| Literature DB >> 32914044 |
Michael Sun1, Craig A Marquardt2,3, Seth G Disner2,3, Philip C Burton2, Nicholas D Davenport2,3,4, Shmuel Lissek4, Scott R Sponheim2,3,4.
Abstract
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is often complicated by the after-effects of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). The mixture of brain conditions results in abnormal affective and cognitive functioning, as well as maladaptive behavior. To better understand how brain activity explains cognitive and emotional processes in these conditions, we used an emotional N-back task and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study neural responses in US military veterans after deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Additionally, we sought to examine whether hierarchical dimensional models of maladaptive personality could account for the relationship between combat-related brain conditions and fMRI responses under cognitive and affective challenge. FMRI data, measures of PTSD symptomatology (PTSS), blast-induced mTBI (bmTBI) severity, and maladaptive personality (MMPI-2-RF) were gathered from 93 veterans. Brain regions central to emotion regulation were selected for analysis, and consisted of bilateral amygdala, bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal (dlPFC), and ventromedial prefrontal/subgenual anterior cingulate (vmPFC-sgACC). Cognitive load increased activity in dlPFC and reduced activity in emotional responding brain regions. However, individuals with greater PTSS showed blunted deactivations in bilateral amygdala and vmPFC-sgACC, and weaker responses in right dlPFC. Additionally, we found that elevated emotional/internalizing dysfunction (EID), specifically low positive emotionality (RC2), accounted for PTSS-related changes in bilateral amygdala under increased cognitive load. Findings suggest that PTSS might result in amygdala and vmPFC-sgACC activity resistant to moderation by cognitive demands, reflecting emotion dysregulation despite a need to marshal cognitive resources. Anhedonia may be an important target for interventions that improve the affective and cognitive functioning of individuals with PTSD.Entities:
Keywords: Attention; Emotion regulation; MMPI-2-RF; Posttraumatic stress; Veterans; fMRI
Year: 2020 PMID: 32914044 PMCID: PMC7443821 DOI: 10.1017/pen.2020.10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Personal Neurosci ISSN: 2513-9886
Acronyms and their definitions
| Acronym | Definition |
|---|---|
| DSM-IV-TR | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual IV – Text Revision |
| PTSD | Posttraumatic stress disorder |
| PTSS | Posttraumatic stress symptoms |
| mTBI | Mild traumatic brain injury |
| bmTBI | Blast-induced mild traumatic brain injury |
| fMRI | Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
| ROI | Region of Interest |
| Brain areas | |
| dlPFC | Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex |
| vmPFC-sgACC | Ventromedial prefrontal cortex-subgenual anterior cingulate cortex |
| MMPI-2-RF | Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory 2 Restructured Form |
| Validity Metrics: | |
| L-r | Uncommon virtues |
| K-r | Adjustment validity |
| F-r | Infrequent Responses |
| Fp-r | Infrequency Psychopathology |
| TRIN-r | True Response Inconsistency |
| VRIN-r | Variable Response Inconsistency |
| PSY-5-RF | Personality Psychopathology-Five Scales Restructured Form |
| PSY-5-RF Scales: | |
| NEGE-r | Negative Emotionality/Neuroticism |
| INTR-r | Introversion/Low Positive Emotionality |
| AGGR-r | Aggressiveness |
| DISC-r | Disconstraint |
| PSYC-r | Psychoticism |
| H-O | Higher-Order Scales |
| H-O Scales: | |
| EID | Emotional/Internalizing Dysfunction |
| BXD | Behavioral Dysfunction |
| THD | Thought Dysfunction |
| RC | Restructured Clinical scales |
| RCd | Restructured Clinical Scale for Demoralization |
| RC2 | Restructured Clinical Scale for Low Positive Emotions |
| RC7 | Restructured Clinical Scale for Dysfunctional Negative Emotions |
| RC4 | Restructured Clinical Scale for Antisocial Behavior |
Figure 1.Neuroanatomical framework of emotional regulation with study regions of interest.
Figure 2.Affective N-back task design.
Sample statistics of CAPS and MN-BEST scores (N = 93)
| Mean (SD) | Observed range | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
|
| 7.55 (7.10) | 0–26 |
|
| 2.95 (3.54) | 0–15 |
|
| 13.72 (10.82) | 0–41 |
|
| 5.51 (3.64) | 0–14 |
|
| 29.72 (21.04) | 0–85 |
|
| ||
|
| 81.49 (26.38) | 26–133 |
|
| 1.97 (2.28) | 0–9 |
|
| 1.17 (1.89) | 0–8 |
Note: asubset of individuals exposed to an explosive blast (n = 49); CAPS: Clinician Administered PTSD Scale, MN-BEST: Minnesota Blast Exposure Screening Tool
Model 1 Estimates of task effects by region of interest
| Fixed effects | Left Amygdala | Right Amygdala | Left dlPFC | Right dlPFC | vmPFC-sgACC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Load / intercept | |||||
| 0-back neutral | .307** | .339*** | −.257*** | −.329*** | .438*** |
| Cognitive Load | |||||
| 2-back neutral | −.717*** | −.761*** | .538*** | .699*** | −.879*** |
| Affect | |||||
| 0-back combat | .272** | .199* | −.011 | −.055 | .134* |
| Cognitive Load * Affect | |||||
| 2-back combat | −.337** | −.232† | −.025 | .030 | −.264** |
Note: Standardized beta values are displayed. 372 observations. † p < .10. *p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001. vmPFC = ventromedial prefrontal cortex, sgACC = subgenual anterior cingulate cortex, dlPFC = dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
Figure 3.Model 2: PTSS and bilateral amygdala activity effects.
Figure 4.Statistical model effects.