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

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 - Apr 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

Keywords

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

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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