Sid
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Authors’ reply to Tuller et al.
Extinguishing fear conditioning has already been tried. In fact it’s been the cornerstone of treatment of these patients for decades (CBT, GET) and it hasn’t worked.
Another letter pointed out that most patients have at some point been told their illness is psychiatric and many received psychiatric treatment with no success.
Dr Tuller and colleagues4 write that the finding of anticipatory tachycardia can be explained by patients knowing "that standing up during a tilt-table test could aggravate their symptoms¨. We agree with their statement as it describes fear conditioning. It is important to emphasize that the biological process of fear conditioning makes this neurological response unconscious and independent of will. Therefore, the fear conditioning that occurs in POTS should be treated. Extinguishing fear conditionings could improve symptoms; dismissing this would be a disservice to patients.
Extinguishing fear conditioning has already been tried. In fact it’s been the cornerstone of treatment of these patients for decades (CBT, GET) and it hasn’t worked.
Another letter pointed out that most patients have at some point been told their illness is psychiatric and many received psychiatric treatment with no success.