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Publication : Rhythmic brain stimulation reduces anxiety-related behavior in a mouse model based on meditation training.

First Author  Weible AP Year  2017
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  114
Issue  10 Pages  2532-2537
PubMed ID  28223484 Mgi Jnum  J:241651
Mgi Id  MGI:5903336 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1700756114
Citation  Weible AP, et al. (2017) Rhythmic brain stimulation reduces anxiety-related behavior in a mouse model based on meditation training. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114(10):2532-2537
abstractText  Meditation training induces changes at both the behavioral and neural levels. A month of meditation training can reduce self-reported anxiety and other dimensions of negative affect. It also can change white matter as measured by diffusion tensor imaging and increase resting-state midline frontal theta activity. The current study tests the hypothesis that imposing rhythms in the mouse anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), by using optogenetics to induce oscillations in activity, can produce behavioral changes. Mice were randomly assigned to groups and were given twenty 30-min sessions of light pulses delivered at 1, 8, or 40 Hz over 4 wk or were assigned to a no-laser control condition. Before and after the month all mice were administered a battery of behavioral tests. In the light/dark box, mice receiving cortical stimulation had more light-side entries, spent more time in the light, and made more vertical rears than mice receiving rhythmic cortical suppression or no manipulation. These effects on light/dark box exploratory behaviors are associated with reduced anxiety and were most pronounced following stimulation at 1 and 8 Hz. No effects were seen related to basic motor behavior or exploration during tests of novel object and location recognition. These data support a relationship between lower-frequency oscillations in the mouse ACC and the expression of anxiety-related behaviors, potentially analogous to effects seen with human practitioners of some forms of meditation.
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