News Release

Severity of PTSD symptoms linked to decreased activity in hippocampus

People more sensitive to threats show decreased brain activity and worse PTSD symptoms

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Society for Neuroscience

Severity of PTSD Symptoms Linked to Decreased Activity in Hippocampus

image: Fear-potentiated startle interacts with hippocampal threat reactivity in predicting PTSD at two-weeks. view more 

Credit: Tanriverdi et al., JNeurosci 2022

After a traumatic event, people with decreased activity in the hippocampus experience worse PTSD symptoms, according to new research published in JNeurosci.

The hippocampus does more than encode new memories — it also takes stock of spatial and emotional contexts and processes threat. PTSD impacts all of these functions, generating symptoms like the overgeneralization of fear and recurrent traumatic memories. Yet the exact interplay between the hippocampal activity and PTSD was unclear.

Tanriverdi et al. measured PTSD symptoms and hippocampal activity in people who had visited the emergency room after a traumatic event like a car crash. Participants answered a questionnaire about PTSD symptoms, then they viewed frightened and neutral faces while the researchers measured their brain activity with fMRI. People with more severe PTSD symptoms had decreased activity in the hippocampus in response to the frightened faces. This relationship strengthened in people who startled more easily in a defensive learning task. For these participants, their hippocampus may not be discriminating between safe and unsafe contexts. These results indicate certain individuals may be more susceptible to PTSD because of impaired activity in their hippocampus.

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Paper title: Hippocampal Threat Reactivity Interacts with Physiological Arousal to Predict PTSD Symptoms

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About JNeurosci

JNeurosci, the Society for Neuroscience's first journal, was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship.

About The Society for Neuroscience

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 37,000 members in more than 90 countries and over 130 chapters worldwide.


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