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Amygdala volume changes in posttraumatic stress disorder in a large case-controlled veterans group.

Rajendra A MoreyAndrea L GoldKevin S LaBarShannon K BeallVanessa M BrownCourtney C HaswellJessica D NasserH Ryan WagnerGregory McCarthynull null
Published in: Archives of general psychiatry (2013)
These results provide clear evidence of an association between a smaller amygdala volume and PTSD. The lack of correlation between trauma load or illness chronicity and amygdala volume suggests that a smaller amygdala represents a vulnerability to developing PTSD or the lack of a dose-response relationship with amygdala volume. Our results may trigger a renewed impetus for investigating structural differences in the amygdala, its genetic determinants, its environmental modulators, and the possibility that it reflects an intrinsic vulnerability to PTSD.
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