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Repeated Exposure to Experimental Pain Differentiates Combat Traumatic Brain Injury with and without Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

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Abstract Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are highly comorbid conditions that often co-occur with chronic pain. We have shown that women with PTSD subsequent to… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are highly comorbid conditions that often co-occur with chronic pain. We have shown that women with PTSD subsequent to intimate partner violence show attenuated brain response to repeated experimental pain that was related to symptoms of avoidance. The aim of this study was to extend our past findings to males with combat trauma and to examine brain response to experimental pain in men with and without PTSD who sustained mTBI during combat. Seventy male veterans performed an experimental pain paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI. Of the 70 total subjects, 46 self-reported a history of mTBI during combat (46 of 70). Of those with mTBI, 26 also met criteria for PTSD (26 of 46). As in our previous study, we examined change in brain activity to repeated heat pain with linear mixed-effects modeling for group by administration interaction effects. We observed a significant group by administration interact...

Keywords: post traumatic; traumatic brain; experimental pain; brain injury; brain; pain

Journal Title: Journal of Neurotrauma
Year Published: 2017

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