Department of Psychiatry, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Psychology, The New School, New York, New York.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2017 Oct;38(10):4898-4907. doi: 10.1002/hbm.23702. Epub 2017 Jul 17.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by dysregulated arousal and altered cardiac autonomic response as evidenced by decreased high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV), an indirect measure of parasympathetic modulation of the heart. Indeed, subtle threatening cues can cause autonomic dysregulation, even without explicit awareness of the triggering stimulus. Accordingly, examining the neural underpinnings associated with HF-HRV during both sub- and supraliminal exposure to trauma-related cues is critical to an enhanced understanding of autonomic nervous system dysfunction in PTSD.
We compared neural activity in brain regions associated with HF-HRV in PTSD (n = 18) and healthy controls (n = 18) during exposure to sub- and supraliminal processing of personalized trauma-related words.
As compared to controls, PTSD exhibited decreased HF-HRV reactivity in response to sub- and supraliminal cues. Notably, during subliminal processing of trauma-related versus neutral words, as compared to controls, PTSD showed decreased neural response associated with HF-HRV within the left dorsal anterior insula. By contrast, during supraliminal processing of trauma-related versus neutral words, decreased neural activity associated with HF-HRV within the posterior insula/superior temporal cortex, and increased neural activity associated with HF-HRV within the left centromedial amygdala was observed in PTSD as compared to controls.
Impaired parasympathetic modulation of autonomic arousal in PTSD appears related to altered activation of cortical and subcortical regions involved in the central autonomic network. Interestingly, both sub- and supraliminal trauma-related cues appear to elicit dysregulated arousal and may contribute to the maintenance of hyperarousal in PTSD. Hum Brain Mapp 38:4898-4907, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的特征是觉醒失调和心脏自主反应改变,表现为高频心率变异性(HF-HRV)降低,这是副交感神经对心脏调制的间接测量。事实上,即使没有明确意识到触发刺激,微妙的威胁线索也会引起自主神经失调。因此,在亚阈和超阈水平暴露于与创伤相关的线索时,检查与 HF-HRV 相关的神经基础对于增强对 PTSD 中自主神经系统功能障碍的理解至关重要。
我们比较了 PTSD(n=18)和健康对照组(n=18)在暴露于个性化与创伤相关的词语的亚阈和超阈处理时,与 HF-HRV 相关的大脑区域的神经活动。
与对照组相比,PTSD 在对亚阈和超阈线索的反应中表现出 HF-HRV 反应性降低。值得注意的是,与对照组相比,在对与创伤相关的词语进行潜意识处理时,PTSD 与 HF-HRV 相关的左背侧前岛叶的神经反应降低。相比之下,在超阈处理与创伤相关的词语与中性词语时,与对照组相比,PTSD 中与 HF-HRV 相关的后岛叶/上颞叶皮层的神经活动减少,与 HF-HRV 相关的左中央杏仁核的神经活动增加。
PTSD 中自主觉醒的副交感神经调制受损似乎与涉及中枢自主神经网络的皮质和皮质下区域的激活改变有关。有趣的是,亚阈和超阈的创伤相关线索似乎都会引起失调的觉醒,并可能导致 PTSD 中的过度觉醒持续存在。人类大脑映射 38:4898-4907,2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.