Wolf Erika J, Sadeh Naomi, Leritz Elizabeth C, Logue Mark W, Stoop Tawni B, McGlinchey Regina, Milberg William, Miller Mark W
National Center for PTSD, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Psychiatry, Boston, Massachusetts.
National Center for PTSD, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Psychiatry, Boston, Massachusetts.
Biol Psychiatry. 2016 Sep 1;80(5):363-71. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2015.11.023. Epub 2015 Dec 8.
Metabolic syndrome (MetS), defined by a constellation of cardiometabolic pathologies, is highly prevalent among veterans, especially veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and poses a major risk for adverse health outcomes, including neurodegeneration and mortality. Given this, we evaluated 1) the association between MetS and neural integrity, indexed by cortical thickness; 2) the relationship between PTSD and MetS; and 3) whether PTSD was associated with cortical thickness indirectly through MetS.
The sample consisted of 346 U.S. military veterans (89.3% male; 71.4% white) who deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan, or both. Neuroimaging data were available for 274 participants.
In whole-brain analyses, MetS was negatively associated with cortical thickness in two left and four right hemisphere regions, as follows: bilateral temporal lobe, including temporal pole, fusiform gyrus, and insula, and extending into occipital cortex (left hemisphere) and orbitofrontal cortex (right hemisphere); bilateral precuneus, posterior cingulate, calcarine, and occipital-parietal cortex; and right rostral anterior cingulate cortex and central sulcus/postcentral gyrus. Path models showed that PTSD predicted MetS (β = .19, p < .001), which was associated with reduced cortical thickness (β = -.29 to -.43, all p < .001).
Results from this young veteran sample provide evidence that PTSD confers risk for cardiometabolic pathology and neurodegeneration and raise concern that this cohort may be aging prematurely and at risk for substantial medical and cognitive decline. This study highlights the need to identify the molecular mechanisms linking PTSD to MetS and effective interventions to reduce PTSD-related health comorbidities.
代谢综合征(MetS)由一系列心脏代谢病理特征所定义,在退伍军人中高度流行,尤其是患有创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的退伍军人,并且对包括神经退行性变和死亡在内的不良健康结局构成重大风险。鉴于此,我们评估了:1)以皮质厚度为指标的MetS与神经完整性之间的关联;2)PTSD与MetS之间的关系;3)PTSD是否通过MetS间接与皮质厚度相关。
样本包括346名部署到伊拉克、阿富汗或两地的美国退伍军人(89.3%为男性;71.4%为白人)。274名参与者有神经影像学数据。
在全脑分析中,MetS与左脑两个区域和右脑四个区域的皮质厚度呈负相关,具体如下:双侧颞叶,包括颞极、梭状回和脑岛,并延伸至枕叶皮质(左脑半球)和眶额皮质(右脑半球);双侧楔前叶、后扣带回、距状裂和枕顶叶皮质;以及右脑喙前扣带回皮质和中央沟/中央后回。路径模型显示,PTSD可预测MetS(β = 0.19,p < 0.001),而MetS与皮质厚度降低相关(β = -0.29至-0.43,均p < 0.001)。
这个年轻退伍军人样本的结果表明,PTSD会增加患心脏代谢疾病和神经退行性变的风险,并引发人们对这一群体可能过早衰老以及面临重大医学和认知衰退风险的担忧。这项研究强调了识别将PTSD与MetS联系起来的分子机制以及有效干预措施以减少与PTSD相关的健康合并症的必要性。