Neuroimaging Memories of Fear and Safety in the Human Brain

Purpose

The purpose of this research is to use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate how the brain forms associations between neutral and negative stimuli. The ultimate goal is to understand the neural systems involved in regulating negative emotional responses to fearful stimuli.

Conditions

  • Fear Anxiety
  • PTSD

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 50 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

(All study populations): 1. Volunteers with a major medical illness or a neurological disorder (e.g., Parkinson's Disease), or neurological abnormality including significant head trauma (loss of consciousness > 5 min). 2. A positive pregnancy test in female volunteers. 3. Benzodiazepines, tested using urine tox screen. 4. For the healthy subjects, exclusion is meeting criteria for either PTSD, or any other psychiatric disorder, or any prior psychiatric hospitalizations. 5. For the healthy subjects, exclusion is prior use of a psychotropic medication for longer than 1 month. 6. History of moderate to severe cannabis use disorder. 7. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) exclusions: Claustrophobia; tattoos above the shoulders; permanent eyeliner or permanent; artificial eyebrows; cardiac pacemaker; metal fragments in eye, skin, or body, including shrapnel; heart valve replacement; brain clips; venous umbrella; being a sheet-metal worker or welder; lifetime history of aneurysm surgery; intracranial bypass, renal, or aortic clips; prosthetic devices such as middle ear, eye, joint, or penile implants; joint replacements; non-removable hearing aid, neurostimulator, or insulin pump; shunts/stents; metal mesh/coil implants; metal plate/pin/screws/wires; or any other metal implants. Inclusion Criteria (PTSD populations): 1. Meet diagnostic criteria for PTSD, as assessed by standard diagnostic instruments. 2. Participants with PTSD are eligible if they meet diagnostic criteria for current PTSD. This is determined by the presence of a Criterion A event in addition to a severity score of 2 or greater on 1 symptom in clusters B and C and on 2 symptoms in clusters D and E, in addition to meeting criteria F and G. The specific form of trauma is not considered for inclusion/exclusion. 3. Volunteers in the patient group, but not healthy control group, may also meet criteria for a mood disorder (except for bipolar affective disorder, see exclusions below), as well as other anxiety disorders (panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, or obsessive compulsive disorder). Including these comorbidities is essential because of the high frequency of co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders with PTSD.

Exclusion Criteria

(all participants): 1. Volunteers with a major medical illness or a neurological disorder (e.g., Parkinson's Disease), or neurological abnormality including significant head trauma (loss of consciousness > 5 min). 2. A positive pregnancy test in female volunteers. 3. Benzodiazepines, tested using urine tox screen. 4. For the healthy subjects, exclusion is meeting criteria for either PTSD, or any other psychiatric disorder, or any prior psychiatric hospitalizations. 5. For the healthy subjects, exclusion is prior use of a psychotropic medication for longer than 1 month. 6. History of moderate to severe cannabis use disorder. 7. MRI exclusions: Claustrophobia; tattoos above the shoulders; permanent eyeliner or permanent; artificial eyebrows; cardiac pacemaker; metal fragments in eye, skin, or body, including shrapnel; heart valve replacement; brain clips; venous umbrella; being a sheet-metal worker or welder; lifetime history of aneurysm surgery; intracranial bypass, renal, or aortic clips; prosthetic devices such as middle ear, eye, joint, or penile implants; joint replacements; non-removable hearing aid, neurostimulator, or insulin pump; shunts/stents; metal mesh/coil implants; metal plate/pin/screws/wires; or any other metal implants. Exclusion Criteria (PTSD group): - 1. Volunteers meeting DSM-5 criteria for history of or current psychotic or bipolar affective disorders, a current eating disorder (bulimia, anorexia nervosa), or dissociative identity disorder. 2. Volunteers meeting DSM-5 criteria for another substance use disorder, with the exception of caffeine or nicotine, within the past 12 months. 3. Individuals considered an immediate suicide risk based on the Columbia Suicide Severity Scale (C-SSRS) or who would likely require hospitalization during the course of the study. 4. Participants must be stable on medication.

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Basic Science
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
PTSD group
Participants will be screened and diagnosed using typical screening procedures and diagnostic criteria (e.g., the clinically administered PTSD scale). Participants also screened for contraindications for MRI. The learning paradigm inside the MRI scanner occurs over 3 days. The first two days are consecutive (back-to-back) and the third MRI visit is 1 month later. Participants are asked to look at a screen and listen to simple tones over headphones, while the experimenter measures brain activity and physiological measures of arousal (e.g., sweating from sensors on the hand). These visits will be scheduled within two weeks from the baseline and assessment visit.
  • Behavioral: Fear conditioning
    Participants will learn to associate neutral stimuli with a mildly uncomfortable electrical stimulation to the wrist. The intensity of the electrical stimulus is calibrated prior to the start of the experiment to a level deemed highly annoying but not painful by the participant.
Experimental
Healthy control group
Participants will be healthy adults without a history of psychiatric illness. Participants also screened for contraindications for MRI. The learning paradigm inside the MRI scanner occurs over 3 days. The first two days are consecutive (back-to-back) and the third MRI visit is 1 month later. Participants are asked to look at a screen and listen to simple tones over headphones, while the experimenter measures brain activity and physiological measures of arousal (e.g., sweating from sensors on the hand). These visits will be scheduled within two weeks from the baseline and assessment visit.
  • Behavioral: Fear conditioning
    Participants will learn to associate neutral stimuli with a mildly uncomfortable electrical stimulation to the wrist. The intensity of the electrical stimulus is calibrated prior to the start of the experiment to a level deemed highly annoying but not painful by the participant.

Recruiting Locations

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
University of Texas at Austin

Study Contact

Detailed Description

This study uses functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate how the brain forms associations between neutral stimuli and a mildly uncomfortable electrical stimulation to the wrist. Referred to as Pavlovian fear conditioning. The goal is to compare brain activity between individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and healthy control subjects without PTSD. PTSD is characterized by excessive fear and anxiety, including in harmless situations. The data here will help us better understand dysregulation in neural circuitry involved in fear recovery, which has implications for improving treatment.