New PTSD treatment looks at brain signals

By Maura Lerner

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 26 2010 11:14 a.m. MST

Scientists, led by Dr. Apostolos Georgopoulos at the Minneapolis VA hospital have discovered a way to identify people with post-traumatic stress disorder by analyzing their brain signals. They use an imaging technique called MEG (magnetoencephalography), left, in a vault-like room at the VA hospital to create images of brain activity, which can then be analyzed.

Jeff Wheeler, Minneapolis Star Tribune/MCT

MINNEAPOLIS — There's never been a simple test to diagnose post-traumatic stress, but a group of Minnesota scientists say they've found a high-tech way to identify people who have the disorder — by studying their brain signals.

The discovery could have huge implications for the way PTSD is diagnosed and treated in the future, says Dr. Apostolos Georgopoulos, who led the research as director of the Brain Sciences Center at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center.

PTSD is thought to afflict tens of thousands of combat veterans, but it can be hard to diagnose. It's a collection of psychological symptoms that can, in some cases, be caused by other conditions, such as head injuries or depression. That's one reason that exact numbers are hard to pin down; the VA estimates that anywhere from 11 to 20 percent of returning veterans from Afghanistan and Iraq have PTSD.

But in a study released Wednesday, Dr. Georgopoulos and his research team found what they call the first "biological marker" for PTSD: A distinctive pattern of brain signals that can be detected with a $2 million device called MEG (magnetoencephalography).

"The brain patterns are very different," said Georgopoulos, who has been studying brains for 30 years.

In men and women with PTSD, he said, the machine found a cluster of abnormal brain signals in an area of the brain involved in memory. Exactly why is still a mystery, but he speculates that it may interfere with the ability to suppress bad memories, one of the hallmarks of post-traumatic stress.

Georgopoulos, who is also a neurology professor at the University of Minnesota, is one of a growing band of scientists using brain imaging, such as MEG and PET scans, to study psychiatric disorders.

"That's a big area in psychiatry," said Dr. Monte Buchsbaum, a leading brain researcher and psychiatrist at the University of California at San Diego. "Mental illness is a devastating brain disease, and we now have better technology to look at the brain in action."

Three years ago, Georgopoulos led a small study of patients with Alzheimer's, schizophrenia and several other brain disorders, and found that each group had a distinctive pattern of brain signals when examined with the MEG device, which measures moment to moment changes in the brain's electrical activity.

For the latest study, he and his team recruited several hundred veterans from Minnesota and Wisconsin, spanning every war since World War II. Among them were 74 men and women who had been diagnosed with PTSD.

One was Gary K. Lore of Minnetonka, Minn.

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