An Electroencephalography Connectomic Profile of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Autor: | Kamron Sarhadi, Duna Abu-Amara, Russell T. Toll, Amit Etkin, Manjari Narayan, Kasra Sarhadi, Yu Zhang, Rachael Wright, Emmanuel Shpigel, Carena A. Cornelssen, Charles R. Marmar, Roland Hart, Carlo de los Angeles, Nicole Anicetti, Wei Wu, Parker Longwell, Sharon Naparstek, Bryan Gonzalez, Brian Patenaude, Silas Mann, Jennifer Newman |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Electroencephalography Stress Disorders Post-Traumatic Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Power envelope Neuroimaging Connectome medicine Humans Veterans medicine.diagnostic_test Functional connectivity Brain Cognition 030227 psychiatry Psychiatry and Mental health Posttraumatic stress Case-Control Studies Female Nerve Net Psychology Neuroscience 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Psychiatry. 177:233-243 |
ISSN: | 1535-7228 0002-953X |
Popis: | The authors sought to identify brain regions whose frequency-specific, orthogonalized resting-state EEG power envelope connectivity differs between combat veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and healthy combat-exposed veterans, and to determine the behavioral correlates of connectomic differences.The authors first conducted a connectivity method validation study in healthy control subjects (N=36). They then conducted a two-site case-control study of veterans with and without PTSD who were deployed to Iraq and/or Afghanistan. Healthy individuals (N=95) and those meeting full or subthreshold criteria for PTSD (N=106) underwent 64-channel resting EEG (eyes open and closed), which was then source-localized and orthogonalized to mitigate effects of volume conduction. Correlation coefficients between band-limited source-space power envelopes of different regions of interest were then calculated and corrected for multiple comparisons. Post hoc correlations of connectomic abnormalities with clinical features and performance on cognitive tasks were conducted to investigate the relevance of the dysconnectivity findings.Seventy-four brain region connections were significantly reduced in PTSD (all in the eyes-open condition and predominantly using the theta carrier frequency). Underconnectivity of the orbital and anterior middle frontal gyri were most prominent. Performance differences in the digit span task mapped onto connectivity between 25 of the 74 brain region pairs, including within-network connections in the dorsal attention, frontoparietal control, and ventral attention networks.Robust PTSD-related abnormalities were evident in theta-band source-space orthogonalized power envelope connectivity, which furthermore related to cognitive deficits in these patients. These findings establish a clinically relevant connectomic profile of PTSD using a tool that facilitates the lower-cost clinical translation of network connectivity research. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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