Elsevier

NeuroImage: Clinical

Volume 3, 2013, Pages 531-538
NeuroImage: Clinical

Atypical visual processing in posttraumatic stress disorder

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2013.08.009Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Investigation of visual processing in PTSD using a picture-viewing task during fMRI

  • Alteration was found in the visual system responsible for object feature processing.

  • Lower visual responsiveness in PTSD was not accounted for by stimulus valence.

  • Altered visual processing in PTSD may be related to attentional dysfunction.

Abstract

Background

Many patients with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) feel overwhelmed in situations with high levels of sensory input, as in crowded situations with complex sensory characteristics. These difficulties might be related to subtle sensory processing deficits similar to those that have been found for sounds in electrophysiological studies.

Method

Visual processing was investigated with functional magnetic resonance imaging in trauma-exposed participants with (N = 18) and without PTSD (N = 21) employing a picture-viewing task.

Results

Activity observed in response to visual scenes was lower in PTSD participants 1) in the ventral stream of the visual system, including striate and extrastriate, inferior temporal, and entorhinal cortices, and 2) in dorsal and ventral attention systems (P < 0.05, FWE-corrected). These effects could not be explained by the emotional salience of the pictures.

Conclusions

Visual processing was substantially altered in PTSD in the ventral visual stream, a component of the visual system thought to be responsible for object property processing. Together with previous reports of subtle auditory deficits in PTSD, these findings provide strong support for potentially important sensory processing deficits, whose origins may be related to dysfunctional attention processes.

Keywords

Visual system
Ventral stream
Dorsal stream
fMRI
International Affective Picture System
Sensory perception

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