Amygdala EFP Neurofeedback Effects on PTSD Symptom Clusters and Emotional Regulation Processes

  • Nadav Goldental
  • , Raz Gross
  • , Daniela Amital
  • , Eiran V. Harel
  • , Talma Hendler
  • , Aron Tendler
  • , Liora Levi
  • , Dmitri Lavro
  • , Tal Harmelech
  • , Shulamit Grinapol
  • , Nitsa Nacasch
  • , Eyal Fruchter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) manifests through distinct symptom clusters that can respond differently to treatments. Neurofeedback guided by the Amygdala-derived-EEG-fMRI-Pattern (Amyg-EFP-NF) has been utilized to train PTSD patients to regulate amygdala-related activity and decrease symptoms. Methods: We conducted a combined analysis of 128 PTSD patients from three clinical trials of Amyg-EFP-NF to evaluate effects across symptom clusters (as assessed by CAPS-5 subscales) and on emotion regulation processing (evaluated by the ERQ). Results: Amyg-EFP-NF significantly reduced severity across all PTSD symptom clusters immediately post-treatment, with improvements maintained at three-month follow-up. The arousal and reactivity cluster showed continued significant improvement during follow-up. Combined effect sizes were large (η2p = 0.23–0.35) across all symptom clusters. Regression analysis revealed that emotion regulation processes significantly explained 17% of the variance in symptom improvement during the follow-up period. Conclusions: Reduction of PTSD symptoms following Amyg-EFP-NF occurs across all symptom clusters, with emotional regulation processes potentially serving as an underlying mechanism of action. These results support Amyg-EFP-NF as a comprehensive treatment approach for PTSD that continues to show benefits after treatment completion.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2421
JournalJournal of Clinical Medicine
Volume14
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • EFP-neurofeedback
  • amygdala downregulation
  • emotion regulation
  • self-neuromodulation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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