"Prior Sexual Trauma Exposure Impacts Posttraumatic Dysfunction and Neu" by Grace E. Rowland, Alyssa Roeckner et al.
 

Authors

Grace E. Rowland, McLean Hospital
Alyssa Roeckner, Emory University School of Medicine
Timothy D. Ely, Emory University School of Medicine
Lauren A.M. Lebois, McLean Hospital
Sanne J.H. van Rooij, Emory University School of Medicine
Steven E. Bruce, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Tanja Jovanovic, Wayne State University School of Medicine
Stacey L. House, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Francesca L. Beaudoin, Brown University
Xinming An, UNC School of Medicine
Thomas C. Neylan, University of California, San Francisco
Gari D. Clifford, Emory University School of Medicine
Sarah D. Linnstaedt, UNC School of Medicine
Laura T. Germine, Harvard Medical School
Scott L. Rauch, Harvard Medical School
John P. Haran, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School
Alan B. Storrow, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Christopher Lewandowski, Henry Ford Health System
Paul I. Musey, Indiana University School of Medicine
Phyllis L. Hendry, University of Florida College of Medicine
Sophia Sheikh, University of Florida College of Medicine
Christopher W. Jones, Cooper Medical School of Rowan University
Brittany E. Punches, The Ohio State University College of Medicine
Michael C. Kurz, Heersink School of Medicine
Nina T. Gentile, Lewis Katz School of Medicine
Lauren A. Hudak, Emory University School of Medicine
Jose L. Pascual, University of Pennsylvania
Mark J. Seamon, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine
Erica Harris, Albert Einstein Healthcare Network
Claire Pearson, Wayne State University
Roland C. Merchant, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Robert M. Domeier, Trinity Health Ann Arbor Hospital

Document Type

Article

Keywords

Longitudinal study, Neuroimaging, Posttraumatic stress disorder, Sexual trauma

Abstract

Background: Prior sexual trauma (ST) is associated with greater risk for posttraumatic stress disorder after a subsequent traumatic event; however, the underlying neurobiological mechanisms remain opaque. We investigated longitudinal posttraumatic dysfunction and amygdala functional dynamics following admission to an emergency department for new primarily nonsexual trauma in participants with and without previous ST. Methods: Participants (N = 2178) were recruited following acute trauma exposure (primarily motor vehicle collision). A subset (n = 242) completed magnetic resonance imaging that included a fearful faces task and a resting-state scan 2 weeks after the trauma. We investigated associations between prior ST and several dimensions of posttraumatic symptoms over 6 months. We further assessed amygdala activation and connectivity differences between groups with or without prior ST. Results: Prior ST was associated with greater posttraumatic depression (F1,1120 = 28.35, p = 1.22 × 10−7, ηp2 = 0.06), anxiety (F1,1113 = 17.43, p = 3.21 × 10−5, ηp2 = 0.05), and posttraumatic stress disorder (F1,1027 = 11.34, p = 7.85 × 10−4, ηp2 = 0.04) severity and more maladaptive beliefs about pain (F1,1113 = 8.51, p = .004, ηp2 = 0.02) but was not related to amygdala reactivity to fearful versus neutral faces (all ps > .05). A secondary analysis revealed an interaction between ST and lifetime trauma load on the left amygdala to visual cortex connectivity (peak Z value: −4.41, corrected p < .02). Conclusions: Findings suggest that prior ST is associated with heightened posttraumatic dysfunction following a new trauma exposure but not increased amygdala activity. In addition, ST may interact with lifetime trauma load to alter neural circuitry in visual processing regions following acute trauma exposure. Further research should probe the relationship between trauma type and visual circuitry in the acute aftermath of trauma.

Publication Date

10-1-2023

ISSN

4

Volume

3

First Page

National Institute of Mental Health

DOI

10.1016/j.bpsgos.2023.02.004

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Repository URL

https://irl.umsl.edu/psychology-faculty/119