Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
QEEG and LORETA Analysis in PTSD Patients
In this study the Quantitative Electroencephalography and low resolution topographic analysis of chronic Post-traumatic stress disorder and normal subjects will be compared.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is defined as a constellation of symptoms in response
to a stressor, including re-experiencing a traumatic event, numbed responsiveness and
symptoms of an increased level of arousal (APA 2000) . In recent years there were many
attempts to connect the brain structure and function to symptoms in PTSD patients (Francati,
Vermetten et al. 2007; Liberzon and Sripada 2008). One of the important technologies in this
regard is the Electroencephalography (EEG) measurement.
The EEG is the reflection of the inner brain electrical changing dipole as it is measured on
the scalp. It is measured by electrode that placed on the head according to the
international distribution of electrodes called 10-20. The EEG recording that is the product
of the measurement can be analyzed at least in three different levels: visual inspection of
the raw EEG, quantities analysis of the EEG (QEEG) and based on the QEEG, calculating the
electrical distribution of dipoles inside the brain that creates the EEG signal (Niedermeyer
and Lopes da Silva 2005). Theoretically two EEG measurements could have the same visual EEG
and/or QEEG patterns but the inner brain electrical dipole distribution could be very
different. The mathematical solution to the calculation of the dipole distribution inside
the brain, using the scalp EEG is based on "the inverse problem" concepts. One of the more
common and precise method to solve the inverse problem regarding the EEG is called LORETA
(low resolution topographic analysis) (Pascual-Marqui, Michel et al. 1994; Pascual-Marqui,
Esslen et al. 2002). There are many brain image technologies aiming on mapping the
connection between brain function and psychopathology. Each method caries with it both
advantage and drawbacks. The use of the Electroencephalographic mapping technique is no
different and it's main advantage - the temporal resolution is with opposition to the
relatively lower spatial resolution. Modern signal processing tools and software like the
LORETA start challenging this equation and in the last years some articles were published
proving the possibilities of using EEG measurement to localized brain function with high
spatial-resolution (Stern, Neufeld et al. 2009) .
The study will focus on the rest QEEG and rest LORETA analysis in PTSD patients.
Previous QEEG research found conflicting results regarding the spectral distribution of the
EEG waves across the scalp.
Begic et al (Begic, Hotujac et al. 2001) compared 18 PTSD veterans to 20 controls. They
found that PTSD patients had increased theta activity over central regions, and they had
increased beta activity over frontal, central and occipital regions. No significant
differences were noted between the PTSD and control group in both the delta and alpha
activity. In this study all the patients were medication free for 2 weeks.
In another study the same group compared veterans with PTSD to veterans without PTSD. In
this study the PTSD patients had decreased alpha power and increased beta power. No
difference was noted on the theta band in this study (Jokic-Begic and Begic 2003).
In a recent study another group studied the hemispheric asymmetries among motor vehicle
survivors with PTSD, with subsyndromal PTSD, survivors without PTSD and nonexposed healthy
controls during rest (baseline) and in response to neutral, positive, negative, and
trauma-related pictures. They focus on the alpha band. They found no group differences in
EEG alpha activity during the baseline condition. In there study all the patients were
without medication for 1 month (Rabe, Beauducel et al. 2006). Shankman et al compared the
resting EEG of PTSD patients to "super- controls" in order to maximized the difference
between this two groups. They found no statistical significant difference in any of the
spectral band (Shankman, Silverstein et al. 2008).
The aim of this study is to calculate the QEEG difference and to do LORETA analysis in PTSD
patients compared to controls.
In order to avoid statistical multiple compressing problems this study will focus on the
theta band. There are at least two reasons for this: the first is that due to ethical issue
we don't ask our patients to stop there psychotropic treatments therefore all of them are
using SSRI antidepressants which could cause some alpha rhythms changes (Niedermeyer and
Lopes da Silva 2005). Another reason is that the origin of the theta bend is supposed to be
the in limbic system (Niedermeyer and Lopes da Silva 2005) that is long ago connected to
PTSD symptoms (Francati, Vermetten et al. 2007).
;
Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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