Predeployment Neurocognitive Functioning Predicts Postdeployment Posttraumatic Stress in Army Personnel
Objective: The Fort Campbell Cohort study was designed to assess predeployment biological and behavioral markers and build predictive models to identify risk and resilience for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following deployment. This article addresses neurocognitive functioning variables as p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuropsychology 2020-03, Vol.34 (3), p.276-287 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective: The Fort Campbell Cohort study was designed to assess predeployment biological and behavioral markers and build predictive models to identify risk and resilience for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following deployment. This article addresses neurocognitive functioning variables as potential prospective predictors. Method: In a sample of 403 soldiers, we examined whether PTSD symptom severity (using the PTSD Checklist) as well as posttraumatic stress trajectories could be prospectively predicted by measures of executive functioning (using two web-based tasks from WebNeuro) assessed predeployment. Results: Controlling for age, gender, education, prior number of deployments, childhood trauma exposure, and PTSD symptom severity at Phase 1, linear regression models revealed that predeployment sustained attention and inhibitory control performance were significantly associated with postdeployment PTSD symptom severity. We also identified two posttraumatic stress trajectories utilizing latent growth mixture models. The "resilient" group consisted of 90.9% of the soldiers who exhibited stable low levels of PTSD symptoms from pre- to postdeployment. The "increasing" group consisted of 9.1% of the soldiers, who exhibited an increase in PTSD symptoms following deployment, crossing a threshold for diagnosis based on PTSD Checklist scores. Logistic regression models predicting trajectory revealed a similar pattern of findings as the linear regression models, in which predeployment sustained attention (95% CI of odds ratio: 1.0109, 1.0558) and inhibitory control (95% CI: 1.0011, 1.0074) performance were significantly associated with postdeployment PTSD trajectory. Conclusions: These findings have clinical implications for understanding the pathogenesis of PTSD and building preventative programs for military personnel.
General Scientific Summary
Identifying risk and protective factors for the development of PTSD, particularly in the military, is essential. This prospective longitudinal study identified poorer predeployment inhibitory control and sustained attention as risk factors for the development of PTSD postdeployment. These findings have clinical implications for the development of cognitive resilience prevention programs for military personnel. |
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ISSN: | 0894-4105 1931-1559 |
DOI: | 10.1037/neu0000603 |