Odor-enhanced Visual Processing in PTSD

Aicko Y. Schumann, Thomas W. Uhde, David C. Houghton, Qing X. Yang, Bernadette M. Cortese

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Significant differences in the independent processing of trauma-related visual or olfactory cues have been demonstrated in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Yet, it remains unclear if PTSD-related differences exist in how the olfactory and visual systems interact to process potential threat. The present fMRI study assessed odor-enhanced visual processing (i.e. greater activation in visual areas to combined odor-picture cues compared to picture cues presented alone) in 46 combat veterans (19 with PTSD (CV+PTSD) and 27 healthy controls (HCV)). As expected, general odor-enhanced visual processing was demonstrated in the overall group, and CV+PTSD, compared to HCV, demonstrated significantly more threat odor-enhanced visual cortical activation to neutral images. Unexpectedly, however, CV+PTSD, compared to HCV, demonstrated significantly less threat odor-enhanced visual cortical activation to combat-related images. Functional connectivity findings mirrored those results and indicated a PTSD-related increase in olfactory-visual connectivity with neutral images and decrease with combat-related images. These findings suggest potential sensory processing dysregulation in PTSD that could be based in an olfactory-visual coupling impairment. Findings are also consistent with a PTSD-related focus on potential threat that may override the need to process additional sensory information important for the biological functions that promote survival.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number121072
JournalNeuroImage
Volume309
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2025

Keywords

  • Connectivity
  • fMRI
  • Sensory perception
  • Threat
  • Trauma

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neurology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience

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