It has been experimentally tested that particular areas of the brain are involved with freezing behavior. As mentioned before, Ann E. Power investigated the effect of
basolateral amygdala on freezing behavior. It was also found that
muscarinic cholinergic activation plays a role in the behavior. • GABA • Oxytocin • Dopamine • Epinephrine • Cortisol • Antipsychotic drugs • Methamphetamine • Monoamine oxidase inhibitors Hashimoto et al. investigated the effects of conditioned fear on
serotonin and freezing behavior in rats. Through
in vivo microdialysis, certain concentrations of extracellular serotonin in the rat brain were able to be measured. It was found that conditioned fear stress increased the levels of the serotonin in the medial
prefrontal cortex. This increase was correlated with an increased freezing behavior that was observed. The rats were then given an inhibitor for the extracellular serotonin, which resulted in a reduced freezing behavior. It can be suggested from these results that inhibition of serotonin can decrease freezing behavior and, also, anxiety. Not only does serotonin influence freezing behavior, but it has been shown that
antipsychotic drugs (APDs), such as
clozapine, ORG5222, and olanzapine, affect freezing behavior as well. Drugs were administered
subcutaneously to rats 30 minutes before footshock stress. It was observed that, 24 hours following the footshock, freezing behavior was present without shocks. This is interesting to note, since there was a sympathetic response to no stimuli at all. This suggests that antipsychotic drugs alter freezing behavior, making the rats more sensitive to fear stimulus, for example.
Methamphetamine has also been shown to potentially affect freezing behavior. Tsuchiya et al. conducted a study investigating the effect of methamphetamine pretreatment on freezing behavior. Rats were given the drug over a week, ramping up the doses. After that, there was a five-day period without any drugs administered. The rats were then subjected to conditioned fear stress. Repeated but not single methamphetamine pretreatment resulted in a significantly increased freezing behavior. This evidence suggests that previous exposure to chronic methamphetamine results in an increased sensitivity to subsequent stress than a control group. Just as neurotransmitters influence freezing behavior,
inhibitors, as expected, interrupt neurotransmitters and influence freezing behavior. This study examined the effects of
monoamine oxidase inhibitors on freezing behavior. Rats were treated with specific inhibitors that target either
monoamine oxidase A or B. The results showed that acute inhibition of both monoamine oxidase A and B reduce anxiety or freezing behavior. However, inhibition of monoamine oxidase A or B alone failed to do so. == Hormones ==