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Changes in brain electrical activity after cognitive behavioral therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder in patients injured in motor vehicle accidents

Changes in brain electrical activity after cognitive behavioral therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder in patients injured in motor vehicle accidents
Changes in brain electrical activity after cognitive behavioral therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder in patients injured in motor vehicle accidents
Objective: To explore changes for the first time in neural processing due to effective cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after severe motor vehicle accidents. Recent studies have highlighted the role of right hemisphere activation during withdrawal-related emotions (e.g., anxiety). There has been little research on changes in brain function due to cognitive-behavioral interventions in anxiety disorders.
Methods: We conducted a randomized, controlled trial comparing cognitive-behavioral therapy with an assessment-only Wait-list condition. Spontaneous electroencephalographic activity was recorded from left and right anterior and posterior regions in participants with PTSD/subsyndromal PTSD receiving CBT (n = 17) before and after a CBT program. Wait-list controls (n = 18) were investigated before and after 3 months.
Results: At the pretreatment assessment, a pattern of increased right-sided activation during exposure to a trauma-related picture (relative to a neutral picture) was observed in both CBT and Wait-list participants. At posttreatment, there was a greater reduction of right anterior activation in the CBT group as compared with Wait-list controls. Across both groups, PTSD symptom reduction was significantly positively correlated with a decrease in right anterior activation to the trauma stimulus.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that effective CBT treatment of PTSD may be accompanied by adaptive changes in asymmetrical brain function. Future studies are needed to confirm our findings.
cognitive-behavioral therapy, posttraumatic stress disorder, electroencephalography, alpha, asymmetry
0033-3174
13-19
Rabe, Sirko
4f72049c-7e14-4dc7-b0dd-f1111df18f91
Zöllner, Tanja
c360ade9-d39c-4766-974c-dae3a30ed211
Beauducel, Andrë
03a358aa-45f3-4ba3-8c82-36f6a964ee80
Maercker, Andreas
c8c1b9a1-07e0-4086-8c97-a3c259f33aa6
Karl, Anke
7f091050-641c-4658-a247-785cfd194c3d
Rabe, Sirko
4f72049c-7e14-4dc7-b0dd-f1111df18f91
Zöllner, Tanja
c360ade9-d39c-4766-974c-dae3a30ed211
Beauducel, Andrë
03a358aa-45f3-4ba3-8c82-36f6a964ee80
Maercker, Andreas
c8c1b9a1-07e0-4086-8c97-a3c259f33aa6
Karl, Anke
7f091050-641c-4658-a247-785cfd194c3d

Rabe, Sirko, Zöllner, Tanja, Beauducel, Andrë, Maercker, Andreas and Karl, Anke (2008) Changes in brain electrical activity after cognitive behavioral therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder in patients injured in motor vehicle accidents. Psychosomatic Medicine, 70 (1), 13-19. (doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e31815aa325).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To explore changes for the first time in neural processing due to effective cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after severe motor vehicle accidents. Recent studies have highlighted the role of right hemisphere activation during withdrawal-related emotions (e.g., anxiety). There has been little research on changes in brain function due to cognitive-behavioral interventions in anxiety disorders.
Methods: We conducted a randomized, controlled trial comparing cognitive-behavioral therapy with an assessment-only Wait-list condition. Spontaneous electroencephalographic activity was recorded from left and right anterior and posterior regions in participants with PTSD/subsyndromal PTSD receiving CBT (n = 17) before and after a CBT program. Wait-list controls (n = 18) were investigated before and after 3 months.
Results: At the pretreatment assessment, a pattern of increased right-sided activation during exposure to a trauma-related picture (relative to a neutral picture) was observed in both CBT and Wait-list participants. At posttreatment, there was a greater reduction of right anterior activation in the CBT group as compared with Wait-list controls. Across both groups, PTSD symptom reduction was significantly positively correlated with a decrease in right anterior activation to the trauma stimulus.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that effective CBT treatment of PTSD may be accompanied by adaptive changes in asymmetrical brain function. Future studies are needed to confirm our findings.

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More information

Published date: January 2008
Keywords: cognitive-behavioral therapy, posttraumatic stress disorder, electroencephalography, alpha, asymmetry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 48067
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/48067
ISSN: 0033-3174
PURE UUID: 28b1e366-bf91-43bc-8734-deabfd2e3f5d

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Date deposited: 24 Aug 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:42

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Contributors

Author: Sirko Rabe
Author: Tanja Zöllner
Author: Andrë Beauducel
Author: Andreas Maercker
Author: Anke Karl

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