Differential relations between breathing retraining, in vivo exposure, and imaginal exposure homework completion and treatment outcomes in veterans receiving prolonged exposure for PTSD

Author:

Gros Daniel F.12ORCID,Pavlacic Jeffrey M.12ORCID,Argyriou Evangelia12,Acierno Ron13,Hernandez‐Tejada Melba A.3

Affiliation:

1. Mental Health Service Ralph H. Johnson VA Healthcare System Charleston South Carolina USA

2. Department of Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina USA

3. Louis A. Faillace, MD Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesLimited research exists that outlines the predictive relevance of the treatment components of prolonged exposure (PE) for post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on PTSD and depression symptom outcomes. The goal of the present study was to investigate relations between participant completion of breathing retraining, in vivo exposure, and imaginal exposure exercises and symptom outcomes.MethodsA total of 58 participants completed a trial of PE as part of a larger trial on peer involvement and treatment adherence. Diagnostic and self‐report measures were completed throughout treatment. Participants also recorded weekly completion of breathing retraining, in vivo exposure, and imaginal exposure exercises. Pearson correlations and hierarchical regression analyses were used to investigate relations between average weekly treatment component completion and treatment outcomes, controlling for relevant variables.ResultsAlthough breathing retraining and in vivo exposures were associated with PTSD outcomes in the correlational findings, use of breathing retraining, in vivo exposures, and imaginal exposures were not reliably associated with PTSD symptom outcomes when controlling for other variables in the regression analysis. However, when investigating changes in comorbid symptoms of depression, greater use of breathing retraining was associated with decreased symptoms of depression at posttreatment.ConclusionsPresent findings demonstrate the differential relations between participation in various PE treatment components and posttreatment symptom outcomes. The importance of breathing retraining in addressing comorbid depressive symptoms is discussed, with emphasis on potentially increasing relaxation and positive activities more broadly to encourage further treatment benefits.

Funder

U.S. Department of Defense

Publisher

Wiley

Reference41 articles.

1. Psychometric properties of the PTSD Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–Fifth Edition (PCL-5) in veterans.

2. Chrestman K.(2020). Staff perspective: Drs. Edna Foa and Sheila Rauch give the low down the new PE manual. Retrieved September 8 2023 fromhttps://deploymentpsych.org/blog/staff-perspective-drs-edna-foa-and-sheila-rauch-give-low-down-new-pe-manual

3. The Economic Burden of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in the United States From a Societal Perspective

4. Do you need to talk about it? Prolonged exposure for the treatment of chronic PTSD.

5. Behavioral activation for PTSD: A meta-analysis.

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