| Literature DB >> 29780334 |
Marieke J van Gelderen1,2, Mirjam J Nijdam1,3, Eric Vermetten1,2,4.
Abstract
Despite an array of evidence-based psychological treatments for patients with a posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a majority of patients do not fully benefit from the potential of these therapies. In veterans with PTSD, up to two-thirds retain their diagnosis after psychotherapy and often their disorder is treatment-resistant, which calls for improvement of therapeutic approaches for this population. One of the factors hypothesized to underlie low response in PTSD treatment is high behavioral and cognitive avoidance to traumatic reminders. In the current paper we explore if a combination of personalized virtual reality, multi-sensory input, and walking during exposure can enhance treatment engagement, overcome avoidance, and thereby optimize treatment effectiveness. Virtual reality holds potential to increase presence and in-session attention and to facilitate memory retrieval. Multi-sensory input such as pictures and music can personalize this experience. Evidence for the positive effect of physical activity on fear extinction and associative thinking, as well as embodied cognition theories, provide a rationale for decreased avoidance by literally approaching cues of the traumatic memories. A dual-attention task further facilitates new learning and reconsolidation. These strategies have been combined in an innovative framework for trauma-focused psychotherapy, named Multi-modular Motion-assisted Memory Desensitization and Reconsolidation (3MDR). In this innovative treatment the therapeutic setting is changed from the face-to-face sedentary position to a side-by-side activating context in which patients walk toward trauma-related images in a virtual environment. The framework of 3MDR has been designed as a boost for patients with treatment-resistant PTSD, which is illustrated by three case examples. The intervention is discussed in context of other advancements in treatment for treatment-resistant PTSD. Novel elements of this approach are activation, personalization and empowerment. While developed for veterans with PTSD who do not optimally respond to standardized treatments, this innovative framework holds potential to also be used for other patient populations and earlier stages of treatment for patients with PTSD.Entities:
Keywords: PTSD; innovation; physical activity; reconsolidation; treatment; treatment resistance; veterans; virtual reality
Year: 2018 PMID: 29780334 PMCID: PMC5946512 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Outcomes of systematic reviews and meta-analysis on VRET and exercise.
| ( | Systematic review | PTSD patients ( | In 3 out of 3 studies comparing VRET to a waitlist control group, symptoms improved in VRET group only. In 6 out of 7 studies comparing VRET to an active treatment, PTSD symptoms improved but did not outperform traditional therapies. The other study found VRET to outperform IE. No effect size reported. |
- Small sample sizes; largest sample size was 22. - High risk of bias in most studies due to lack of blinding. Some studies did not randomize patients. - High variety of protocols used. |
| ( | Systematic review | PTSD patients ( | VRET improved PTSD symptoms in all studies. In 1 study VRET outperformed a minimal attention control group. No effect size reported. |
- Small sample sizes; largest sample size was 36. - High risk of bias in most studies due to lack of blinding. Some studies did not randomize patients. - High variety of protocols used. |
| ( | Meta-analysis | Anxiety disorder patients ( | VRET improved PTSD symptoms; Cohen's | - Over-representation of specific phobias (fear of flying and acrophobia). |
| ( | Meta-analysis | PTSD patients ( | Compared to control groups, exercise significantly reduced PTSD symptoms; Hedges' |
- Small number of studies (4). - High variety in exercise interventions used. |
| ( | Meta-analysis | Healthy and obese participants and patients with either diabetes/ depression/MS/panic disorder ( | Single exercise session increases BDNF levels; Hedges' |
- Several studies did not report on intensity of exercise. |
Figure 1Schematic overview of the augmentation strategies applied in the framework of the 3MDR intervention and its outcomes.
Figure 2Schematic overview of a single 3MDR session. A session consists of a pre-platform phase (A), a platform phase (B) and a post-platform phase (C).