Neural Circuitry of Interoception: New Insights into Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders

Curr Treat Options Psychiatry. 2014 Sep;1(3):235-247. doi: 10.1007/s40501-014-0019-0. Epub 2014 Jun 21.

Abstract

Over the past century, much research has investigated how the brain processes signals from the body (interoception) and how this processing may be disturbed in patients with psychiatric disorders. In this paper, I discuss the literature examining the relationship between interoceptive awareness and emotional and cognitive processes, and review the evidence suggesting that anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are characterized by abnormal interoception. A network of cortical and subcortical brain regions centered on the insula has repeatedly been implicated in interoception and is abnormal in anxiety and OCD. The investigation of interoception provides a framework for understanding behavioral and neural mechanisms of anxiety and OCD, although additional research is needed to directly link insula functioning to aberrant interoception in these disorders. Future work targeting interoception may be useful for the development of novel treatments.

Keywords: Abnormal interoception; Emotional and cognitive processes; Interoceptive awareness; OCD; Psychiatric disorders.