| Literature DB >> 34657474 |
Teresa López-Castro1, Laura Martin2, Sean Nickley3, Tanya C Saraiya4, Robert D Melara1.
Abstract
The current study examined frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) as a marker of approach- and avoidance-related prefrontal activity in participants with and without trauma exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). We investigated FAA in an inhibitory control paradigm (threatening vs nonthreatening cues) under 2 levels of cognitive demand (baseline: images constant within a block of trials; vs filtering: images varied randomly within a block) in 3 groups of participants: individuals with PTSD (n = 16), exposed to trauma but without PTSD (n = 14), and a control group without PTSD or trauma exposure (n = 15). Under low demand (baseline), both PTSD and trauma-exposed participants exhibited significantly greater relative left than right frontal brain activity (approach) to threatening than to nonthreatening images. Under high demand (filtering), no FAA differences were found between threatening and nonthreatening images, but PTSD participants revealed more relative left than right FAA, whereas trauma-exposed participants showed reduced left relative right FAA. In all conditions, healthy controls exhibited reduced left relative to right FAA and no differences between threatening and nonthreatening images. Study findings suggest dysfunctional prefrontal mechanisms of emotion regulation in PTSD, but adaptive prefrontal regulation in trauma-exposed individuals without PTSD.Entities:
Keywords: Posttraumatic stress disorder; electroencephalography; frontal alpha asymmetry; inhibitory control; prefrontal cortex
Year: 2021 PMID: 34657474 PMCID: PMC9022109 DOI: 10.1177/15500594211046703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin EEG Neurosci ISSN: 1550-0594 Impact factor: 2.046