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This Emory-led study shows a link between post-trauma brain activity and symptoms of anxiety and PTSD six months later. It is part of the AURORA study, led nationally by Sam McLean, MD, at the UNC School of Medicine.


The way an individual’s brain responds to stress following a traumatic event, such as a car accident, may help to predict their long-term mental health outcomes, according to research led by Emory scientists and published in the American Journal of Psychiatry (AJP), as part of the AURORA study, a large-scale, multisite research project that followed more than 3,000 people for up to a year after exposure to a traumatic event. UNC lead on the AJP article is Xinming An, PhD.

AURORA is led nationally and at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill by Sam McLean, MD, the Jeffrey Houpt Distinguished Investigator and Professor of Emergency Medicine, Anesthesiology and Psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine. He is also Director of the Institute for Trauma Recovery at UNC-Chapel Hill.

Evidence from previous studies suggests it’s common for people to show a wide range of responses after a traumatic experience, such as a natural disaster or serious accident. One person may show initial symptoms that diminish naturally over time, while another may have long-lasting symptoms that make it difficult to carry out everyday activities. These different responses do not fall neatly into existing diagnostic categories and, although there are known risk and resilience factors associated with mental health outcomes, researchers aren’t yet able to predict how a specific person will fare after experiencing a traumatic event.

Using a variety of neurobiological, behavioral, and self-report measures, the AURORA study researchers hope to develop a comprehensive picture of the factors that play a role in trauma survivors’ mental health over time. To help advance this effort, AURORA study data will be made available to the broader research community through the NIMH Data Archive.

As part of the study, Jennifer Stevens, PhD, of Emory University in Atlanta, led an investigation of post-trauma brain activity in an initial group of 69 AURORA participants who were seen in an emergency department following a car crash. Stevens and colleagues hypothesized that different patterns of stress-related brain activity may predict participants’ long-term mental health symptoms across a range of diagnoses.

Two weeks after the accident, the participants had their brain activity measured via functional MRI while they completed a series of standard computer-based tasks. The tasks assessed their brain activity in response to social threat cues, reward cues, and situations that required them to inhibit a response.

Over the next six months, the participants also completed digital surveys in which they self-reported symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, dissociation, anxiety, and impulsivity.

Analyses of the participants’ brain activity data revealed four distinct profiles:

  • Reactive/disinhibited: High activity related to both threat and reward; little activity related to response inhibition
  • Low-reward/high-threat: High activity related to threat; low activity related to reward
  • High-reward: No activity related to threat; little activity related to response inhibition; high activity related to reward
  • Inhibited: De-activation related to threat; some activity related to inhibition; low activity related to reward

The researchers then performed the same analyses with a separate group of 77 AURORA participants who also were seen in an emergency department following exposure to a range of traumatic events not limited to car crashes. In this group, they found evidence for three of the four profiles: reactive/disinhibited, low-reward/high-threat, and inhibited.

These profiles were not correlated with other demographic, health-related, trauma-related, or site-specific characteristics.

Looking at participants’ brain activity profiles in relation to their mental health outcomes, Stevens and co-authors found that participants with the reactive/disinhibited profile—those who showed high activity related to both threat and reward—reported higher levels of symptoms of both PTSD and anxiety over the six-month follow-up period compared with the other profiles.

The researchers found no association between any of the brain activity profiles and other mental health outcomes, such as symptoms of depression, dissociation, or impulsivity.

The link between high reward reactivity (as part of the reactive/disinhibited profile) and long-term symptoms was unexpected, as previous studies indicated an association between low reward reactivity and post-trauma PTSD and depression. The divergent findings could be explained by the fact that reactivity to reward and threat are rarely examined together in trauma-related studies. The researchers suggest that reward reactivity warrants greater attention in future studies as a potential risk factor for stress-related symptoms following trauma.

These findings are preliminary and additional research with larger samples will be needed to confirm and refine these brain-based profiles. However, these initial findings suggest that the profiles could provide meaningful information about a person’s vulnerability to stress after experiencing a traumatic event. Establishing reliable, predictive profiles of stress response could improve clinical care, helping providers deliver effective interventions that are tailored to trauma survivors’ individual needs and circumstances.

AURORA is supported by the National Institutes of Mental Health (U01MH110925), the US Army MRMC, One Mind, and The Mayday Fund. The above content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of any of the funders.

UNC School of Medicine Contact: Mark Derewicz