| Literature DB >> 21898707 |
Ebony M Glover1, Justine E Phifer, Daniel F Crain, Seth D Norrholm, Michael Davis, Bekh Bradley, Kerry J Ressler, Tanja Jovanovic.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients show heightened fear responses to trauma reminders and an inability to inhibit fear in the presence of safety reminders. Brain imaging studies suggest that this is in part due to amygdala over-reactivity as well as deficient top-down cortical inhibition of the amygdala. Consistent with these findings, previous studies, using fear-potentiated startle (FPS), have shown exaggerated startle and deficits in fear inhibition in PTSD participants. However, many PTSD studies using the skin conductance response (SCR) report no group differences in fear acquisition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21898707 PMCID: PMC3229665 DOI: 10.1002/da.20880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Depress Anxiety ISSN: 1091-4269 Impact factor: 6.505
Demographic and clinical data for the study sample
| Demographics | PTSD ( | Control ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex (% women) | 58.5 | 57.1 | ns |
| Race (% AA) | 95.1 | 94.3 | ns |
| Age ( | 41.15 (12.03) | 40.50 (12.31) | ns |
| Trauma history | |||
| Childhood trauma ( | 51.93 (19.34) | 39.24 (15.00) | |
| Adult trauma ( | 3.12 (2.11) | 2.36 (1.87) | |
| PTSD symptoms | |||
| Total ( | 27.23 (10.12) | 7.36 (6.20) | |
| Re-experiencing ( | 6.67 (3.99) | 1.49 (2.06) | |
| Avoidance ( | 11.24 (4.62) | 2.87 (3.56) | |
| Hyper-arousal ( | 9.29 (3.66) | 3.00 (3.01) | |
Figure 1Fear-potentiated startle between PTSD and controls by fear acquisition block, separated by trial type. (A) shows group differences in fear-potentiated startle across blocks during the CS+; (B) shows the group differences during the CS−. The value on the Y axis depicts difference score calculated as startle magnitude to each CS minus startle magnitude to noise probe alone.
Figure 2Skin conductance response between PTSD and controls by fear acquisition block, separated by trial type. (A) shows group differences in fear-potentiated startle across blocks during the CS+; (B) shows the group differences during the CS−. The value on the Y axis depict square root transformations of the SCR calculated at the level of electrodermal activity during the 3–6 s post-CS onset minus the electrodermal activity during the 1 s before CS onset.
Correlations between psychophysiological measures and PTSD symptom clusters
| Startle to danger cue | SCR to danger cue | Startle to safety cue | SCR to safety cue | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Re-experiencing PTSD symptoms | .24** | −.05 | .22* | .06 |
| Avoidance PTSD symptoms | .05 | −.12 | .12 | .04 |
| Hyper-arousal PTSD symptoms | .14 | −.22* | .23* | −.04 |
Stepwise regression analysis of (A) re-experiencing symptoms, and (B) hyper-arousal symptoms of PTSD
| (A) Outcome: Re-Experiencing PTSD symptoms | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictors | ||||
| 1. Age, sex, and race | .010 | .014 | 0.50 | ns |
| 2. Childhood and adult trauma | .130 | .116 | 6.67 | .002*** |
| 3. Startle to danger cue | .186 | .056 | 6.76 | .01** |
| 4. SCR to danger cue | .189 | .003 | 0.39 | ns |
| Final model: | β | Part | ||
| Age | .01 | .01 | ns | |
| Sex | −.04 | −.04 | ns | |
| Race | .06 | .05 | ns | |
| Childhood trauma | .38 | .35 | <.001 | |
| Adult trauma | −.05 | −.04 | ns | |
| Startle to danger cue | .26 | .24 | .01 | |
| SCR to danger cue | −.06 | −.06 | ns | |
| (B) Outcome: Hyper-arousal PTSD symptoms | ||||
| Predictors | ||||
| 1. Age, sex, and race | .003 | .003 | 0.11 | ns |
| 2. Childhood and adult trauma | .134 | .131 | 7.56 | .001*** |
| 3. Startle to safety cue | .191 | .057 | 7.00 | .009** |
| 4. SCR to safety cue | .194 | .003 | 0.32 | ns |
| Final model: | β | part | ||
| Age | .03 | .03 | ns | |
| Sex | −.17 | −.15 | ns | |
| Race | .07 | .07 | ns | |
| Childhood trauma | .39 | .36 | <.001 | |
| Adult trauma | −.09 | −.08 | ns | |
| Startle to safety cue | .25 | .24 | .01 | |
| SCR to safety cue | −.06 | −.05 | ns | |