Glenn Daniel E, Acheson Dean T, Geyer Mark A, Nievergelt Caroline M, Baker Dewleen G, Risbrough Victoria B
Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health, San Diego Veterans Affairs Health Services, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, CA, USA.
Depress Anxiety. 2017 Aug;34(8):723-733. doi: 10.1002/da.22642. Epub 2017 May 10.
It is unknown how traumatic brain injury (TBI) increases risk for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). One potential mechanism is via alteration of fear-learning processes that could affect responses to trauma memories and cues. We utilized a prospective, longitudinal design to determine if TBI is associated with altered fear learning and extinction, and if fear processing mediates effects of TBI on PTSD symptom change.
Eight hundred fifty two active-duty Marines and Navy Corpsmen were assessed before and after deployment. Assessments included TBI history, PTSD symptoms, combat trauma and deployment stress, and a fear-potentiated startle task of fear acquisition and extinction. Startle response and self-reported expectancy and anxiety served as measures of fear conditioning, and PTSD symptoms were measured with the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale.
Individuals endorsing "multiple hit" exposure (both deployment TBI and a prior TBI) showed the strongest fear acquisition and highest fear expression compared to groups without multiple hits. Extinction did not differ across groups. Endorsing a deployment TBI was associated with higher anxiety to the fear cue compared to those without deployment TBI. The association of deployment TBI with increased postdeployment PTSD symptoms was mediated by postdeployment fear expression when recent prior-TBI exposure was included as a moderator. TBI associations with increased response to threat cues and PTSD symptoms remained when controlling for deployment trauma and postdeployment PTSD diagnosis.
Deployment TBI, and multiple-hit TBI in particular, are associated with increases in conditioned fear learning and expression that may contribute to risk for developing PTSD symptoms.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)如何增加创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险尚不清楚。一种潜在机制是通过改变恐惧学习过程,这可能会影响对创伤记忆和线索的反应。我们采用前瞻性纵向设计,以确定TBI是否与恐惧学习和消退的改变相关,以及恐惧处理是否介导TBI对PTSD症状变化的影响。
对852名现役海军陆战队队员和海军医护兵在部署前后进行评估。评估内容包括TBI病史、PTSD症状、战斗创伤和部署压力,以及一项用于恐惧获得和消退的恐惧增强惊吓任务。惊吓反应、自我报告的预期和焦虑作为恐惧条件作用的指标,PTSD症状用临床医生管理的PTSD量表进行测量。
与没有多次头部受伤的组相比,认可“多次头部受伤”暴露(部署时的TBI和既往TBI)的个体表现出最强的恐惧获得和最高的恐惧表达。各组之间的消退情况没有差异。与没有部署时TBI的人相比,认可部署时TBI的人对恐惧线索的焦虑更高。当将近期既往TBI暴露作为调节因素时,部署时TBI与部署后PTSD症状增加之间的关联由部署后的恐惧表达介导。在控制部署创伤和部署后PTSD诊断后,TBI与对威胁线索反应增加和PTSD症状之间的关联仍然存在。
部署时的TBI,特别是多次头部受伤的TBI,与条件性恐惧学习和表达的增加相关,这可能导致出现PTSD症状的风险增加。