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.
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.
Authors: Martin Kurthen; Peter Trautner; Timm Rosburg; Thomas Grunwald; Thomas Dietl; Kai-Uwe Kühn; Carlo Schaller; Christian E Elger; Horst Urbach; Kost Elisevich; Nash N Boutros Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2007-05-21 Impact factor: 3.222
Authors: Amy S Badura-Brack; Katherine M Becker; Timothy J McDermott; Tara J Ryan; Madelyn M Becker; Allison R Hearley; Elizabeth Heinrichs-Graham; Tony W Wilson Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2015-07-02 Impact factor: 3.222