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1000 Titel
  • The brain at war: effects of stress on brain structure in soldiers deployed to a war zone
1000 Autor/in
  1. Kühn, Simone |
  2. Butler, Oisin |
  3. Willmund, Gerd |
  4. Wesemann, Ulrich |
  5. Zimmermann, Peter |
  6. Gallinat, Jürgen |
1000 Erscheinungsjahr 2021
1000 Publikationstyp
  1. Artikel |
1000 Online veröffentlicht
  • 2021-04-26
1000 Erschienen in
1000 Quellenangabe
  • 11(1):247
1000 Copyrightjahr
  • 2021
1000 Lizenz
1000 Verlagsversion
  • https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01356-0 |
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8076198/ |
1000 Publikationsstatus
1000 Sprache der Publikation
1000 Abstract/Summary
  • In search of the neural basis of severe trauma exposure and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a multitude of cross-sectional studies have been conducted, most of them pointing at structural deficits in the hippocampus and medial prefrontal cortex including the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC). Since cross-sectional studies are silent to causality, the core question remains: which brain structural alterations constitute a risk factor for disease and therewith precede the stressor, and which brain regions may undergo alterations as a consequence of exposure to the stressor. We assessed 121 soldiers before and after deployment to regions of war and 40 soldiers as controls, who were not deployed. Analysis using voxel-based morphometry revealed volumetric reductions in the ACC, vmPFC (region of interest analysis, effect does not survive conservative multiple test correction) and in bilateral thalamus (whole-brain analysis) in the deployment group. Remarkably, the ACC and vmPFC volume decrease was not limited to the period of deployment, but continued over the following 6 months after deployment. Volumetric reductions did not correlate with increases in PTSD symptoms. The volume decreases in medial prefrontal cortex and thalamus seem to be driven by trauma exposure rather than a vulnerability factor for PTSD. However, data indicate that the volume decrease in medial prefrontal cortex surpasses the time period of deployment. This may hint at an initiated pathobiological process below a symptom threshold, potentially paving the way to future mental health problems.
1000 Sacherschließung
lokal Military Personnel [MeSH]
lokal Article
lokal Brain/diagnostic imaging [MeSH]
lokal Neuroscience
lokal Prefrontal Cortex/diagnostic imaging [MeSH]
lokal Humans [MeSH]
lokal Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic [MeSH]
lokal Cross-Sectional Studies [MeSH]
lokal Pathogenesis
1000 Liste der Beteiligten
  1. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6823-7969|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/QnV0bGVyLCBPaXNpbg==|https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2267-6389|https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2537-2148|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/WmltbWVybWFubiwgUGV0ZXI=|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/R2FsbGluYXQsIErDvHJnZW4=
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1000 Erstellt am 2023-04-26T14:42:30.032+0200
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1000 Zuletzt bearbeitet 2023-10-19T12:50:31.918+0200
1000 Objekt bearb. Thu Oct 19 12:50:31 CEST 2023
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