The human fear-circuitry and fear-induced fainting in healthy individuals - The paleolithic-threat hypothesis

被引:26
作者
Bracha, HS [1 ]
Bracha, AS
Williams, AE
Ralston, TC
Matsukawa, JM
机构
[1] Pacific Isl Hlth Care Syst, Dept Vet Affairs, Natl Ctr Posttraumat Stree Disorder, Honolulu, HI 96813 USA
[2] Cornell Univ, Ithaca, NY USA
[3] Univ Hawaii, Dept Psychol, Honolulu, HI USA
关键词
fainting; human evolution; war; combat; fear-circuitry; androgens; stress-induced disorders;
D O I
10.1007/s10286-005-0245-z
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The Paleolithic-Threat hypothesis reviewed here posits that habitual efferent fainting can be traced back to fear-induced allelic polymorphisms that were selected into some genomes of anatomically, mitochondrially, and neurally modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) in the Mid-Paleolithic because of the survival advantage they conferred during periods of inescapable threat. We posit that during Mid-Paleolithic warfare an encounter with "a stranger holding a sharp object" was consistently associated with threat to life. A heritable hardwired or firm-wired (prepotentiated) predisposition to abruptly increase vagal tone and collapse flaccidly rather than freeze or attempt to flee or fight in response to an approaching sharp object, a minor injury, or the sight of blood, may have evolved as an alternative stress-induced fear-circuitry response. Such a stable (balanced) polymorphism for the hemodynamically "paradoxical" flaccid-immobility in response to these stimuli may have increased some non-combatants' chances of survival. This is consistent with the unusual age and sex pattern of fear-induced fainting. The Paleolithic-Threat hypothesis also predicts a link to various hypo-androgenic states (e.g. low dehydroxyepiandrosterone-sulfate. We offer five predictions testable via epidemiological, clinical, and ethological/primatological methods. The Paleolithic-Threat hypothesis has implications for research in the aftermath of man-made disasters, such as terrorism against civilians, a traumatic event in which this hypothesis predicts epidemics of fear-induced fainting.
引用
收藏
页码:238 / 241
页数:4
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