Neural affective mechanisms associated with treatment responsiveness in veterans with PTSD and comorbid alcohol use disorder

•Anticipatory reactivity to trauma cues is high in comorbid PTSD and alcohol use.•This affective hyperactivation may be reduced by cognitive-behavioral treatments.•After treatment, anticipatory activity changed in two salience network regions.•These activation changes were positively related to PTSD...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging 2020-11, Vol.305, p.111172-111172, Article 111172
Hauptverfasser: Harlé, Katia M., Simmons, Alan N., Norman, Sonya B., Spadoni, Andrea D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Anticipatory reactivity to trauma cues is high in comorbid PTSD and alcohol use.•This affective hyperactivation may be reduced by cognitive-behavioral treatments.•After treatment, anticipatory activity changed in two salience network regions.•These activation changes were positively related to PTSD symptom severity change.•Treatment (exposure vs non-exposure) was not additionally related to neural changes. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with neuro-physiological abnormalities reflecting increased anticipatory anxiety and reactivity to traumatic cues. It remains unclear whether neural mechanisms associated with PTSD treatment responsiveness, i.e. hyperactivation of the affective salience network in the brain, extend to a comorbid PTSD and substance use disorder population. Thirty-one Veterans with PTSD and co-occurring alcohol use disorder (AUD) were randomly assigned to either prolonged exposure or a non-exposure based treatment. They completed an affective anticipation task while undergoing fMRI, immediately prior and after completing treatment. After controlling for type and length of treatment, larger reduction of PTSD symptoms was associated with decreased anticipatory activation to negative trauma-related cues in the right pre-Supplementary Motor Area (pre-SMA), a region associated with emotion regulation. Smaller reduction in PTSD severity was associated with enhanced anticipatory activation to those cues within the right para-hippocampal region, an affective processing region. Our findings suggest that post-treatment reductions in anticipatory reactivity to trauma-related cues in the pre-SMA and para-hippocampal area are associated with larger PTSD symptom reduction in individuals with co-occurring PTSD and AUD. These results may offer neurofeedback training targets as an alternative to or enhancement of other PTSD treatment modalities in this population.
ISSN:0925-4927
1872-7506
DOI:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2020.111172