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      Targeting abnormal neural circuits in mood and anxiety disorders: from the laboratory to the clinic.

        1 ,
      Nature neuroscience
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Recent decades have witnessed tremendous advances in the neuroscience of emotion, learning and memory, and in animal models for understanding depression and anxiety. This review focuses on new rationally designed psychiatric treatments derived from preclinical human and animal studies. Nonpharmacological treatments that affect disrupted emotion circuits include vagal nerve stimulation, rapid transcranial magnetic stimulation and deep brain stimulation, all borrowed from neurological interventions that attempt to target known pathological foci. Other approaches include drugs that are given in relation to specific learning events to enhance or disrupt endogenous emotional learning processes. Imaging data suggest that common regions of brain activation are targeted with pharmacological and somatic treatments as well as with the emotional learning in psychotherapy. Although many of these approaches are experimental, the rapidly developing understanding of emotional circuit regulation is likely to provide exciting and powerful future treatments for debilitating mood and anxiety disorders.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Neurosci
          Nature neuroscience
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1097-6256
          1097-6256
          Sep 2007
          : 10
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, 954 Gatewood Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30329, USA. kressle@emory.edu
          Article
          nn1944 NIHMS55932
          10.1038/nn1944
          2444035
          17726478
          e67057b1-45b7-43ff-b911-91eeafef7b22
          History

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