| Literature DB >> 29185490 |
Katrin A Bangel1, Susanne van Buschbach2, Dirk J A Smit2, Ali Mazaheri3, Miranda Olff2,4.
Abstract
Part of the symptomatology of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are alterations in arousal and reactivity which could be related to a maladaptive increase in the automated sensory change detection system of the brain. In the current EEG study we investigated whether the brain's response to a simple auditory sensory change was altered in patients with PTSD relative to trauma-exposed matched controls who did not develop the disorder. Thirteen male PTSD patients and trauma-exposed controls matched for age and educational level were presented with regular auditory pure tones (1000 Hz, 200 ms duration), with 11% of the tones deviating in both duration (50 ms) and frequency (1200 Hz) while watching a silent movie. Relative to the controls, patients who had developed PTSD showed enhanced mismatch negativity (MMN), increased theta power (5-7 Hz), and stronger suppression of upper alpha activity (13-15 Hz) after deviant vs. standard tones. Behaviourally, the alpha suppression in PTSD correlated with decreased spatial working memory performance suggesting it might reflect enhanced stimulus-feature representations in auditory memory. These results taken together suggest that PTSD patients and trauma-exposed controls can be distinguished by enhanced involuntary attention to changes in sensory patterns.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29185490 PMCID: PMC5707412 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16669-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Participants’ characteristics.
| PTSD (N = 13) | Matched controls (N = 13) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 46.7 | 43.5 |
| Gender | Male | Male |
| Educational level | ||
| Low | 0% | 0% |
| Medium | 38% | 38% |
| High | 62% | 47% |
| Academic | 0% | 15% |
| CAPS (Mean score) |
| 1.3 |
| Re-experiencing | 17.7 | 0.7 |
| Avoidance | 22.2 | 0.0 |
| Hyperarousal | 24.9 | 0.7 |
| Cognitive performance (CANTAB) | ||
| Sensorimotor (MOT error) | 12,4% | 12.6% |
| Response inhibition (SST SSD) | 259.2 ms | (459.0 ms)* |
| Response inhibition (SST SSRT) | 176.3 ms | (164.1 ms)* |
| Working memory (SWM error) | 28.1% | 24.9% |
*Note: Due to technical issues, SST performance in the control group is based on N = 7.
Figure 1The grand-average ERP waveforms (FC1/FC2) after deviant and standard tones for PTSD (a) patients and (b) trauma-exposed matched controls (right panel). ERP waveforms and topographies show a larger and earlier negative peak (i.e. mismatch negativity) in PTSD patients compared to the controls.
Figure 2(a) Topographies (upper panel) and time-frequency representations (TFR, lower panel) of upper alpha band power after deviant as opposed to standard tones. (b) Greater alpha suppression at 330–490 ms after deviant (vs. standard) tones over posterior electrodes in PTSD patients compared to trauma-exposed matched controls suggests hyperresponsiveness to stimulus change, increased auditory processing, and/or stronger stimulus-feature representations in auditory sensory memory in PTSD. Note that topographies were averaged over time window and TFRs over electrodes where a cluster-based permutation test detected a significant group effect in response to auditory stimulus change.
Figure 3(a) Topographies (upper panel) and time-frequency representations (TFR, lower panel) of theta band power (5–7 Hz) over frontal channels at 90–250 ms after deviant as opposed to standard tones. (b) Compared to controls, PTSD patients showed increased synchronization in theta band power over (right) fronto-central channels which indicates enhanced automatic pre-attentive auditory processing and hypersensitive auditory discrimination ability in PTSD in response to deviant (vs. standard) tones.
Figure 4Upper alpha power in PTSD following the deviant tones correlated negatively with patients’ working memory performance. Alpha suppression in response to deviating sounds was related to increasing between errors on the spatial working memory task.