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A prospective examination of sex differences in posttraumatic autonomic functioning

Authors :
Stacey L. House
Karestan C. Koenen
Roland C. Merchant
Brian J. O'Neil
Elizabeth R. Steuber
Mariam Reda
Francesca L. Beaudoin
Sophia Sheikh
Rebecca Hinrichs
Christopher W. Jones
Anna Marie Chang
Sarah D. Linnstaedt
Tanja Jovanovic
Leon D. Sanchez
Jennifer S. Stevens
Cassandra Wanna
Niels K. Rathlev
Vishnu P. Murty
Scott L. Rauch
Phyllis L. Hendry
Kerry J. Ressler
John P. Haran
Elizabeth M. Datner
Xinming An
Jutta Joormann
Lauren A. Hudak
Alan B. Storrow
Brittany E. Punches
Robert M. Domeier
Antonia V. Seligowski
Ronald C. Kessler
Christopher Lewandowski
Michael C. Kurz
Steven E. Bruce
James M. Elliott
Sterling Winters
Charis Wiltshire
Mark W. Miller
Kenneth A. Bollen
Jose L. Pascual
Diego A. Pizzagalli
Mark J. Seamon
Guia Guffanti
Samuel A. McLean
M Deanna
Robert H. Pietrzak
Karlye Phillips
David A. Peak
Paul I. Musey
Steven E. Harte
Donglin Zeng
Gari D. Clifford
Thomas C. Neylan
Laura Germine
Meghan E. McGrath
Claire Pearson
John F. Sheridan
Beatriz Luna
Source :
Neurobiology of Stress, Neurobiology of Stress, Vol 15, Iss, Pp 100384-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Cross-sectional studies have found that individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) exhibit deficits in autonomic functioning. While PTSD rates are twice as high in women compared to men, sex differences in autonomic functioning are relatively unknown among trauma-exposed populations. The current study used a prospective design to examine sex differences in posttraumatic autonomic functioning. Methods 192 participants were recruited from emergency departments following trauma exposure (Mean age = 35.88, 68.2% female). Skin conductance was measured in the emergency department; fear conditioning was completed two weeks later and included measures of blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and high frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV). PTSD symptoms were assessed 8 weeks after trauma. Results 2-week systolic BP was significantly higher in men, while 2-week HR was significantly higher in women, and a sex by PTSD interaction suggested that women who developed PTSD demonstrated the highest HR levels. Two-week HF-HRV was significantly lower in women, and a sex by PTSD interaction suggested that women with PTSD demonstrated the lowest HF-HRV levels. Skin conductance response in the emergency department was associated with 2-week HR and HF-HRV only among women who developed PTSD. Conclusions Our results indicate that there are notable sex differences in autonomic functioning among trauma-exposed individuals. Differences in sympathetic biomarkers (BP and HR) may have implications for cardiovascular disease risk given that sympathetic arousal is a mechanism implicated in this risk among PTSD populations. Future research examining differential pathways between PTSD and cardiovascular risk among men versus women is warranted.

Details

ISSN :
23522895
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of stress
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10bbf7b6ec312da1d4b61527cbd0fe45