Title: PTSD: Neurobiology
1PTSD Neurobiology
2Neurophysiologic Alterations in PTSD
- Stress hormone systems - adrenal gland
- Sympatho-adrenomedullary
- Hypothlamic-pituitary-adrenal
- Neurotransmitter systems
- Thyroid
- Immune system
- Amygdala hyperactivity fear and anger
- Hippocampal volume loss memory deficits
- Anterior cingulate emotional clutch
3Adrenergic Alterations
- Exaggerated increases in cardiovascular responses
to trauma-specific stimuli - Increased catecholamines in urine, plasma, CSF
- Decreased platelet a-2 receptors
- Yohimbine induced panic attacks
4HPA Axis Alterations
PTSD Major Depression
Cortisol levels
Low High Glucocorticoid receptors
Increased Decreased Dexamethasone
Hypersuppression Nonsuppression Negat
ive feedback Stronger
Weaker CSF CRF levels Increased
Increased
5 Hypothalamus
CRF
Posterior Pituitary
Anterior Pituitary
ACTH
PTSD
Adrenal
Norepinephrine ? Cortisol ?
Kidney
6Stress Hormone Systems
- Norepinephrine revving up hormone
- Cortisol quieting down hormone
- Both hormones are released in response to stress.
They are normally in balance.
7LeDoux, Scientific American, 1994
8Hiker and Snake
- Immediate response
- - Fight or flight
- - Quick and dirty
- Delayed response
- - Recognition, planning
- - Slow and accurate
9SENSORY CORTEX
High Road
SENSORY THALAMUS
AMYGDALA
Low Road
EMOTIONAL STIMULUS
EMOTIONAL RESPONSES
10Why do I get so angry?Whats wrong with my
memory?
- Amygdala
- Reptile brain, dinosaur brain
- Emotional response
- Fear, anger, fight or flight
- Frontal lobe
- Executive function
- Cognitive response
- Working memory, attention, carrying out tasks
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13Battlemind
- In a dangerous situation you dont want to sit
around and think. You want to act immediately
using your amygdala and bypassing your frontal
lobe. - In PTSD the brain acts like you are in a
dangerous situation all the time. The amygdala is
hyperactive and the frontal lobe functions
poorly. - Anger and poor concentration are related. They
are both part of hyperarousal.
14Neuroimaging in PTSD
- Amygdala hyperactivity, responsivity
is associated with PTSD symptom severity - Frontal cortex volume loss, responsivity is
inversely associated with PTSD symptom severity - Hippocampus volume loss, decreased neuronal
and functional integrity
15Anterior cingulate cortex
- Interprets emotional stimuli and processes
responses - Sympathetic ANS accelerator
- Parasympathetic ANS brakes
- Anterior cingulate clutch
16Anterior cingulate in PTSD
- Emotional Counting Stroop paradigm (pressing
buttons) - Blood oxygenation measured by fMRI
- Recruitment of anterior cingulate increased when
counting combat-related words only in controls
and not in PTSD subjects - - Shin et al, Biol Psychiatry 2001
17Speechless Terror
- Suppression of Brocas area during traumatic
reexperiencing (Rauch et al.) - Construction of narrative promotes reencoding of
traumatic memories - Subcortical memories - somatosensory
- Cortical memories verbal, symbolic
18Failure of Extinction in PTSD
- Extinction Decrease in conditioned response
due to nonreinforcement - PTSD
- Inability to extinguish conditioned fear
responses - Inability to distinguish between dangerous and
safe situations
19Extinction is an Active Cortical Process
- Cortical ablation studies LeDoux
- Acquisition of conditioned fear responses
requires only subcortical structures - Cortical ablation greatly prolongs or prevents
extinction of fear responses - Indelibility of subcortical emotional memories
20Coordination of Threat Response
Sights Sounds
Medial Prefrontal Cortex Anterior Cingulate Cortex
_
AMYGDALA
Thalamus
Hippocampus
_
Smells
Coordinated Response
21Salient Features of PTSD
- Hyperresponsiveness to stimuli that are reminders
of the trauma - ? Amygdalar hyperactivity
- Overgeneralization of stimuli
- ? Hippocampal dysfunction
- Anger dyscontrol, Failure of extinction
- ? Medial prefrontal cortex dysfunction
22Individual Differences in a Husband and Wife Who
Developed PTSD After a Motor Vehicle Accident A
Functional MRI Case Study
Lanius RA, Hopper JW, Menon RS.
Am J Psychiatry 1604, April 2003 667-669
Both subjects were trapped in their car
for several minutes, during which they witnessed
a child burn to death and feared that they
too would die.
23Trauma Response - Husband
- Extremely aroused, actively involved in rescue
broke windshield - Nightmares and flashbacks started next day, often
felt as if accident were recurring - Psychological and physiological arousal when
thinking or talking about accident - Severely impaired, unable to function at work
24Trauma Response - Wife
- Felt in shock, frozen
- Nightmares and flashbacks started next day, often
felt as if accident were recurring - Reexperiencing involved feeling numb and frozen
- Severely impaired, unable to function at work
- H/O early parental loss, postpartum depression,
mild panic disorder
25Script-Driven Imagery - Husband
- Intense anxiety, arousal, escape-focused
cognitions - Increased heart rate
- Increased activation of multiple regions
including anterior frontal, anterior cingulate,
thalamus, amygdala - Exposure therapy x 6 mos - No PTSD
26Script-Driven Imagery - Wife
- Felt extremely numb and frozen
- No increase in heart rate
- Increased activation only in occipital region
- Exposure therapy x 6 mos - Still had PTSD
27Functional MRI Responses to Traumatic Imagery
Husband
Wife
28PTSD Treatment
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30Treatment Components
- Coping skills
- Medication
- Psychotherapy
- Alternative therapies
31Institute of Medicine
- scientific evidence on treatment modalities
for PTSD does not reach the level of certainty
that would be desired for such a common and
serious condition among veterans additional high
quality research is essential for every treatment
modality.
32- Treating people with PTSD is challenging and
rewarding. Success requires creativity,
flexibility, compassion, and clinical skill. - Be aware of secondary traumatization.
33Sri Lanka
34Dream Bubbles of Smoke and Blood Ray-Paul
Nielsen
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36When to Refer for Specialized Psychiatric Care
- Medication failures or side effects
- Suicidal or homicidal ideation
- Comorbid psychiatric problems including substance
abuse - Other life stressors, limited social support
37Basic Skills
- Relaxation, meditation, mindfulness training,
coping skills training, anger management,
grounding, etc. - Tolerate negative emotion
- Use social support
- Calm/soothe self
- Moderate self-loathing
- Control destructive impulses (self-harm,
violence, substance abuse) - Articulate feelings
- Maintain hope
38Approach to Medication Treatment
- ? Literature extremely limited, few controlled
trials - ? No specific agent for PTSD
- ? Treat prominent symptoms
- ? Treat comorbidity
39Therapeutic Relationship
- ? Common barriers to alliance
- problems with authority, feelings of
powerlessness, fear of being exploited - intense mistrust and/or isolation
- ? Support concurrent psychotherapy
- ? Initial pharmacotherapy may allow later
psychotherapy and vice versa
40Explore the Meaning of Medication
- ? Defective, weak, or damaged self
- ? Drugging or numbing dont want to listen to
complaints - ? Failure in psychotherapy
- ? Unrealistic wish for med to erase traumatic
event - Â
- gt Assess fears and fantasies as you monitor
benefits and side effects
41Symptomatic Treatment
- Inventory all symptoms
- Identify target symptoms for a given medication
- Focus initial therapy on one or two most
distressing symptoms - Often significant resistance to improvement, e.g.
hypervigilance
42Psychoeducation and Control Issues
- Give patient (and family) information
- handouts, internet
- spark of recognition
- Give the patient control
- titration decisions
- meds like trazodone, hydroxyzine useful in this
regard
43SSRIs
- Sertraline (Zoloft), Paroxetine (Paxil),
Fluoxetine (Prozac), Citalopram (Celexa) - All 3 symptom clusters may respond
- Sexual dysfunction
- Arousal - Jitteriness
- Nausea, diarrhea, headache, insomnia
44Other Antidepressants
- Nefazodone (Serzone)
- lower sexual dysfunction, liver toxicity?
- Venlafaxine (Effexor)
- dual mechanism of action
- Mirtazapine (Remeron)
- sedation, weight gain
- Buproprion (Wellbutrin)
- activation, increased energy, smoking cessation
- Tricyclic Antidepressants Amitriptyline,
Nortriptyline, Desipramine, Imipramine - chronic pain, many side effects
45Benzodiazepines Anxiety and Sleep
- Alprazolam (Xanax) - short acting
- Clonazepam (Klonopin) - long acting
- Lorazepam (Ativan)
- Diazepam (Valium)
- Temazepam (Restoril) - sleep
- Chlordiazepoxide (Librium) alcohol withdrawal
- GABAA receptor binding and potentiation
- Caution - high addiction potential
46Trazodone and Hydroxyzine
- Trazodone (Desyrel) - 50-200 mg for sleep, 25-100
for anxiety - Hydroxyzine (Vistaril, Atarax) - 25-100 mg for
sleep and anxiety, also Diphenhydramine (Benadryl)
47Newer Sleep Agents
- Zolpidem (Ambien)
- Zaleplon (Sonata)
- Eszopiclone (Lunesta)
- Different binding site on GABAA receptor
- Less addictive, expensive
48Anticonvulsants
- Valproic Acid, Divalproex (Depakote)
- Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
- Lamotrigine (Lamictal)
- Anger, moodswings, violent behavior
- Comorbid bipolar disorder
- Antidepressant augmentation
49Antipsychotics
- Risperidone (Risperdal), Olanzapine (Zyprexa),
Ziprasidone (Geodon), Quetiapine (Seroquel),
Aripiprazole (Abilify) - Psychotic symptoms including prominent
hallucinations, paranoia - Affective instability (Borderline PD)
- Antidepressant augmentation
50Prazosin for Nightmares
- Alpha-1 adrenergic antagonist commonly used to
treat high blood pressure and enlarged prostate - Lipid soluble crosses blood-brain barrier
- Slow titration
- Orthostatic dizziness, including first dose
effect - Headache, nausea, congestion, tachycardia
51Approach to Psychotherapy
- Three stages safety, remembering, reconnection
- Education about trauma and PTSD
- Normalization and validation
- Relieve irrational guilt
- Determine ability to tolerate memories without
decompensation or intolerable self-loathing - Group therapy
- Evidence-based therapy
52Effective Therapies
- Exposure Therapy Desensitization
- Cognitive Therapy Dysfunctional beliefs and
behaviors
53Therapy for Fear/Anxiety Problems
AMYGDALA
thought
extinction
AMYGDALA
DRUGS
side effects
(After LeDoux)
54VA Therapeutic Menu
- Cognitive Behavioral Skills (CBT)
- Prolonged Exposure (PE)
- Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
- Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing
(EMDR) - Addictions Treatment
- Behavioral Activation
- Interpersonal Skills
- Imagery Rehearsal Therapy
- Sleep Improvement
- Mindfulness
- Wellness (Diet, Exercise, Smoking Cessation)
- Work Readiness
- Life Transitions
55Alternative therapies
- Art therapy
- Somatic therapies/bodywork
- Acupuncture
- Yoga
- Tai Chi
- Religious/spiritual practices
- Virtual reality
56Traditional Sweat Lodge
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58D-Cycloserine
- Extinction is an active cortical process
requires learning Joseph LeDoux - NMDA receptor mediated calcium influx underlies
learning and memory - NMDA receptor agonist at the glycine site,
potentiates neurotransmission, facilitates
extinction of conditioned fear - Increases effectiveness of treatment when paired
with exposure therapy. - Drug development company Mike Davis
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