Mišić Bratislav, Dunkley Benjamin T, Sedge Paul A, Da Costa Leodante, Fatima Zainab, Berman Marc G, Doesburg Sam M, McIntosh Anthony R, Grodecki Richard, Jetly Rakesh, Pang Elizabeth W, Taylor Margot J
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405,
Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1X8, Canada.
J Neurosci. 2016 Jan 13;36(2):419-31. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1506-15.2016.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder arising from exposure to a traumatic event. Although primarily defined in terms of behavioral symptoms, the global neurophysiological effects of traumatic stress are increasingly recognized as a critical facet of the human PTSD phenotype. Here we use magnetoencephalographic recordings to investigate two aspects of information processing: inter-regional communication (measured by functional connectivity) and the dynamic range of neural activity (measured in terms of local signal variability). We find that both measures differentiate soldiers diagnosed with PTSD from soldiers without PTSD, from healthy civilians, and from civilians with mild traumatic brain injury, which is commonly comorbid with PTSD. Specifically, soldiers with PTSD display inter-regional hypersynchrony at high frequencies (80-150 Hz), as well as a concomitant decrease in signal variability. The two patterns are spatially correlated and most pronounced in a left temporal subnetwork, including the hippocampus and amygdala. We hypothesize that the observed hypersynchrony may effectively constrain the expression of local dynamics, resulting in less variable activity and a reduced dynamic repertoire. Thus, the re-experiencing phenomena and affective sequelae in combat-related PTSD may result from functional networks becoming "stuck" in configurations reflecting memories, emotions, and thoughts originating from the traumatizing experience.
The present study investigates the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in combat-exposed soldiers. We find that soldiers with PTSD exhibit hypersynchrony in a circuit of temporal lobe areas associated with learning and memory function. This rigid functional architecture is associated with a decrease in signal variability in the same areas, suggesting that the observed hypersynchrony may constrain the expression of local dynamics, resulting in a reduced dynamic range. Our findings suggest that the re-experiencing of traumatic events in PTSD may result from functional networks becoming locked in configurations that reflect memories, emotions, and thoughts associated with the traumatic experience.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是一种因暴露于创伤性事件而引发的焦虑症。尽管主要根据行为症状来定义,但创伤应激的全球神经生理效应越来越被认为是人类PTSD表型的一个关键方面。在此,我们使用脑磁图记录来研究信息处理的两个方面:区域间通信(通过功能连接性测量)和神经活动的动态范围(根据局部信号变异性测量)。我们发现,这两种测量方法都能将被诊断患有PTSD的士兵与未患PTSD的士兵、健康平民以及患有轻度创伤性脑损伤(通常与PTSD共病)的平民区分开来。具体而言,患有PTSD的士兵在高频(80 - 150赫兹)时表现出区域间超同步,同时信号变异性也随之降低。这两种模式在空间上相关,且在包括海马体和杏仁核的左侧颞叶子网中最为明显。我们推测,观察到的超同步可能有效地限制了局部动态的表达,导致活动变异性降低和动态范围减小。因此,与战斗相关的PTSD中的重现现象和情感后遗症可能是由于功能网络“陷入”反映创伤经历中的记忆、情感和思想的配置中所致。
本研究调查了战斗暴露士兵中创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的影响。我们发现,患有PTSD的士兵在与学习和记忆功能相关的颞叶区域回路中表现出超同步。这种僵化的功能结构与相同区域的信号变异性降低有关,表明观察到的超同步可能限制了局部动态的表达,导致动态范围减小。我们的研究结果表明,PTSD中创伤事件的重现可能是由于功能网络锁定在反映与创伤经历相关的记忆、情感和思想的配置中所致。