Impaired right inferior frontal gyrus response to contextual cues in male veterans with PTSD during response inhibition

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is often associated with impaired fear inhibition and decreased safety cue processing; however, studies capturing the cognitive aspect of inhibition and contextual cue processing are limited. In this fMRI study, the role of contextual cues in response inhibition was investigated.

Male medication-naive war veterans with PTSD, male control veterans (combat controls) and healthy nonmilitary men (healthy controls) underwent fMRI while performing the stop-signal anticipation task (SSAT). The SSAT evokes 2 forms of response inhibition: reactive inhibition (outright stopping) and proactive inhibition (anticipation of stopping based on contextual cues).

We enrolled 28 veterans with PTSD, 26 combat controls and 25 healthy controls in our study. Reduced reactive inhibition was observed in all veterans, both with and without PTSD, but not in nonmilitary controls, whereas decreased inhibition of the left pre/postcentral gyrus appeared to be specifically associated with PTSD. Impaired behavioural proactive inhibition was also specific to PTSD. Furthermore, the PTSD group showed a reduced right inferior frontal gyrus response during proactive inhibition compared with the combat control group.

Reference: 
Rooij SJv, Rademaker AR, Kennis M, Vink M, Kahn RS, Geuze E, | 2014
Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience | 39 | 5 | september | 330-338
http://search.proquest.com/openview/fc43bad064701bbc4ffb9bc8eccd45f2/1
Keywords: 
Behavioral Inhibition, Mental health, Netherlands, Neurobiology, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Psychotrauma, PTSD (en), Statistical Analysis, Veterans