Title of article :
Neural Networks of Information Processing in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study
Author/Authors :
Richard A. Bryant، نويسنده , , Kim L. Felmingham، نويسنده , , Andrew H. Kemp، نويسنده , , Matthew Barton، نويسنده , , Anthony S. Peduto، نويسنده , , Chris Rennie، نويسنده , , Evian Gordon، نويسنده , , Leanne M. Williams، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Background
Neuroimaging studies report reduced medial prefrontal cortical (particularly anterior cingulate) but enhanced amygdala response to fear signals in posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). We investigated whether anterior cingulate-amygdala dysregulation in PTSD would generalize to salient, but nonthreat related signals.
Methods
Individuals with PTSD (n = 14) and age and sex-matched nontraumatized controls (n = 14) completed an auditory oddball paradigm adapted to functional magnetic resonance imaging at a 1.5-T field strength.
Results
Controls displayed bilateral activation in ventral anterior cingulate and amygdala networks, and PTSD subjects showed bilateral dorsal anterior cingulate and amygdala activation to targets relative to nontargets. Compared to controls, PTSD subjects showed enhanced responses to targets in the dorsal and rostral anterior cingulate, and left amygdala. Whole-brain analyses confirmed the expected pattern of distributed prefrontal-parietal responses to targets in the oddball task. Greater activity in posterior parietal somatosensory regions was observed in PTSD.
Conclusions
Our findings of enhanced anterior cingulate responses in PTSD contrast with reports of reduced activity for threat stimuli, suggesting that the latter may be specific to processing of threat-related content. Activation in rostral and dorsal anterior cingulate, left amygdala and posterior parietal networks in response to salient, nonthreatening stimuli may reflect generalized hypervigilance.
Keywords :
Information processing , oddball , fMRI , Anterior cingulate , Amygdala , posttraumatic stress disorder
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry