Neurobiological and genetic correlates of the dissociative subtype of posttraumatic stress disorder.
Erika J WolfSage E HawnDanielle R SullivanMark W MillerVictoria SanbornEmma BrownZoe NealeDana Fein-SchafferXiang ZhaoMark W LogueCatherine B FortierRegina E McGlincheyWilliam P MilbergPublished in: Journal of psychopathology and clinical science (2023)
Approximately 10%-30% of individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) exhibit a dissociative subtype of the condition defined by symptoms of depersonalization and derealization. This study examined the psychometric evidence for the dissociative subtype of PTSD in a sample of young, primarily male post-9/11-era Veterans ( n = 374 at baseline and n = 163 at follow-up) and evaluated its biological correlates with respect to resting state functional connectivity (default mode network [DMN]; n = 275), brain morphology (hippocampal subfield volume and cortical thickness; n = 280), neurocognitive functioning ( n = 337), and genetic variation ( n = 193). Multivariate analyses of PTSD and dissociation items suggested a class structure was superior to dimensional and hybrid ones, with 7.5% of the sample comprising the dissociative class; this group showed stability over 1.5 years. Covarying for age, sex, and PTSD severity, linear regression models revealed that derealization/depersonalization severity was associated with: decreased DMN connectivity between bilateral posterior cingulate cortex and right isthmus ( p = .015; adjusted- p [ p adj ] = .097); increased bilateral whole hippocampal, hippocampal head, and molecular layer head volume ( p = .010-.034; p adj = .032-.053); worse self-monitoring ( p = .018; p adj = .079); and a candidate genetic variant (rs263232) in the adenylyl cyclase 8 gene ( p = .026), previously associated with dissociation. Results converged on biological structures and systems implicated in sensory integration, the neural representation of spatial awareness, and stress-related spatial learning and memory, suggesting possible mechanisms underlying the dissociative subtype of PTSD. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).