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About
The main purpose of this study is to determine whether functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), can distinguish between service members with and without traumatic brain injury (TBI), as well as those with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) who receive either virtual reality exposure therapy (VRET) or PTSD treatment other than exposure therapy. The investigators and other investigators have previously identified changes in function in multiple regions of the brain in combat veterans with PTSD, and the investigators have also seen that structural changes in the white matter associated with combat TBI are also linked with changes in function, and in turn with PTSD symptoms. However, the investigators need to confirm these findings in larger numbers, and also need to discern whether fMRI can distinguish if there is something significantly different about those who have PTSD after TBI vs. those in whom it does not follow a TBI. Finally, the investigators have previously demonstrated that exposure therapy ameliorates the functional changes in the brain induced by PTSD, but the investigators do not know if similar changes occur with other forms of therapy, so the investigators seek to compare the two directly. It is our expectation that the findings will better inform the choice of therapy for service members with combat-related PTSD, with or without TBI.
Full description
The investigators have previously demonstrated that military service members (SMs) with PTSD related to deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan have fMRI brain activation patterns similar to those reported in other populations with PTSD. The investigators have also demonstrated significant improvements, or normalization, in the activation of each of these brain areas following exposure therapy. In this study the investigators will assess recovery in SMs receiving virtual reality exposure therapy, comparing them to healthy veterans, those with history of blast exposure and those with PTSD receiving usual care. The investigators hope to (1) demonstrate that fMRI can distinguish between military service members with PTSD, with mild TBI, and those who have neither; (2) demonstrate that significant differences are not seen in brain activation patterns merely by repeating fMRI scans at 3 month intervals but when significant changes are present they in fact represent the effect of the exposure therapy intervention; (3) discern whether those with PTSD after TBI have different activation patterns than those with PTSD in the absence of TBI; and (4) identify fMRI characteristics of resilience in service members who have been deployed but did not develop PTSD.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria
Over 18 years of age.
Able to give written informed consent prior to participation in this study.
Good overall health. Subjects with stable medical problems (e.g., hypertension, hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus) that are fully under control with treatment will be included.
Specific criteria according to arm:
Healthy OIF/OEF veterans who deployed for at least 3 months in support of OIF/OEF who do not have blast exposure (i.e., within 100 feet of a blast, in which the pressure wave knocked them to the ground or caused other physical symptoms, or the vehicle in which they were riding hit an improvised explosive device, jarring them from their seat) or PTSD: PCL-M<50, negative history of concussion or loss of consciousness.
OIF/OEF veterans with a history of blast exposure (as defined above) who do not meet criteria for PTSD (PCL-M <50)
OIF/OEF veterans with PTSD only who receive usual care: any form of individual or group psychotherapy so long as it does not include exposure therapy, and/or may be on any combination of prescription psychotropic medications; participants in this group may or may not have a history of blast exposure, provided they did not have loss of consciousness of 60 minutes or more or otherwise meet any criteria for moderate or severe TBI.
OIF/OEF veterans with PTSD that will receive VRET through the WRNMMC IRB approved protocol entitled "Enhancing Exposure Therapy for PTSD: Virtual Reality and Imaginal Exposure with Cognitive Enhancer": must meet entry criteria for that study; most notably, they must have combat-related PTSD; participants in this group may or may not have a history of blast exposure, provided they did not have loss of consciousness of 60 minutes or more or otherwise meet any criteria for moderate or severe TBI.
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Exclusion Criteria
88 participants in 4 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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