| Literature DB >> 30890976 |
Florence Durand1,2, Clémence Isaac1,2, Dominique Januel1.
Abstract
Background: Emotional memory is an adaptive process that improves the memorization of emotional events or stimuli. In Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), emotional memory may be altered, which in turn may affect symptoms. Having a clearer view of the processes of interaction between memory and emotional stimuli in PTSD may improve our knowledge of this disorder, and could create new therapeutic management tools. Thus, we performed a systematic review of the evidence of specific emotional memory in PTSD patients. Method: Following PRISMA guidelines, a systematic review of MEDLINE, PsycInfo, and ScienceDirect was undertaken to identify controlled studies on emotional memory that used cognitive tasks on PTSD patients. The initial research was conducted from June 2017 to July 2017, and search terms included: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; PTSD; emotional memory; emotion; emotional; memory; and episodic memory.Entities:
Keywords: PTSD; Post-traumatic stress disorder; attentional bias; emotion; emotional memory; interaction cognition-emotion; interaction memory-emotion; memory
Year: 2019 PMID: 30890976 PMCID: PMC6411692 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Summary of literature search, adapted from PRISMA (Moher et al., 2009).
Studies' characteristics and behavioral results of emotional memory in PTSD.
| Baumann et al., | 12 PTSD 13 HC | Migrants and refugees | M&F | Non trauma-related emotional information pictures | Item-method directed forgetting task following by a recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = HC |
| Bremner et al., | 10 PTSD 11 HC | Childhood sexual abuse | F | Negative word pairs that have fear-related or life-threatening content and neutral word pairs | Word-pair task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = HC |
| Brohawn et al., | 18 PTSD 18 TE | Varied | M&F | Negative, neutral, and positive pictures | Visual memory recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = TE |
| Chemtob et al., | 16 PTSD 27 TE 20 HC 16 Psy | Vietnam combat veteran | M | Combat related and neutral words and pictures | free recall for words and recognition task for pictures | |
| Golier et al., | 31 PTSD 17 TE 34 HC | Holocaust survivors | F | Low associate pairs consisted of a Holocaust-related words paired with a neutral word (unrelated words), and high associate pairs consisted of neutral word pairs (moderatly related words) | Word-pair task and word-stem completion test | |
| Guillery-Girard et al., | 25 PTSD 24 HC | NS | M&F | Neutral and negative non-trauma related pictures (perceptual and conceptual pictures) | Oddball task following by a recognition task | Negative/neutral: PTSD+ = control; PTSD– ≠ control: PTSD-: negative perceptuals pictures < neutral & negative conceptual pictures; more false negative conceptual recognitions |
| Herzog et al., | 28 PTSD 28 TE 28 HC | Childhood sexual, physical abuse | F | Negative trauma-related words, negative words, neutral words and color words | Emotional Stroop task following by free recall and recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = HC = TE |
| McNally et al., | 14 PTSD 12 TE 12 HC | Childhood sexual abuse | F | Trauma related, positive, and neutral words | Directed forgetting task then free recall | PTSD/TE and HC: Direct forgetting effect only for positive and neutral words. |
| Mickley Steinmetz et al., | 25 PTSD 27 TE 25 HC | Varied | M&F | Images of positive, negative and neutral items onto neutral background scenes | Memory recognition task for the items and backgrounds separately | Memory trade off: PTSD > control groups |
| Moradi et al., | 24 PTSD 25 HC | Road traffic or personal violence events | M&F | Positive, negative, neutral words | Free recall and recognition task | |
| Nicholson et al., | 18 PTSD 20 TE 20 HC | Varied | M&F | Negative, neutral and positive pictures stimuli | Delayed memory free recall task after two days | Negative /positive and neutral |
| Patel et al., | 11 PTSD 11 TE | Varied | M&F | Negative arousing, negative non-arousing, positive arousing, positive non-arousing and neutral pictures | Memory recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = TE |
| Tapia et al., | 15 PTSD 15 HC 15 A&D | Varied | M&F | Positive, negative, neutral words | Recognition task with RKG paradigm | PTSD = other groups, but PTSD/HC were more likely to “remember” negative words than to “know” it |
| Thomaes et al., | 30 PTSD 25 HC | Childhood sexual and/or physical abuse | F | Neutral and negative words | Declarative memory recognition task | Negative/neutral: PTSD = HC; PTSD: False alarm to negative words (trend) |
| Vrana et al., | 42 PTSD 15 TE | Vietnam War trauma | M | Vietnam War-related words with neutral and negative meaning, general negative words and neutral words | Emotional Stroop task following by a free recall then a recognition task | |
| Whalley et al., | 16 PTSD 16 TE 16 D | Varied | M&F | Pictures of object superimposed on an emotional background context non trauma- related | Visual memory recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = control |
| Zeitlin and McNally, | 24 PTSD 24 TE | Vietnam combat veteran | M | Negative (combat, social threat), positif and neutral words | Word completion task (implicit memory), cued recall (explicit memory) | |
| Zoellner et al., | 28 PTSD 28 HC | Sexual/nonsexual assault | F | Negative threat-related, positive, and neutral words | Item-cued directed forgetting task with mood induction following by free recall and recognition task | Emotional/neutral: PTSD = HC |
PTSD, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders patients; PTSD–, PTSD with attentional deficit; PTSD+, PTSD with similar or superior attentional abilities to healthy participants; TE, Trauma-Exposed participants; HC, Healthy control participants; D, Depressed participants; Psy, patients with varied psychiatric diseases; A&D, patients with anxiety and depression disorders; NR, Not Reported; F, Female; M, Male; FA, False alarms; “Emotional/neutral”: when we compare recall of emotional stimuli to the recall of neutral stimuli.
Risk of bias.
| Baumann et al., | HC | Age, sex, country of origin | NR | No/Yes | NR | 4 PTSD and 1 HC (low performance) | NR | Yes |
| Bremner et al., | HC | Sex, age, YoE, IQ | Free of all medications | No/No | NR | NR | NR | No |
| Brohawn et al., | TE | Age, YoE | Free of psychotropic medication | No/No | 2 PTSD for imaging, 1 PTSD for memory test | 3 TE (low performance) | NR | No |
| Chemtob et al., | TE, HC, Psy | Trauma type, YoE, ethnicity | NR | No/Yes | only 76 participants completed the word-recall phase of the experiment. | NR | NR | Yes |
| Golier et al., | TE, HC | Age, sex, the age at time of trauma | NR | No/No | NR | NR | NR | No |
| Guillery-Girard et al., | HC | Age, attentional capacities | Free of psychotropic medication | No/Yes | 4 HC (results were not recorded) | 2 HC (low performance) | NR | No |
| Herzog et al., | TE HC | Age, sex, YoE, handedness | In PTSD group | No/Yes | NR | NR | NR | Yes |
| McNally et al., | TE, HC | Age, trauma type | NR | No/Yes | Missing data in demographic and psychometric data | NR | NR | NR |
| Mickley Steinmetz et al., | TE HC | Age, sex, YoE, age at time of trauma, time since trauma | NR | No/No | 3 participants (failure to complete the second part of the study) | NR | NR | No |
| Moradi et al., | HC | Age, verbal IQ, reading ability | NR | No/Yes | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Nicholson et al., | TE, HC | Sex, trauma type, time since trauma | In PTSD and TE group. | No/No | NR | NR | NR | No |
| Patel et al., | TE | Age, sex, YoE | In PTSD and TE group | No/No | NR | NR | NR | No |
| Tapia et al., | HC, A&D | Age, education level | In PTSD and A&D groups | No/Yes | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Thomaes et al., | HC | Age, sex, handedness | In PTSD group only | No/Yes | 2 PTSD and 4 HC (technical problem), and 1 PTSD (panicked during scanning) | 2 PTSD and 5 HC (too many omissions) | NR | No |
| Vrana et al., | TE | Sex, number of months in combat | In PTSD and TE groups | No/No | Free recall data were not collected for 5 PTSD patients | NR | NR | No |
| Whalley et al., | TE, D | Age, sex, handedness, YoE | NR | No/No | NR | NR | NR | No |
| Zeitlin and McNally, | TE | Trauma type | NR | No/NR | NR | NR | NR | Yes |
| Zoellner et al., | HC | Sex | NR | No/Yes | NR | NR | NR | Yes |
PTSD, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder patients; TE, Trauma-Exposed participants; HC, Healthy Control participants; D, Depressed participants; NR, Not Reported; YoE, Years of Education; IQ, Intelligence Quotient.