Neural Changes Associated With Symptom Improvement In Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Following Exposure Treatment
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$223,855.00
Summary
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a chronic disorder with enormous psychological, social and economic consequences that affects approximately 10-15% of Australians. Recent international research is focused on identifying mechanisms underlying effective treatments of PTSD, in an attempt to understand both the processes that maintain PTSD, and to help target more precise interventions to prevent chronic PTSD, a disabling condition that creates an enormous economic burden on health and compen ....Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a chronic disorder with enormous psychological, social and economic consequences that affects approximately 10-15% of Australians. Recent international research is focused on identifying mechanisms underlying effective treatments of PTSD, in an attempt to understand both the processes that maintain PTSD, and to help target more precise interventions to prevent chronic PTSD, a disabling condition that creates an enormous economic burden on health and compensation systems. This project will be the first study to identify the neural mechanisms underlying effective exposure-based treatment of PTSD. Exposure-based treatments are the current treatments of choice for PTSD, with several studies showing them to be highly effective in treating PTSD. Yet, the mechanisms and agents of change underlying this effective treatment remain unknown. Exploring the neural networks associated with effective treatment and symptom change will help identify and elucidate the mechanisms underlying exposure treatment. This has critical clinical implications, enabling insight into biological mechanisms underlying PTSD, more precise identification of populations that are less responsive to standard exposure-based treatments, and eventually will lead to better targeted and more effective treatment of chronic PTSD.Read moreRead less
The Neurobiology Of Auditory Hallucinations: Characterisation Of Dysfunction Within A Neural Circuitry Model.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$299,625.00
Summary
This is a highly innovative research proposal which is based on years of extensive research by our group. Auditory hallucinations are a prominent and potentially disabling symptom of psychosis, however it is extremely difficult to study them scientifically. Past research by our group (and other groups internationally) has indicated that an extensive network in the brain is activated whenever auditory hallucinations occur, but the source of this brain activity is unclear. It was thought that the ....This is a highly innovative research proposal which is based on years of extensive research by our group. Auditory hallucinations are a prominent and potentially disabling symptom of psychosis, however it is extremely difficult to study them scientifically. Past research by our group (and other groups internationally) has indicated that an extensive network in the brain is activated whenever auditory hallucinations occur, but the source of this brain activity is unclear. It was thought that the source may be the same brain circuits that are involved in generating inner speech or monitoring it, but our past research has ruled out these possibilities. Instead, our recent work suggests that auditory hallucinations may be associated with poorly functioning connections within central auditory processing circuits, specifically between left and right auditory association cortical regions. We conceptualise hallucinations as an abnormal and involuntary form of memory retrieval consequent to this dysfunction. Our study will pioneer methods of measuring connectivity in the brain circuits identified in our model, using a combination of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and electroencephalographic (EEG) techniques in tandem with tests of central auditory processing. We believe that sufferers may benefit from understanding the physical processes which cause hallucinations. We also believe that a better understanding of hallucinations may lead to a better understanding of schizophrenia and the psychoses, which may in turn help in the development of better ways of treating these illnesses.Read moreRead less
THE AUTONOMIC, SOMATIC AND CENTRAL NEURAL RESPONSES TO DEEP AND SUPERFICIAL PAIN IN HUMAN SUBJECTS
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$375,750.00
Summary
Pain is a subjective experience, the intensity of which can be readily influenced by personal experience. Despite this, pain originating from a particular part of the body will usually be described by all individuals as having similar character. For example, pain arising from the skin is commonly described as being sharp or burning and is usually easy to localise, whereas pain arising from muscle is commonly dull, throbbing and diffuse. In addition to producing sensory changes, pain also evokes ....Pain is a subjective experience, the intensity of which can be readily influenced by personal experience. Despite this, pain originating from a particular part of the body will usually be described by all individuals as having similar character. For example, pain arising from the skin is commonly described as being sharp or burning and is usually easy to localise, whereas pain arising from muscle is commonly dull, throbbing and diffuse. In addition to producing sensory changes, pain also evokes changes in blood pressure, heart rate and motor activity (often in an attempt to remove the source of the pain). The proposed research aims to characterise the cardiovascular and motor patterns associated with pain originating in skin and in muscle and to examine the brain regions that produce these changes. More specifically, microelectrodes will be used to investigate changes in peripheral nerve activity during transient painful skin and muscle events in awake human subjects. In a separate investigation functional magnetic resonance imaging will be used to determine brain sites that are activated by skin or muscle pain.Read moreRead less
An Event Related Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) Study Of Cognitive Deficits In Huntington's Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$257,550.00
Summary
Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive disorder clinically characterized by the onset of involuntary jerky movements, impaired voluntary movements, cognitive-attentional deterioration, and psychiatric symptoms. It is a consequence of progressive and selective brain degeneration. Over the last decade our research unit has made significant progress in describing the cognitive deficits in HD; however, we still don't know much about the parts of the brain that underlie these deficits. The aim of ....Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive disorder clinically characterized by the onset of involuntary jerky movements, impaired voluntary movements, cognitive-attentional deterioration, and psychiatric symptoms. It is a consequence of progressive and selective brain degeneration. Over the last decade our research unit has made significant progress in describing the cognitive deficits in HD; however, we still don't know much about the parts of the brain that underlie these deficits. The aim of this project is to use event related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to correlate structural and functional changes in the brain via the use of various cognitive behavioural measures. In this way we can elucidate what brain areas are responsible for various cognitive functions. In addition, we intend to ascertain how different brain areas decrement in function over time and to determine whether there is a relationship between rate of disease progression, age at onset and certain genetic characteristics. Understanding how the brain functions and how the disease progresses over time will be essential, from the point of view of patient management, when new drug treatments eventually permit prevention of the development, or slows further progress, of the disorder.Read moreRead less