Autonomous driving paper index
Right amygdala ablation reduces maladaptive negative interpretation bias and symptoms in a patient with post-traumatic stress disorder
One-line summary
Here, we present a unique prospective case of a male patient with refractory epilepsy and comorbid chronic PTSD, who underwent stereoelectroencephalography-guided radiofrequency ablation (SEEG-guided RFA) targeting the right amygdala.
Engineering notes
Immediately following focal right amygdala ablation, negative interpretation bias and PTSD symptom severity were significantly reduced, while seizure frequency remained unchanged.
Chinese explanation / 中文解读
中文解读待补充:本站会优先为端到端自动驾驶、BEV感知、3D目标检测、轨迹预测、路径规划、LiDAR感知等高价值论文补充中文说明。
Original abstract
Negative interpretation bias - the tendency to perceive ambiguous stimuli as threatening - is a core cognitive distortion underlying post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The amygdala, a key structure in fear processing, is implicated in PTSD-related hypervigilance and heightened fear perception, yet direct causal evidence linking amygdala function to negative interpretation bias remains limited. Here, we present a unique prospective case of a male patient with refractory epilepsy and comorbid chronic PTSD, who underwent stereoelectroencephalography-guided radiofrequency ablation (SEEG-guided RFA) targeting the right amygdala. Before ablation, the patient exhibited heightened negative interpretation bias, judging ambiguous faces as more fearful compared to control groups of epilepsy patients without PTSD. Intracranial SEEG recordings revealed that this cognitive bias was associated with increased late-phase event-related potential (L-ERP) differentiation between fearful and happy faces in the right amygdala. Immediately following focal right amygdala ablation, negative interpretation bias and PTSD symptom severity were significantly reduced, while seizure frequency remained unchanged. Notably, reductions in L-ERP amplitude after ablation closely tracked decreases in fear perception, highlighting L-ERP as a potential biomarker of negative interpretation bias and therapeutic response. Our findings provide causal evidence from an n-of-1 study that the right amygdala supports maladaptive negative interpretation bias in a patient with PTSD and that right amygdala ablation can contribute to the relief of PTSD symptomatology.
Links and sources
Need this topic turned into a technical roadmap?
Full Self Driving can prepare a custom autonomous driving literature review, code map, dataset map, and B2B technology assessment.
Request B2B research
Comments