Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Psychophysiology of Prolonged Exposure for PTSD With/Without Yohimbine
The proposed study has three distinct but related research objectives. The first goal is to measure physiological correlates of successful treatment with Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Individuals with PTSD often experience elevated heart rates and other objectively measurable signs of anxiety when confronted with safe situations that remind them of past dangerous situations. We will measure physiological responses and compare the outcomes to patient's self reported subjective accounts of symptom improvement on traditional measures of PTSD. Developing a way to measure objective gains in symptoms improvement may help researchers who are studying ways to improve PTSD treatment. The second goal of the study is to investigate if yohimbine, a drug found to promote a specific type of learning, will improve treatment outcomes for veterans in PTSD treatment. The third goal is to investigate if ability to get used to loud startling audio tones correlates to baseline PTSD pathology and treatment outcomes for PE. This goal represents an important step forward in understanding characteristics of heritable traits that are related PTSD. It is significant because such research may one day lead to the development of individual responder policies that will assist patients by individualizing treatment plans based on personal characteristics.
The proposed study has three distinct but related research objectives. The first research
goal is to measure psychophysiological correlates of treatment gains associated with
Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy for PTSD in veterans of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi
Freedom (OEF/OIF). Specifically, heart rate, heart rate variability, skin conductance, and
facial electromyography, will be recorded before and after treatment during a three minute
anxiety probe specific to the patient's index trauma. These measures will be compared to
patient's self reported subjective accounts of symptom improvement on traditional measures of
PTSD pathology (Subjective Units of Distress (SUDs), PTSD Checklist-Military Version (PCL),
Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS), and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)). This goal
is significant for veterans because currently no widely used objective criteria exist to
measure treatment progress in PTSD. While the preponderance of existing evidence suggests
that no one objective psychophysiological measurement will be a valid correlate for all
individuals, even establishing a measurement paradigm that can show mean differences between
groups will provide researchers with an objective tool to measure outcomes on clinical
trials.
The second goal of the study is to investigate if the administration of yohimbine, a drug
found to promote the extinction of conditioned fear in animal models, and more recently, in
humans with claustrophobia, improves the facilitation of fear extinction in PE. Yohimbine is
a safe drug that is already extensively used in human populations. Specifically, this goal
will be investigated using a double blind placebo controlled randomized trial design. The
hypothesis is that one 21mg oral dose of yohimbine given concurrently with a 40 minute
imaginal exposure exercise in PE will lead to a greater reduction in cue-induced anxiety
during the following weekly PE session than placebo. This goal is significant because current
projections of PTSD in OEF/OIF veterans indicate that the need for psychological services
will likely outpace the supply of such services. Accordingly, assisting treatments to be more
efficient will likely translate into more veterans receiving much needed mental health
services.
The 3rd goal is to investigate if ability to habituate to loud, 95db, audio tones correlates
to baseline PTSD pathology and treatment outcomes for PE. This goal represents an important
step forward in understanding characteristics of trait habituation, fear extinction, and
learning in humans, which are all factors related to the successful treatment of PTSD. It is
also significant because such research may lead to the development of individual responder
policies that will assist veterans by individualizing treatment plans based on personal
characteristics.
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