Acute hydrocortisone treatment increases anxiety but not fear in healthy volunteers: A fear-potentiated startle study

Christian Grillon, Randi Heller, Elizabeth Hirschhorn, Mitchel A. Kling, Daniel S. Pine, Jay Schulkin, Meena Vythilingam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The debilitating effects of chronic glucocorticoids excess are well-known, but comparatively little is understood about the role of acute cortisol. Indirect evidence in rodents suggests that acute cortisone could selectively increase some forms of long-duration aversive states, such as "anxiety," but not relatively similar, briefer aversive states, such as "fear." However, no prior experimental studies in humans consider the unique effects of cortisol on anxiety and fear, using well-validated methods for eliciting these two similar but dissociable aversive states. The current study examines these effects, as instantiated with short- and long-duration threats. Methods: Healthy volunteers (n = 18) received placebo or a low (20 mg) or a high (60 mg) dose of hydrocortisone in a double-blind crossover design. Subjects were exposed repeatedly to three 150-sec duration conditions: no shock; predictable shocks, in which shocks were signaled by a short-duration threat cue; and unpredictable shocks. Aversive states were indexed by acoustic startle. Fear was operationally defined as the increase in startle reactivity during the threat cue in the predictable condition (fear-potentiated startle). Anxiety was operationally defined as the increase in baseline startle from the no shock to the two threat conditions (anxiety-potentiated startle). Results: Hydrocortisone affected neither baseline nor short-duration, fear-potentiated startle but increased long-duration anxiety-potentiated startle. Conclusions: These results suggest that hydrocortisone administration in humans selectively increases anxiety but not fear. Possible mechanisms implicated are discussed in light of prior data in rodents. Specifically, hydrocortisone might increase anxiety via sensitization of corticotrophin-releasing hormones in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)549-555
Number of pages7
JournalBiological Psychiatry
Volume69
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 15 2011
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Biological Psychiatry

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