PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Neurofeedback tunes key brain networks, improving subjective well-being in PTSD

2013-12-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kathy Wallis
kwallis3@uwo.ca
519-661-2111 x81136
University of Western Ontario
Neurofeedback tunes key brain networks, improving subjective well-being in PTSD Pioneering research conducted at Western University (London, Canada) points to a promising avenue for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): utilising neurofeedback training to alter the plasticity of brain networks linked to the condition.

During neurofeedback, intentional control of one's own brain activity may be learned with what's called a brain-computer interface, which is able to represent graphically a person's real-time brain activation on a computer. This can be done noninvasively with brainwave activities, for example, where the computer monitor behaves like a virtual "mirror" to real electrical oscillations produced by neurons in the cortex. These are recorded by surface sensors on the scalp, also known as an electroencephalogram (EEG).

Available online at the psychiatry journal Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, lead authors Rosemarie Kluetsch and Tomas Ros describe the details: "This is the first study to show that key brain networks involved in mediating affect and cognition in PTSD can be volitionally modulated via neurofeedback, with measurable outcomes on subjective well-being. It was achieved by harnessing multiple imaging techniques, including EEG and functional MRI (fMRI). In a nutshell, using fMRI we captured the patients' resting-state brain activity just before and after a 30-minute neurofeedback training session, which was carried out outside the scanner using EEG. We then searched for any differences in connectivity within well-known brain networks. Interestingly, we discovered significant correlations between EEG and fMRI network activities as well as changes in self-reported calmness. This indicated that neurofeedback was able to directly modulate the brain bases of emotional processing in PTSD."

Senior author and principal investigator Dr. Ruth Lanius, a professor at the Department of Psychiatry at Western's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry and a scientist with Lawson Health Research Institute, adds "The last decade of neuroscience research has offered a deeper understanding of the key brain networks involved in cognitive and emotional functions. Connectivity in the salience and default mode networks, for example, has been found to be altered in PTSD. We are now on the threshold of being able to use this information to understand the neural mechanisms underlying certain disorders and their treatments. Neurofeedback offers great promise as a type of brain training that is directly based on the functional activation of these brain networks. We are therefore thrilled to see the first evidence of this in action, along with significant changes in subjective well-being. Our hope and vision for the future is that this approach could improve and potentially augment PTSD treatment."

### The study was supported by grants from the Canadian Institute for Military & Veteran Health Research and Lawson.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Majority of Americans believe another government shutdown likely in coming months

2013-12-03
Majority of Americans believe another government shutdown likely in coming months Last government shutdown harmful to medical research ALEXANDRIA, Va.—December 3, 2013—Nearly two-thirds (65%) of Americans say it's likely there will be another government shutdown ...

Manufacturing a new gut to treat GI diseases

2013-12-03
Manufacturing a new gut to treat GI diseases Researchers develop way to grow and control maturation of intestinal stem cells, findings pave new ways to treat gastrointestinal disorders Boston, MA – For those living with gastrointestinal ...

Do sports concussions really cause chronic traumatic encephalopathy?

2013-12-03
Do sports concussions really cause chronic traumatic encephalopathy? Study finds little evidence to support link MAYWOOD, Ill. – It's been widely reported that football and other contact sports increase the risk of a debilitating neurological condition called ...

Obesity, smoking increase risk after immediate breast reconstruction with implants

2013-12-03
Obesity, smoking increase risk after immediate breast reconstruction with implants New risk-scoring tool allows surgeons to better counsel and potentially change an operative plan for women at higher risk for implant failure after mastectomy, Journal of the ...

NASA sees thirty-third tropical depression form in Northwestern Pacific

2013-12-03
NASA sees thirty-third tropical depression form in Northwestern Pacific The Northwestern Pacific Ocean tropical cyclone season continues with the formation of the thirty-third tropical depression today, December 3, 2013.Two NASA satellites provided a look at the ...

Protein in prostate biopsies signals increased cancer risk

2013-12-03
Protein in prostate biopsies signals increased cancer risk Finding may help clinicians decide which men, with an aberrant biopsy, could benefit from additional future biopsy screenings NEW YORK (December 3, 2013) -- Researchers from Weill Cornell Medical ...

Building life-saving batteries: American Chemical Society Prized Science video

2013-12-03
Building life-saving batteries: American Chemical Society Prized Science video The engineering feat that enables a device to jolt a dangerously misbehaving heart back to its normal rhythm and save millions of lives is featured in a new video from the popular ...

New report calls for attention to abrupt impacts from climate change

2013-12-03
New report calls for attention to abrupt impacts from climate change WASHINGTON -- Climate change has increased concern over possible large and rapid changes in the physical climate system, which includes the Earth's atmosphere, land surfaces, and oceans. Some ...

Rainfall to blame for decline in Arctic peregrines

2013-12-03
Rainfall to blame for decline in Arctic peregrines Rain, crucial to sustaining life on Earth, is proving deadly for young peregrine falcons in Canada's Arctic. A University of Alberta study recently published in Oecologia has found that an increase in the frequency ...

Does Facebook use affect body image in teen girls?

2013-12-03
Does Facebook use affect body image in teen girls? New Rochelle, NY, December 3, 2013—"Appearance exposure" on the Internet has been linked to body image disturbance among adolescent girls. A new study that links specific Facebook ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Millions of men could benefit from faster scan to diagnose prostate cancer

Simulations solve centuries-old cosmic mystery – and discover new class of ancient star systems

MIT study explains how a rare gene variant contributes to Alzheimer’s disease

Race, ethnicity, insurance payer, and pediatric cardiac arrest survival

High-intensity exercise and hippocampal integrity in adults with cannabis use disorder

“Brain dial” for consumption found in mice

Lung cancer rewires immune cells in the bone marrow to weaken body’s defenses

Researchers find key to Antarctic ice loss blowing in the north wind

Ten years after the discovery, gravitational waves verify Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Area Theorem

Researchers uncover potential biosignatures on Mars

Built to learn: how early brain structure primes the brain to learn efficiently

Cells use electricity to eliminate their ‘weakest’ neighbours to maintain healthy protective barriers

New motion-compensation approach delivers sharper single-pixel imaging for dynamic scenes

Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience now officially part of the Canadian Science Publishing portfolio

What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”

Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA

New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer

State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds

Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards    

Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework

An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe

Childhood traumatic events and transgender identity are strongly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in university students

UVA to test if MRI can reveal undetected brain injuries in soldiers

Mount Sinai Morningside unveils new, state-of-the-art facility for patients who need inpatient rehabilitation

BD² announces new funding opportunities focused on biology of bipolar disorder

“Want to, but can’t”: A new model to explain the gap in waste separation behavior

Highly sensitive, next-generation wearable pressure sensors inspired by cat whiskers

Breaking the code of sperm motion: Two proteins found to be vital for male fertility

UC Irvine poll: Californians support stricter tech regulations for children

Study finds critically endangered sharks being sold as food in U.S. grocery stores

[Press-News.org] Neurofeedback tunes key brain networks, improving subjective well-being in PTSD