathways. In anterior insular cortex, citalopram reductions of heart-IR depended on anxiety levels, removing a previously known association between anxiety and the region’s response to attended heart sensation observed with placebo. Preliminary post hoc analysis indicated that citalopram effects on the stomach-IR of the amygdalae corresponded to acute anxiety changes. This direct evidence of general and anxiety-linked serotonergic influence on neural interoceptive processes advances our understanding of interoception, its regulation, and anxiety.

Funder

The University of Sussex, School of Psychology

The University of Sussex Psychology PhD Studentship

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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