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A substantial proportion of public safety personnel (PSP) develop service-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD is associated with a range of negative outcomes and its exact underlying neurophysiological mechanism is still not well understood. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is commonly prescribed to treat PTSD, and recent studies suggest that it may be effective in preventing the condition. We have developed a 5-session class focused on teaching introductory CBT skills to prevent and manage psychological distress, and we are currently in the process of launching a clinical trial to demonstrate its effectiveness in preventing PTSD and related conditions in PSP. In the proposed adjunctive study to this trial, we will quantitate the brain connectivity signature that is specific to the PTSD-resilience, and examine whether the classes increase this resilience-related brain mechanism.
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Our ultimate research goal is to develop and validate a preventive strategy for PTSD. We aim to 1) demonstrate neurophysiological evidence (using fMRI) of preventive CBTm classes for PTSD, and 2) validate the utility of the proposed imaging-based biomarker for PTSD-related resiliency. Emerging evidence suggests that a program such as CBTm classes could promote resiliency to PTSD in healthy individuals at high risk for trauma exposure. Further, our preliminary brain imaging data analysis suggests that we can quantitate the brain connectivity pattern that may reflect resilience to PTSD. We thus hypothesize that CBTm will increase the PTSD resilience-related brain connectivity pattern expression.
In this novel pilot imaging study, we will recruit 40 PSP without PTSD or other mental disorder from 120 participants participating in our larger clinical trial. Twenty will be from each arm (CBTm and wait-list). The effect of CBTm on fMRI-based measures will be compared between arms.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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