Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder

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Standard

Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder. / Meteran, Hanieh; Vindbjerg, Erik; Uldall, Sigurd Wiingaard; Glenthoj, Birte; Carlsson, Jessica; Oranje, Bob.

I: Psychological Medicine, Bind 49, Nr. 4, 2019, s. 581-589.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Meteran, H, Vindbjerg, E, Uldall, SW, Glenthoj, B, Carlsson, J & Oranje, B 2019, 'Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder', Psychological Medicine, bind 49, nr. 4, s. 581-589. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329171800123X

APA

Meteran, H., Vindbjerg, E., Uldall, S. W., Glenthoj, B., Carlsson, J., & Oranje, B. (2019). Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder. Psychological Medicine, 49(4), 581-589. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329171800123X

Vancouver

Meteran H, Vindbjerg E, Uldall SW, Glenthoj B, Carlsson J, Oranje B. Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder. Psychological Medicine. 2019;49(4):581-589. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329171800123X

Author

Meteran, Hanieh ; Vindbjerg, Erik ; Uldall, Sigurd Wiingaard ; Glenthoj, Birte ; Carlsson, Jessica ; Oranje, Bob. / Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder. I: Psychological Medicine. 2019 ; Bind 49, Nr. 4. s. 581-589.

Bibtex

@article{28d427bd72df453ba39734386a88f896,
title = "Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder",
abstract = "Background Impairments in mechanisms underlying early information processing have been reported in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, findings in the existing literature are inconsistent. This current study capitalizes on technological advancements of research on electroencephalographic event-related potential and applies it to a novel PTSD population consisting of trauma-affected refugees.Methods A total of 25 trauma-affected refugees with PTSD and 20 healthy refugee controls matched on age, gender, and country of origin completed the study. In two distinct auditory paradigms sensory gating, indexed as P50 suppression, and sensorimotor gating, indexed as prepulse inhibition (PPI), startle reactivity, and habituation of the eye-blink startle response were examined. Within the P50 paradigm, N100 and P200 amplitudes were also assessed. In addition, correlations between psychophysiological and clinical measures were investigated.Results PTSD patients demonstrated significantly elevated stimuli responses across the two paradigms, reflected in both increased amplitude of the eye-blink startle response, and increased N100 and P200 amplitudes relative to healthy refugee controls. We found a trend toward reduced habituation in the patients, while the groups did not differ in PPI and P50 suppression. Among correlations, we found that eye-blink startle responses were associated with higher overall illness severity and lower levels of functioning.Conclusions Fundamental gating mechanisms appeared intact, while the pattern of deficits in trauma-affected refugees with PTSD point toward a different form of sensory overload, an overall neural hypersensitivity and disrupted the ability to down-regulate stimuli responses. This study represents an initial step toward elucidating sensory processing deficits in a PTSD subgroup.",
keywords = "Evoked potentials, habituation, posttraumatic stress disorder, psychophysiology, refugees, sensorimotor gating, sensory gating",
author = "Hanieh Meteran and Erik Vindbjerg and Uldall, {Sigurd Wiingaard} and Birte Glenthoj and Jessica Carlsson and Bob Oranje",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1017/S003329171800123X",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
pages = "581--589",
journal = "Psychological Medicine",
issn = "0033-2917",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Startle habituation, sensory, and sensorimotor gating in trauma-affected refugees with posttraumatic stress disorder

AU - Meteran, Hanieh

AU - Vindbjerg, Erik

AU - Uldall, Sigurd Wiingaard

AU - Glenthoj, Birte

AU - Carlsson, Jessica

AU - Oranje, Bob

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Background Impairments in mechanisms underlying early information processing have been reported in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, findings in the existing literature are inconsistent. This current study capitalizes on technological advancements of research on electroencephalographic event-related potential and applies it to a novel PTSD population consisting of trauma-affected refugees.Methods A total of 25 trauma-affected refugees with PTSD and 20 healthy refugee controls matched on age, gender, and country of origin completed the study. In two distinct auditory paradigms sensory gating, indexed as P50 suppression, and sensorimotor gating, indexed as prepulse inhibition (PPI), startle reactivity, and habituation of the eye-blink startle response were examined. Within the P50 paradigm, N100 and P200 amplitudes were also assessed. In addition, correlations between psychophysiological and clinical measures were investigated.Results PTSD patients demonstrated significantly elevated stimuli responses across the two paradigms, reflected in both increased amplitude of the eye-blink startle response, and increased N100 and P200 amplitudes relative to healthy refugee controls. We found a trend toward reduced habituation in the patients, while the groups did not differ in PPI and P50 suppression. Among correlations, we found that eye-blink startle responses were associated with higher overall illness severity and lower levels of functioning.Conclusions Fundamental gating mechanisms appeared intact, while the pattern of deficits in trauma-affected refugees with PTSD point toward a different form of sensory overload, an overall neural hypersensitivity and disrupted the ability to down-regulate stimuli responses. This study represents an initial step toward elucidating sensory processing deficits in a PTSD subgroup.

AB - Background Impairments in mechanisms underlying early information processing have been reported in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, findings in the existing literature are inconsistent. This current study capitalizes on technological advancements of research on electroencephalographic event-related potential and applies it to a novel PTSD population consisting of trauma-affected refugees.Methods A total of 25 trauma-affected refugees with PTSD and 20 healthy refugee controls matched on age, gender, and country of origin completed the study. In two distinct auditory paradigms sensory gating, indexed as P50 suppression, and sensorimotor gating, indexed as prepulse inhibition (PPI), startle reactivity, and habituation of the eye-blink startle response were examined. Within the P50 paradigm, N100 and P200 amplitudes were also assessed. In addition, correlations between psychophysiological and clinical measures were investigated.Results PTSD patients demonstrated significantly elevated stimuli responses across the two paradigms, reflected in both increased amplitude of the eye-blink startle response, and increased N100 and P200 amplitudes relative to healthy refugee controls. We found a trend toward reduced habituation in the patients, while the groups did not differ in PPI and P50 suppression. Among correlations, we found that eye-blink startle responses were associated with higher overall illness severity and lower levels of functioning.Conclusions Fundamental gating mechanisms appeared intact, while the pattern of deficits in trauma-affected refugees with PTSD point toward a different form of sensory overload, an overall neural hypersensitivity and disrupted the ability to down-regulate stimuli responses. This study represents an initial step toward elucidating sensory processing deficits in a PTSD subgroup.

KW - Evoked potentials

KW - habituation

KW - posttraumatic stress disorder

KW - psychophysiology

KW - refugees

KW - sensorimotor gating

KW - sensory gating

U2 - 10.1017/S003329171800123X

DO - 10.1017/S003329171800123X

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29769152

AN - SCOPUS:85047127302

VL - 49

SP - 581

EP - 589

JO - Psychological Medicine

JF - Psychological Medicine

SN - 0033-2917

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 238438210