Interested individuals will first complete a telephone screening followed by a series of structured clinical interviews to diagnose PTSD and comorbid psychiatric disorders, confirm initial inclusion criteria, rule out exclusion criteria and create an audio-recorded account of their index trauma. Participants passing screenings will then complete 2 weeks of at-home sleep and nightmare diaries and time-stamped audio-recorded reports of dream content upon awakening from any nightmare. They will also wear a wrist actigraph throughout this period, complete 2 nights of ambulatory PSG, and complete on-line questionnaires. Nightmare data will be examined for frequency and thematic similarity of nightmares to a participant's reported index trauma. Participants' nightmare and index trauma reports will be audio-recorded for use as scripts during SDI. The participant will then undergo two SDI sessions on a single day, one with a nightmare script and one with an index-trauma script, during which they will wear the NINscan. Sessions will be separated by 1 hour and counterbalanced across participants for script order.
Trauma-related nightmares (TRNs) are a hallmark re-experiencing symptom of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and a severe, re-traumatizing source of distress to those with this condition. Proposed research will investigate whether such nightmares might serve as targets for imaginal exposure during prolonged exposure therapy (PE), a first-line treatment for PTSD. Learning and memory of fear extinction are the neurocognitive underpinnings of PE and increased physiological arousal during PE can aid in extinction learning. Thus, PE using TRNs might enhance treatment outcomes because of the greater immediacy and salience of nightmares relative to the more temporally distant traumatic event. Our research group has developed standardized script-driven imagery (SDI) procedures whereby the degree of psychophysiological arousal induced by recollection of the traumatic event that precipitated posttraumatic symptoms (index trauma) can be assessed. Our team has also developed a novel ambulatory device, the NINscan, that can record skin conductance (SC), facial electromyography (EMG) and electrocardiography (ECG) along with simultaneous functional near-infrared spectroscopic (fNIRS) imaging of the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC). The LPFC encompasses regions that activate and/or deactivate during SDI in persons with PTSD and includes the right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG), an area that plays an important role in inhibiting unwanted behavior and cognition and shows reduced inhibitory performance in PTSD. Following screenings that include a structured clinical evaluation establishing PTSD diagnosis and self-report of a least 2 TRNs per week, qualified participants will record an account of their index trauma. They will then complete 2 weeks of sleep diaries and wrist actigraphy with 4 nights of ambulatory polysomnography (PSG), during which they will audio-record, on a time-stamped digital recorder, a detailed nightmare report following any nightmare-induced awakening. A TRN report having sufficient length, clarity and resemblance to the index trauma will be selected and, along with the index-trauma report, will be re-recorded as a script for SDI. Only participants who generated a TRN suitable for SDI (N=40) will then undergo 2 SDI sessions on a single day while wearing the NINscan. One script will be derived from their index trauma and the other from their TRN, the order of which will be counterbalanced across participants. Psychophysiological response and fNIRS LPFC activation will be compared between scripts using 2 primary outcome measures: (1) a validated canonical psychophysiological variable combining SC, EMG and ECG, and (2) script-related activation of the rIFC. We hypothesize that both activations will be greater for the TRN than for the index-trauma script. Exploratory aims will include (1) examination of the sleep stage and electroencephalographic characteristics of sleep preceding awakenings when a nightmare occurred on a night with PSG.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
trauma and nightmare imaginal probe/challenge for which psychophysiological and CNS responses are recorded
Massachusetts General Hospital
Charlestown, Massachusetts, United States
psychophysiological difference score
"difference scores" between biosignals from the 30-s epoch of nightmare and index-trauma SDI and their baseline epochs (30s of silence preceding the respective script). Individual skin conductance, heart rate and corrugator EMG difference scores as well as composite SDI-PR score.
Time frame: Immediately after the procedure.
fNIRS rlIFG difference score
O2Hb minus HHb concentrations (HbD) difference score at right lateral inferior frontal (rlIFG) Region of Interest (ROI)
Time frame: Up to 24 weeks.
fNIRS difference score for remaining 7 frontolateral ROIs
O2Hb minus HHb concentrations (HbD) difference score at remaining 7 frontolateral ROIs
Time frame: Up to 24 weeks.
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