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Traumatic Memories of PTSD Patients are Handled Differently

What’s New in Psychology?

Traumatic Memories of PTSD Patients are Handled Differently

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Coping with the War in Israel and Gaza

What’s New in Psychology?

Coping with the War in Israel and Gaza  

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Firearm Injury Carries Long-term Physical and Mental Burdens that are Poorly Understood

What’s New in Psychology?

Firearm Injury Carries Long-term Physical and Mental Burdens that are Poorly Understood      

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Brain Response Linked to Risk and Severity of PTSD

What’s New in Psychology?

 Brain Response Linked to Risk and Severity of PTSD

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Dissociation and Substance Use

What’s New in Psychology?

Dissociation and Substance Use

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Watching Disaster News on TV and Social Media Can Spell PTSD for Some Children

What’s New in Psychology

Watching Disaster News on TV and Social Media Can Spell PTSD for Some Children

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Research Reveals COVID-19 Traumatic Stress May Predict PTSD

What’s New in Psychology?

Research Reveals COVID-19 Traumatic Stress May Predict PTSD

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Are We close to Learning to Weaken Fear Memories?

Are We close to Learning to Weaken Fear Memories?

 Jim Windell

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What Clinicians Can Do to Combat Anti-Asian Racism

What Clinicians Can Do to Combat Anti-Asian Racism

 Jim Windell

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How Does Trauma-Focused Therapy Work?

How Does Trauma-Focused Therapy Work?

By Jim Windell

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Who Gets PTSD and Who Doesn’t?

Who Gets PTSD and Who Doesn’t?

 By Jim Windell

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Loss of Sleep Raises Risks for Anxiety and PTSD

Loss of Sleep Raises Risks for Anxiety and PTSD

By Jim Windell

            I know I’m not at my best on those days after I had less than my optimal number of hours of sleep. And I hate the groggy feeling I have after a sleepless night. As for learning anything new or attacking new challenges when I didn’t get enough sleep, forget it.
            We’ve known for some time that sleep is important for consolidating our memories. And we have also been aware that sleep deprivation interferes with learning and memory. However, a new study suggests that getting only half a night's sleep – as many medical workers and military personnel often do – gets in the way of the brain's ability to unlearn fear-related memories. That could very possibly put people at greater risk of conditions such as anxiety or posttraumatic stress disorder.

This new study appears in Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging. Entitled “Partial and Total Sleep Deprivation Interferes with Neural Correlates of Consolidation of Fear Extinction Memory,” the study provides us with new insights into how sleep deprivation affects brain function to disrupt fear extinction.

            The researchers, led by Anne Germain, PhD, at the University of Pittsburgh, and Edward Pace-Schott, PhD, at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, studied 150 healthy adults in the sleep laboratory. One third of subjects got normal sleep, one third were sleep restricted, so they slept only the first half of the night, and one third were sleep deprived, so they got no sleep at all. In the morning, all the subjects underwent fear conditioning.

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Sleep or No Sleep after a Trauma?

Sleep or No Sleep after a Trauma?

By Jim Windell

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Why are Some Veterans More Susceptible to PTSD?

Why are Some Veterans More Susceptible to PTSD?

By Jim Windell

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The Path from PTSD to Heart Problems

People with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) face a higher risk of heart disease at an earlier age than people without PTSD. That was been fairly well established. But why?

A research team’s abstract, recently published in The FASEB Journal, a journal that publishes in the biological sciences, helps explain why.

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