L-DOPA improves extinction memory retrieval after successful fear extinction (Exp. 1)

Access Data

Abstract

Rationale A promising strategy to prevent a return of fear after exposure-based therapy in anxiety disorders is to pharmacologically enhance the extinction memory consolidation presumed to occur after exposure. Accumulating evidence suggests that the effect of a number of pharmacological consolidation enhancers depends on a successful fear reduction during exposure. Here, we employed the dopamine precursor L-DOPA to clarify whether its documented potential to enhance extinction memory consolidation is dependent on successful fear extinction. Methods In two double-blind, randomized and placebo-controlled experiments (experiment 1: N = 79, experiment 2: N = 32) comprising fear conditioning (day 1), extinction followed by administration of 150 mg L-DOPA or placebo (day 2) and a memory test (day 3) in healthy male adults, conditioned responses were assessed as differential skin conductance responses. We tested whether the effect of L-DOPA on conditioned responses at test depended on conditioned responses at the end of extinction in an experiment with a short (10 trials, experiment 1) and long (25 trials, experiment 2) extinction session. Results In both experiments, the effect of L-DOPA was dependent on conditioned responses at the end of extinction. That is, post-extinction L-DOPA compared to placebo administration reduced conditioned responses at test only in participants showing a complete reduction of conditioned fear at the end of extinction. Conclusion The results support the potential use of L-DOPA as a pharmacological adjunct to exposure treatment, but point towards a common boundary condition for pharmacological consolidation enhancers: a successful reduction of fear in the exposure session.

ID 226

Authors

Anna M. V. Gerlicher, Johannes Gutenberg University Medical Center, Mainz, Germany; University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Oliver Tüscher, Johannes Gutenberg University Medical Center, Mainz, Germany Raffael Kalisch, Johannes Gutenberg University Medical Center, Mainz, Germany

Year

2019

DOI of Publication

10.1007/s00213-019-05301-4

Persistent Identifier to Dataset

10.17605/OSF.IO/KEQRN

Where was the data collected?

Johannes Gutenberg University Medical Center, Germany

How to Cite

Gerlicher, A., Tüscher, O., & Kalisch, R. (2025, December 12). L-DOPA improves extinction memory retrieval after successful fear extinction. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/KEQRN

Participant Information

Participant Sex

Experimental Group

Administration of L-DOPA (150/37.5 mg levodopa-benserazide; L-DOPA group) or placebo (placebo group) on day 2 after extinction.

Stimuli

Drug Administration

Yes

Conditioning Protocol

Differential

Instructions CS-US Contingencies

Partially instructed (whole exp)

Number of Different US

1

US Modality

electrotactile

Number of Different CS+

1

CS+ 1: Reinforcement Rate (%)

80

CS+ 2: Reinforcement Rate (%)

CS+ 3: Reinforcement Rate (%)

Number of Different CS-

1

CS Modality

visual

Data Collected During MRI

No

Physiological Measures

measured trialwise & untransformed

Skin Conductance Response

Yes Yes

Skin Conductance Level

No No

Pupil Size

No No

Fear Potentiated Startle/Startle EMG

No No

Heart Rate

No No

Ratings

US Expectancy

No

US Intensity Rating

Yes

CS Valence

No

CS Arousal

No

CS Fear

No

CS Stress

No

CS Anxiety

No

Contingency Awareness

No

Questionnaires

State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-T)

State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-S)

Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI)