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PTSD Among Victims of Sexual Abuse and Changes in Structural and Functional Brain Connectivity (COPTSD)

R

Regional University Hospital Center (CHRU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

PostTraumatic Stress Disorder

Treatments

Procedure: MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01405495
PHRI/10/WEH/COPTSD

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this study is to identify the early modifications in fronto-temporal connectivity in female victims who developed PTSD, compared to female victims who did not develop the disorder, and to healthy control females. The investigators will compare between all these groups, structural and functional differences using different techniques (MRI, fMRI, DTI and ASL), and paradigms (cognitive tasks or at rest).

Full description

Most of the transversal neuroimaging studies in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were conducted in male war veterans. Few studies focused on neuroanatomical correlates of PTSD in civilian populations, and only one prospective study explored the cerebral connectivity when developing the disorder. In France, physical and sexual assaults are the most prevalent causes of PTSD, especially in the female population. Neuroanatomic basis of chronic PTSD are now well-defined, implicating limbic over-activation (amygdala), associated with a default activation in prefrontal cortex. However, mechanisms implied in the modification of fronto-limbic regions connectivity, especially in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), need further investigations. Will the post-traumatic amygdalar over-activation perturbate the normal functioning of the ACC, or is there a modification in the ACC functioning which leads to a default in amygdala inhibition ? This question is of interest, since the prefrontal cortex, including the ACC, has an essential role in different kind of cognitive activities in the normal and pathological brain, such as working memory and attentional processes.

The goal of this study is to characterize early modifications in structural and functional connectivity in brain structures implied in the development of PTSD using different kinds of MRI-based techniques (structural MRI, fMRI, DTI and ASL), as well as biological (cortisol) and psychophysiological (skin conductance ...) measures in female patients developing PTSD, compared to women exposed to trauma who did not develop the disorder and to healthy controls.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Written consent
  • affiliated to the National Health Insurance
  • without neurological past history
  • without psychoactive drugs past history

Exclusion criteria

  • the subject can not follow the instructions
  • simultaneous participation to an other study using psychoactive drugs
  • blindness
  • epilepsy
  • addiction to psychoactive drugs
  • MRI counter-indications (pace-makers ...)
  • claustrophobia
  • every circumstances making the subject unable to understand the nature, the objectives or the consequences of the study

Trial design

60 participants in 3 patient groups

PTSD group
Description:
Intervention 'MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)'
Treatment:
Procedure: MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)
Exposed without PTSD
Description:
Intervention 'MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)'
Treatment:
Procedure: MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)
Healthy Controls
Description:
Intervention 'MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)'
Treatment:
Procedure: MRI-based techniques (sMRI, fMRI, DTI, ASL)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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