Title of article
Sensory gating in chronic posttraumatic stress disorder: reduced auditory p50 suppression in combat veterans
Author/Authors
Thomas C. Neylan، نويسنده , , Daniel J. Fletcher، نويسنده , , Maryann Lenoci، نويسنده , , Keith McCallin، نويسنده , , Daniel S. Weiss، نويسنده , , Frank B. Schoenfeld، نويسنده , , Charles R. Marmar، نويسنده , , George Fein، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
9
From page
1656
To page
1664
Abstract
Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may be associated with a general impairment of cognitive function that extends beyond the processing of trauma-specific stimuli. Suppression of the auditory P50 response to repeated stimuli occurs in normal subjects and reflects the central nervous system’s ability to screen out repetitive stimuli, a phenomenon referred to as sensory gating. This study examines P50 sensory gating to nonstartle auditory stimuli in PTSD subjects and normal controls.
Methods: P50 generation and gating were studied using a conditioning/testing paradigm in 15 male subjects with PTSD and 12 male controls. P50 test/conditioning (T/C) ratios were estimated using the Singular Value Decomposition method.
Results: The amplitude of the P50 response to the conditioning stimulus did not differ in subjects with PTSD compared to normal controls. The P50 T/C ratio is increased in PTSD subjects (mean = .408, SD = .275) as compared to the controls (mean = .213, SD = .126, two tailed t, p = .024).
Conclusions: This study provides evidence that PTSD is associated with impaired gating to nonstartle trauma-neutral auditory stimuli. Biol Psychiatry 1999;46:1656–1664
Keywords
Stress disorders , Evoked potentials , electroencephalography , habituation , Hippocampus , neural inhibition
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Record number
501099
Link To Document