RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Cortical hyperexcitability in post-traumatic stress disorder secondary to minor accidental head trauma: a neurophysiologic study JF Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience JO JPN FD Canadian Medical Association SP 127 OP 132 VO 30 IS 2 A1 Diego Centonze A1 Maria G. Palmieri A1 Laura Boffa A1 Mariangela Pierantozzi A1 Paolo Stanzione A1 Livia Brusa A1 M. Grazia Marciani A1 Alberto Siracusano A1 Giorgio Bernardi A1 M. Donatella Caramia YR 2005 UL http://jpn.ca/content/30/2/127.abstract AB Objective: We applied paired transcranial magnetic stimulation (pTMS) to patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) secondary to minor accidental head trauma. Our purpose was to determine the potential abnormality of motor cortex excitability in this pathologic condition.Methods: pTMS stimulation, according to the conditioning–test paradigm employing interstimulus intervals (ISIs) of 1–6 ms, was used to investigate intracortical inhibition in control subjects and patients with PTSD. The study population consisted of 14 patients who had developed PTSD following minor head trauma, 12 healthy volunteers without a clinical history of head trauma and 11 healthy subjects who had reported accidental minor head trauma 1–4 months before the study. This clinical electrophysiologic study was performed at the Department of Neuroscience, University of Rome “Tor Vergata.”Results: All patients with PTSD exhibited a significantly lower motor evoked potential (MEP) inhibition than controls at 2 ms, 3 ms and 4 ms ISI. The statistical analysis of the pTMS protocol showed a significant effect ( F2,36 = 25.63, p < 0.001) of the factor “group,” because patients with PTSD showed a mean conditioned MEP amplitude higher than that observed in both control groups for all 6 ISIs analyzed. The “ISI” factor was also significant ( F5,180 = 89.85, Greenhouse–Geisser ɛ = 0.35; p < 0.001), with the mean conditioned MEP amplitude increasing from 22.5% to 127.8% as the ISI increased from 1 ms to 6 ms. Finally, the interaction of group with ISI was also significant ( F10,180 = 8.97, p < 0.001), showing that the condition of PTSD secondary to head trauma was able to affect the MEP amplitude at different ISIs.Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that PTSD can give rise to abnormalities in intracortical inhibition. Our results provide further evidence that alterations in cortical inhibitory circuits may underlie specific forms of neuroticism in humans.