AI Article Synopsis

  • High salt intake is linked to anxiety disorders, but its effects on fear responses, particularly fear generalization, are under-researched.
  • In a study using adult mice, it was found that high salt consumption did not affect immediate fear responses but led to increased fear generalization in female mice after a delay, while it decreased fear generalization in male mice.
  • These findings suggest that the impact of salt on fear responses is sex-specific and occurs independently of changes in osmotic stress or hormone levels, indicating deeper neurophysiological changes.

Article Abstract

A hallmark symptom of many anxiety disorders, and multiple neuropsychiatric disorders more broadly, is generalization of fearful responses to non-fearful stimuli. Anxiety disorders are often comorbid with cardiovascular diseases. One established, and modifiable, risk factor for cardiovascular diseases is salt intake. Yet, investigations into how excess salt consumption affects anxiety-relevant behaviors remains little explored. Moreover, no studies have yet assessed how high salt intake influences generalization of fear. Here, we used adult C57BL/6J mice of both sexes to evaluate the influence of two or six weeks of high salt consumption (4.0% NaCl), compared to controls (0.4% NaCl), on contextual fear acquisition, expression, and generalization. Further, we measured osmotic and physiological stress by quantifying serum osmolality and corticosterone levels, respectively. Consuming excess salt did not influence contextual fear acquisition nor discrimination between the context used for training and a novel, neutral context when training occurred 48 prior to testing. However, when a four week delay between training and testing was employed to induce natural fear generalization processes, we found that high salt intake selectively increases contextual fear generalization in females, but the same diet reduces contextual fear generalization in males. These sex-specific effects were independent of any changes in serum osmolality nor corticosterone levels, suggesting the behavioral shifts are a consequence of more subtle, neurophysiologic changes. This is the first evidence of salt consumption influencing contextual fear generalization, and adds information about sex-specific effects of salt that are largely missing from current literature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10343085PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0286221PLOS

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