Turkson Susie, van Rooij Sanne J H, Powers Abigail, Ofotokun Ighovwerha, Norrholm Seth D, N Neigh Gretchen, Jovanovic Tanja, Michopoulos Vasiliki
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Womens Health Rep (New Rochelle). 2024 Mar 12;5(1):231-241. doi: 10.1089/whr.2023.0133. eCollection 2024.
The prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among people living with HIV (PLWH) is higher than in the general population and can impact health behaviors. The influence of HIV on PTSD psychophysiology requires further investigation due to implications for the treatment of PTSD in PLWH.
Utilizing fear-potentiated startle (FPS), we aimed to interrogate the influence of PTSD and HIV on fear responses.
Women (18-65 years of age) recruited from the Women's Interagency HIV Study in Atlanta, GA ( = 70, 26 without HIV and 44 with HIV), provided informed consent and completed a semistructured interview to assess trauma exposure and PTSD symptom severity. Participants also underwent an FPS paradigm to assess fear acquisition and extinction: Psychophysiological indices that measure how individuals learn new fear and then subsequently attempt to suppress this fear.
Women with PTSD, who did not have HIV, exhibited a greater startle response compared to women without PTSD or HIV during late acquisition to both the danger cue, reinforced conditioned stimulus (CS+, = 0.013)), and the safety cue, non-reinforced conditioned stimulus (CS-, = 0.046)), whereas women living with HIV (WLH) and PTSD demonstrated blunted fear responses compared to women with PTSD only. During extinction, WLH comorbid with PTSD exhibited an increased fear response during the extinction period in comparison to all other groups ( = 0.023). Women without PTSD demonstrated a reduction in the fear response during extinction regardless of HIV status.
Our findings indicate that HIV further modifies fear psychophysiology in WLH with comorbid PTSD, highlighting the importance of considering HIV status in conjunction with PTSD treatment.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)在艾滋病毒感染者(PLWH)中的患病率高于普通人群,且会影响健康行为。由于对PLWH中PTSD治疗的影响,艾滋病毒对PTSD心理生理学的影响需要进一步研究。
利用恐惧增强惊吓反应(FPS),我们旨在探究PTSD和艾滋病毒对恐惧反应的影响。
从佐治亚州亚特兰大市的女性机构间艾滋病毒研究中招募的女性(18 - 65岁,n = 70,26名无艾滋病毒,44名有艾滋病毒),提供了知情同意书,并完成了半结构化访谈以评估创伤暴露和PTSD症状严重程度。参与者还接受了FPS范式以评估恐惧习得和消退:测量个体如何学习新恐惧并随后试图抑制这种恐惧的心理生理指标。
无艾滋病毒的PTSD女性在晚期习得阶段对危险线索(强化条件刺激,CS +,p = 0.013)和安全线索(非强化条件刺激,CS -,p = 0.046)的惊吓反应均比无PTSD或艾滋病毒的女性更大,而艾滋病毒感染者(WLH)合并PTSD与仅患有PTSD的女性相比,恐惧反应减弱。在消退阶段,与所有其他组相比,合并PTSD的WLH在消退期表现出增加的恐惧反应(p = 0.023)。无论艾滋病毒感染状况如何,无PTSD的女性在消退期恐惧反应均降低。
我们的研究结果表明,艾滋病毒进一步改变了合并PTSD的WLH的恐惧心理生理学,突出了在PTSD治疗中考虑艾滋病毒感染状况的重要性。