| Literature DB >> 30166975 |
Ramon Landin-Romero1,2, Ana Moreno-Alcazar3,4,5, Marco Pagani6, Benedikt L Amann3,4,5,7.
Abstract
Background: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing [EMDR] is an innovative, evidence-based and effective psychotherapy for post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD]. As with other psychotherapies, the effectiveness of EMDR contrasts with a limited knowledge of its underlying mechanism of action. In its relatively short life as a therapeutic option, EMDR has not been without controversy, in particular regarding the role of the bilateral stimulation as an active component of the therapy. The high prevalence of EMDR in clinical practice and the dramatic increase in EMDR research in recent years, with more than 26 randomized controlled trials published to date, highlight the need for a better understanding of its mechanism of action.Entities:
Keywords: bilateral stimulation; eye movement desensitization and reprocessing; eye movements; mechanism of action; systematic review
Year: 2018 PMID: 30166975 PMCID: PMC6106867 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Flow chart for the selection of eligible studies.
Psychological models (n = 32).
| Dyck, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | Classic conditioning theory as a framework for the effects of EM in traumatic memories. |
| Armstrong and Vaughan, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | The EM trigger an OR that facilitates attention to the trauma memory without avoidance. |
| MacCulloch and Feldman, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | Combination of Pavlovian and Darwinian theory to explain the effectiveness of EMDR. Positive elements of the OR are paired unpleasant memories to remove their negative effect. |
| Wilson et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | Full protocol | Full protocol with no EM Tapping | EMDR group showed desensitization. Autonomic changes during EMDR compatible with a relaxation response. | The EMDR therapeutic effect is provoked by pairing distress with an unlearned relaxation response. |
| Kuiken et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | No EM | Rapid bilateral EM activate the orienting response and, by doing so, facilitate attention to and comprehension of figurative, especially metaphoric, expressions. | Rapid EM in the EMDR protocol prompt novel shifts in memory (e.g., diminution of threat), belief (e.g., recognizing unintentional responsibility), and emotion (e.g., changing fear to anger). |
| Sharpley et al., | Empirical study | HC = 24 | EMDR | Rapid Induction Relaxation | EMDR reduced the vividness more significantly vs. control conditions. | EMDR reduces the vividness of a memory-based image. |
| Andrade et al., | Empirical study | Exp 1:HC = 46 Exp 2: HC = 18 Exp 3: HC = 30 Exp 4: HC = 24 | EM | Fixed eyes Tapping No dual task | EMs reduced vividness and emotiveness of trauma vs. control conditions. | EMDR effects are mediated by the visuospatial sketchpad of working memory. |
| Kavanagh et al., | Empirical study | HC = 18 | EM | Visual noise Exposure alone | EMs reduced vividness and emotiveness of trauma vs. control conditions. | A visuospatial task (e.g. EMs) offer a temporary response aid for imaginal exposure without affecting desensitization. |
| van den Hout et al., | Empirical study | HC = 60 | EM | Finger tapping No dual task | EMs reduced vividness of positive and negative recollections. | The effect of EMs is mediated by VSSP taxation. |
| Gunter and Bodner, | Empirical study | Exp 1: HC = 36 Exp 2: HC = 36 Exp 3: HC = 72 | EM | Stationary eyes Horizontal EMs Auditory shadowing Drawing | Vertical and horizontal EMs reduce vividness and increase arousal. | The central executive of the WM is taxed when a person performs a distractor task while attempting to hold a memory in mind. |
| Maxfield et al., | Empirical study | Exp 1: HC = 24 Exp 2: HC = 36 | EM | No EM Slow EM Fast EM | Fast EMs produce significant decrease of emotional intensity. | The decrease of emotional intensity is mediated by competition for WM resources |
| Lilley et al., | Empirical study | HC = 18 | EM | Counting No concurrent task | EMs reduces vividness and emotionality. | Concurrent tasks matched to the modality of trauma images lessening emotional responses to recollections of trauma. |
| van den Hout et al., | Empirical study | HC = 15 | EM | Bilateral “beeps” | EMs slow down reaction times to auditive cues. | The effect of beeps on taxing negative memories are inferior to those of EMs. |
| Kristjánsdóttir and Lee, | Empirical study | HC = 36 | EM | Counting | Vividness and emotionality significantly decreased after EMs and counting, with EMs producing the greatest effect irrespective memory modality. | Results are consistent with the taxation of the central executive of WM. |
| van den Hout et al., | Empirical study | PTSD = 12 | EM | Beeps Recall only | EMs are better than tones in reducing vividness. Tones are better than recall only. | Results support for WM model. Tones may outperform EMs in cases where trauma memories are vague. |
| Smeets et al., | Empirical study | HC = 61 | EM | Eyes stationary | EMs outperformed eyes stationary condition in reducing vividness first and then emotionality. | Emotionality is reduced only after vividness has dropped. |
| van den Hout et al., | Empirical study | HC = 32 | EM | Eyes stationary | In the EM group, self-rated vividness of the recalled+EM picture decreased, relative to the non-recalled picture. In the no-EM group there was no difference between the recalled versus non-recalled picture. | Reduction of memory vividness due to recall+EM is also evident from non-self-report data. |
| Novo Novo Navarro et al., | Empirical study | HC = 50 | EM | Eye rest condition | No significant differences between EM and fixed eye condition in recall. | EM did not improve auditory and visual consolidation of memory, undermining this WM taxing as a mechanism of action of EMDR |
| de Jongh et al., | Empirical study | PTSD = 32 Other mental disorder = 32 | EM | Tones Eye rest condition | Effects of EMs >tones > recall only. | EM effects of taxing WM on disturbing memories do no differ between PTSD and other metal disorders. |
| Leer et al., | Empirical study | HC = 73 | Recall with EM | Recall only | Recall with EM decrease vividness vs. recall only. | Recall with EM causes 24-h changes in memory vividness/emotionality. |
| van den Hout et al., | Empirical study | HC = 40 | Recall with EM | Recall only | Negative memories are rated as less vivid after “recall + EM” but not after “recall only”. This was not found for neutral memories. | Emotional memories are more taxing than neutral memories. |
| Leer et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Recall with no EM | EM slow down reaction time in a stimulus discrimination task. | EM during recall attenuates memory performance and renders stimulus attributes less accessible |
| van Veen et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Recall with no EM | EM showed a larger decrease in self-reported vividness and emotionality than control conditions. | Recall of an aversive memory loads working memory but drops in vividness and emotionality do not immediately reduce the cognitive load of recalling the memory |
| van Schie et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | recall + slow EM, and recall + fast EM | Speed differences of EM do not affect recall. Cognitively demanding dual task increases the intervention's effectiveness. | Adjusting EM speed is not helpful to reduce emotionality of aversive memories. |
| van Veen et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | recall + fast EM, recall + slow EM, or recall only | recall + fast EM led to less emotional, less vivid and more difficult to retrieve images than recall + slow EM and recall only. | Results support the WM theory: the more taxing a dual-task is, the more a memory image degrades |
| Engelhard et al., | Empirical study | HC = 28 | EM | Exposure | EMs reduce vividness of past and future feared events. | Taxing of WM provokes degradation of visual imagery about feared future events. |
| Engelhard et al., | Empirical study | HC = 60 | EM | Tetris game | EMs and Tetris draw on WM, vs. a no dual-task. Compared to recall only, EM and Tetris both decreased emotionality. | Both EMs and Tetris tax WM. |
| Engelhard et al., | Empirical study | HC = 37 | EM | Stationary eyes recall | Recall + EMs reduces vividness and emotionality vs. recall only. | EMs affect intrusive images about the future. |
| Onderdonk and van den Hout, | Empirical study | HC (n = 17) | EM | Visual task analogous to EM | Study 1 found that RT was slowest in the EM condition. Study 2 found decreases in memory vividness and emotionality after EM. The visual analogous task was similar to the control condition. | Performing EM taxes more WM resources and has greater impact on both memory vividness and emotionality than analogous visual tasks. This demonstrates that the effects observed in EMDR treatment are the result of more than occupying WM systems with visual stimuli alone. |
| Boukezzi et al., | Empirical study | HC (n = 18) | BLS coupled with positive/negative conditioning | positive/negative conditioning without BLS | Fear extinction were facilitated by BLS and associated with reduced skin conductance. | The BLS effect during fear extinction may rely on taxation of working memory, reducing vividness and emotionality, or may provoke memory reconsolidation. |
| Littel et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Recall with no EM | In the absence of arousal, neutral memory vividness did not decrease after recall + EM relative to recall only. | Results of the current study indicate that arousal is a prerequisite for the effectiveness of dual task interventions. |
| Patel and McDowall, | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Recall with no EM | Fast eye movements lowered vividness but not emotionality self-ratings ratings. | Extension to the working memory explanation. The eye movements lower the number of intrusive thoughts of negative memories during suppression. |
EM, eye movements; EMDR, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing; HC, healthy controls; NA, not applicable; OR, orienting response; PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder; VSSP, visuospatial sketchpad WM, working memory; BLS, bilateral stimulation.
Neurobiological models (n = 37).
| Christman et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | Saccadic and smooth pursuit EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | Saccadic EM enhanced episodic memory retrieval. | EM enhance interhemispheric interaction facilitating retrieval of episodic memories. |
| Christman et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | Saccadic and smooth pursuit EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | Saccadic EM led to recall of earlier childhood events. | EM enhance interhemispheric interaction facilitating retrieval of episodic memories. |
| Rasolkhani-Kalhorn and Harper, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | Depotentiation may be the biological basis of EMDR. Induction of low frequency stimulation by EM can lead to modification of fear memory traces. |
| Parker and Dagnall, | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | Saccadic eye movements increased true recognition of words and decreased false recognition. | EM may increase interhemispheric interaction leading to increased contextual information associated with previously learnt items. |
| Parker et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | EM increased associative recognition and recollection. | EM (dual processing task) improve performance of associative learning tasks. This mechanisms may be explained by increased interhemispheric interaction. |
| Parker et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | Horizontal EM increase true memories and recollection EM also decreased the magnitude of the misinformation effect. | Horizontal EM enhance the monitoring and dual processing of source memories. |
| Brunyé et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. no EM | Horizontal EM increased recognition in verbal and non-verbal memory tests. | The effects of horizontal EM in EMDR may induce increased interhemispheric brain activity. |
| Nieuwenhuis et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Horizontal EM no EM (on-screen fixation) simultaneous tactile stimulation simultaneous auditory stimulation | Horizontal EM and tactile stimulation enhance memory retrieval. | EM-driven bilateral stimulation of the brain increase functional connectivity between the two hemispheres, leading to enhanced memory retrieval. |
| Keller et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Stationary eyes | EM were not associated with enhanced interhemispheric coherence but with were associated with intrahemispheric coherence in the right frontal and temporal areas. | A cortical coherence extension for the interhemispheric coherence hypothesis is suggested. |
| Yaggie et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Stationary eyes Between/within-groups experimental design | No differences in vividness and emotional valence between all conditions. No significant increases in interhemispheric coherence measured by EEG. Increases in intrahemispheric coherence associated to EM. | Support for a two-stage cortical coherence model, integrating findings from other hypothesis and models. |
| O'Driscoll et al., | PET | HC = 10 | EM | Saccadic vs. smooth pursuit movements | Saccadic movements are associated with increased metabolism of the frontal cortex. | Differential activation between smooth pursuit and saccadic eye movements. |
| Levin et al., | SPECT | PTSD = 6 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | Post EMDR hyper activation of ACC and left PFC. | Successful EMDR treatment in PTSD may enhance the ability to differentiate real from imagined threat. |
| Lamprecht et al., | EEG, ERP | PTSD = 10 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | Post EMDR reduced OR to novel stimuli and arousal level. | Clinical improvement of trauma in PTSD patients may be related to changes in information processing. |
| Lansing et al., | SPECT | PTSD = 6 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | Changes in perfusion post EDMR treatment. Decrease perfusion in the left and right occipital, left parietal, and right precentral lobes Increased perfusion in the left inferior frontal gyrus. | Significant functional differences in brain activity from pre- to post-EMDR imaging consistent with psychotherapy effects on depression and anxiety disorders. |
| Oh and Choi, | SPECT | PTSD = 2 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | Increased perfusion in PFC and decreased perfusion in temporal association cortex. | EMDR treatment reverse the functional imbalance between the limbic area and the prefrontal cortex. |
| Letizia et al., | MRI | PTSD = 1 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Single case | Increased hippocampal volume. | Psychotherapy may induce alterations in gene expression and structural changes in the brain. |
| Pagani et al., | SPECT | PTSD = 15 HC = 22 | EDMR | Pre-post treatment Within group Between group | Reduction toward normalization in EMDR respondents in pre-limbic cortices and increases in the PFC. | The imaging findings are consistent with previously described imaging changes of psychotherapy on anxiety disorders. |
| Propper et al., | EEG | HC = 22 | EM | Horizontal vs. vertical EM vs. noEM | EM led to decreased interhemispheric coherence. | EM may induce changes but not necessarily decreases in interhemispheric interaction. |
| Harper et al., | EEG | PTSD = 6 | EMDR | Within group analysis | Symptoms of PTSD were reduced after EMDR. EEG activity was compatible to de-potentiation memory synapses. | Treatment gains in EMDR may result from de-potentiation of fear in memory synapses. |
| Ohtani et al., | NIRS | PTSD = 13 | EMDR | Pre-, during, post-treatment Within group | Decreased activity in PFC during recall with EM. | Reduced activity in the PFC may be part of the biological basis for the efficacy of EMDR in PTSD. |
| Grbesa et al., | EEG | PTSD = 1 | EMDR | Pre-, during and post- treatment Within subject | Low level electrocortical amplitude was observed during EMDR. Increased EEG amplitude was observed after successful treatment. | Successful EMDR treatment correlates with sudden increases of electrocortcial amplitude activity. |
| Nardo et al., | MRI | PTSD = 21 HC = 22 | EMDR | Between group | Lower GM density was found in the left posterior cingulate, parahippocampal, limbic and paralimbic cortices in non- responders to EMDR therapy. | GM lower density in limbic and paralimbic cortices is associated with PTSD diagnosis, trauma load, and EMDR treatment outcome, suggesting that PTSD is characterized by memory and dissociative disturbances. |
| Bossini et al., | MRI | PTSD = 10 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | Increased hippocampal volume post EMDR. | EMDR may induce alterations in gene expression and structural changes in the brain. |
| Pagani et al., | EEG | PTSD = 10 HC = 10 | EMDR | Pre-, during and post treatment Within and between group | Activations shifted from frontal to temporal regions over the course of the treatment. | Traumatic events are processed at cognitive level following successful EMDR therapy. |
| Samara et al., | EEG | HC ( | EM | noEM | Interhemispheric phase and amplitude coherence in EEG were not affected by EM. There were no associations between changes in EM-related interhemispheric connectivity and memory performance. | These findings do not support the interhemispheric interaction hypothesis. |
| Landin-Romero et al., | fMRI | Subsyndromal traumatized bipolar patient ( | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Between and within group | Post-treatment normalization of patterns of activation and deactivation. | EMDR may modulate large scale networks in the brain |
| Herkt et al., | fMRI | HC = 20 | Alternating BLS | Non alternating BLS No stimulation | Specific increase in activation of the right amygdala for the bilateral alternating auditory stimulation. Decrease activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex associated to alternating BLS. | Support for increase in limbic processing along with decreased frontal activation as the neurobiological correlate of the therapeutic reintegration of information. |
| Boukezzi et al., | MRI | PTSD ( | EMDR | Supportive therapy | EMDR was associated with grey matter increases in the prefrontal cortex. | EMDR-driven symptom removal is associated with enhancement of brain structures involved in emotional regulation. |
| Littel et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Eyes stationary | No effects of EM on memory emotionality when associated with blockage of noradrenaline. | Noradrenaline is crucial for EMDR effectiveness. |
| Bossini et al., | MRI | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | EMDR was associated with increased grey matter volume in thalamus and parahippocampal regions. | EMDR mechanism of action work at the level of the thalamus, an area implicated in PTSD. |
| Thomaes et al., | fMRI | PTSD ( | EM | Recall with no EM | Recall with EM is associated with reduced activation in amygdala and reduced prefrontal connectivity. | EM reduce activity and connectivity in emotional processing related areas. |
| Laugharne et al., | MRI | PTSD ( | EMDR | Prolonged exposure | Left amygdala mean volume increased following EMDR treatment but not exposure. | Results suggest different underlying processes for the efficacy of EMDR and prolonged exposure. |
| Jung et al., | MRI | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | Successful treatment showed significant effects on global and local network properties. | Subthreshold manifestation of PTSD may be due to a disruption in the optimal balance in the functional brain networks and that this disruption can be ameliorated by psychotherapy. |
| Pagani et al., | Empirical study | noPTSD trauma ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | Orbitofrontal activity shifted to posterior associative regions post-treatment. Participants with chronic exposure to trauma showed similar cortical firing at both stages. | During EMDR memory retention of the traumatic event moves from regions with implicit emotional valence to association areas in which the experience is integrated and consolidated. |
| Rimini et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | EM during EMDR were associated with increased prefrontal oxygenation during recall of aversive memories. | EM were correlated with a reduced oxy-Hb concentration, which may be linked to a reduced working activity of PFC. |
| Amano and Toichi, | Empirical study | HC ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | EM was associated with a significant increase in oxy-Hb in the right superior temporal sulcus and a decrease in the wide bilateral areas of the PFC. | EM may help the recall of pleasant memories. The reduction in the PFC suggests that EM induce relaxation. |
| Amano and Toichi, | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | EMDR was associated with a significant reduction in the right temporal cortex, and a trend toward a reduction in the left orbitofrontal cortex. | Successful EMDR treatment involves brain regions related to memory representation and emotion. |
ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; EEG, electroencephalogram; EM, eye movements; EMDR, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing; ERP, event related potentials; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; HC, healthy controls; GM, gray matter; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NIRS, near-infrared spectroscopy; NA, not applicable; OR, orienting response; PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder; PET, positron emission tomography; PFC, prefrontal cortex; SPECT, single photon emission computer tomography; BLS, bilateral stimulation.
Psychophysiological models (n = 18).
| Kuiken et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Visual fixation (noEM) | EM facilitates attentional and semantic flexibility. | EM induced attentional and semantic flexibility facilitates OR and transformations in the clients traumatic memory. |
| Barrowcliff et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Visual fixation (noEM) High-low frequency tones Attentional task | Lower levels of electrodermal arousal were identified in EM compared to noEM. | EM facilitate a process of psycho-physiological de-arousal |
| Barrowcliff et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Stationary eyes (noEM) | EM resulted in decreased psychophysiological response and reductions on vividness and emotionality in positive and negative memories. | EM facilitate a process of psycho-physiological de-arousal |
| Aubert-Khalfa et al., | Empirical study | HC = 6 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within-group | Post-treatment reductions of clinical scores and psychophysiological response. | Successful EMDR treatment reduces psychophysiological arousal associated with trauma |
| Elofsson et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | NA | Psycho-physiological changes compatible with de-arousal during EMDR. | EM during EMDR activate cholinergic and inhibit sympathetic systems, similarly to the changes observed during REM sleep |
| Schubert et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | NA | EMDR provokes (i) an increase of psychophysiological response at stimulation onsets and (ii) stress related arousal during ongoing stimulation. Across the entire EDMR significant decreases of psycho-physiological activity was observed. | EMDR is associated with autonomic de-arousal over time |
| Sack et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | NA | Treatment with EMDR was followed by a significant reduction of subjective disturbance; trauma related symptoms and reduced psycho-physiological reactivity. | The successful processing of trauma mediated by repetitive ORs causes an habituation of the psycho-physiological response. |
| Frustaci et al., | Empirical study | HC (sub-syndromal PTSD) = 4 | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | EMDR decreased symptoms and increased parasympathetic tone. | Results support physiological de-arousal reductions driven by EMDR also in sub-syndromal PTSD. |
| Kapoula et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EMDR | NA | EMDR decrease the number of saccade intrusions and increase the smooth components of the ocular pursuit. | EMDR reduces distress mediated by cholinergic effects known to improve ocular pursuit. |
| Hornsveld et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | recall + noEM; recall + music | Greater decline in emotionality and concentration after EM compared to recall-only and recall-with-music. | EM reduce vividness resulting in detachment from the trauma. |
| El Khoury-Malhame et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EMDR | Emotional Stroop Target detection task | EMDR contributes to removal of PTSD symptoms vs. control conditions. After successful EMDR therapy patients respond similarly to controls in attentional tasks. | Removal of PTSD symptoms with EMDR eliminates attentional bias towards aversive cues. |
| Stickgold, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | EMDR induces a neurobiological state similar to that of the REM sleep that contributes to integrate traumatic memories into general semantic networks. |
| Sharpley et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EM | Rolling eyes upwards | EM were not associated with increased relaxation as measured by heart rate and alpha activity. | EMDR effects does not rest upon alpha-induction or cause overall relaxation. |
| Schubert et al., | Empirical study | HC ( | EMDR | EMDR with no-EM | EMDR with EM was associated with greater reduction of distress. EMDR led to greater dearousal on physiological variables. | The dual-attention tasks in EMDR create orienting responses and short-term dearousal which may aid in the processing and integration of trauma memories. The relaxation response associated with EMs in EMDR may serve to moderate arousal throughout treatment sessions. |
| Raboni et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group Between group | EMDR decrease symptoms of depression and anxiety in PTSD. | Reduced sympathetic activation may explain the improvements observed after EMDR. |
| Farina et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post design | EMDR was associated with alpha power increases in the left inferior temporal gyrus and HRV. Finally, the values of lagged coherence were negatively associated with subjective units of disturbance and positively associated with parasympathetic activity. | Results suggest that EMDR leads to an integration of dissociated aspects of traumatic memories and, consequently, a decrease of hyperarousal symptoms |
| Schubert et al., | Empirical study | PTSD ( | EMDR | Pre-post treatment Within group | EMDR treatment was followed by significant reductions in PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms. Decreases in heart rate, respiration rate, and skin conductance indicated physiological dearousal within treatment sessions. | Support for the orienting response-relaxation and physiological dearousal during and after successful EMDR treatment |
| Pagani and Carletto, | Speculative theory | NA | NA | NA | NA | Slow-wave sleep, like EM in EMDR has a key role in memory consolidation and in the reorganization of distant functional networks, as well as lead to a weakening of traumatic episodic memory and a reconsolidation of new associated information. |
EM, eye movements; EMDR, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing; HC, healthy controls; NA, not applicable; OR, orienting response; PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder; REM, rapid eye movement.