Clinical and neural correlates of alexithymia in posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) often exhibit deficits in emotional experience and expression, which suggests that certain individuals with PTSD may be alexithymic. In this study, in a sample of 105 individuals with PTSD, clinical correlates of alexithymia included reexperiencing, hyperarousal, numbing, dissociative symptoms, and retrospectively reported experiences of childhood emotional neglect. In a subsample of 26 individuals with PTSD related to a motor vehicle accident, functional neural responses to trauma-script imagery were associated with severity of alexithymia, including increased right posterior-insula and ventral posterior-cingulate activation and decreased bilateral ventral anterior-cingulate, ventromedial prefrontal, anterior-insula, and right inferior frontal cortex activation. Clinical and theoretical implications and future research directions are discussed.

authors

  • Frewen, Paul A
  • Lanius, Ruth
  • Dozois, David JA
  • Neufeld, Richard WJ
  • Pain, Clare
  • Hopper, James W
  • Densmore, Maria
  • Stevens, Todd K

publication date

  • February 2008