OBJECTIVE: Studies in nonhuman primates suggest that high levels of
cortisol associated with stress have neurotoxic effects on the hippocampus,
a brain structure involved in memory. The authors previously showed that
patients with combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) had
deficits in short-term memory. The purpose of this study was to compare the
hippocampal volume of patients with PTSD to that of subjects without
psychiatric disorder. METHOD: Magnetic resonance imaging was used to
measure the volume of the hippocampus in 26 Vietnam combat veterans with
PTSD and 22 comparison subjects selected to be similar to the patients in
age, sex, race, years of education, socioeconomic status, body size, and
years of alcohol abuse. RESULTS: The PTSD patients had a statistically
significant 8% smaller right hippocampal volume relative to that of the
comparison subjects, but there was no difference in the volume of other
brain regions (caudate and temporal lobe). Deficits in short-term verbal
memory as measured with the Wechsler Memory Scale were associated with
smaller right hippocampal volume in the PTSD patients only. CONCLUSIONS:
These findings are consistent with a smaller right hippocampal volume in
PTSD that is associated with functional deficits in verbal memory.
Abstract Teaser