| Literature DB >> 24604631 |
Brian M Iacoviello1, Gang Wu1, Rany Abend2, James W Murrough1, Adriana Feder1, Eyal Fruchter3, Yoav Levinstein3, Ilan Wald2, Christopher R Bailey1, Daniel S Pine4, Alexander Neumeister5, Yair Bar-Haim2,6, Dennis S Charney1.
Abstract
Cognitive theories implicate information-processing biases in the etiology of anxiety disorders. Results of attention-bias studies in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have been inconsistent, suggesting biases towards and away from threat. Within-subject variability of attention biases in posttraumatic patients may be a useful marker for attentional control impairment and the development of posttrauma symptoms. This study reports 2 experiments investigating threat-related attention biases, mood and anxiety symptoms, and attention-bias variability following trauma. Experiment 1 included 3 groups in a cross-sectional design: (a) PTSD, (b) trauma-exposed without PTSD, and (c) healthy controls with no trauma or Axis I diagnoses. Greater attention-bias variability was found in the PTSD group compared to the other 2 groups (η(p)2=.23); attention-bias variability was significantly and positively correlated (r = .37) with PTSD symptoms. Experiment 2 evaluated combat-exposed and nonexposed soldiers before and during deployment. Attention-bias variability did not differentiate groups before deployment, but did differentiate groups during deployment (ηp2=.16); increased variability was observed in groups with acute posttraumatic stress symptoms and acute depression symptoms only. Attention-bias variability could be a useful marker for attentional impairment related to threat cues associated with mood and anxiety symptoms after trauma exposure. PublishedEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24604631 PMCID: PMC4617532 DOI: 10.1002/jts.21899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trauma Stress ISSN: 0894-9867