Interoception Underlies The Therapeutic Effects of Mindfulness Meditation for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Seung Suk Kang, Ph.D., Scott R. Sponheim, Ph.D., Kelvin O. Lim, M.D

TL;DR
This randomized clinical trial demonstrates that mindfulness meditation enhances interoceptive brain responses, which mediates PTSD symptom reduction, revealing a neurobiological mechanism underlying its therapeutic effects.
Contribution
The study identifies interoceptive brain responses, specifically heartbeat-evoked responses, as a key mechanism through which mindfulness-based stress reduction alleviates PTSD symptoms.
Findings
MBSR led to greater PTSD symptom improvement than control.
Frontal theta heartbeat-evoked responses increased after MBSR.
Changes in interoceptive brain responses mediated treatment effects.
Abstract
Mindfulness-based interventions have proven its efficacy in treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but the underlying neurobiological mechanism is unknown. To determine the neurobiological mechanism of action of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) treating PTSD, we conducted a randomized clinical trial (RCT) in which 98 veterans with PTSD were randomly assigned to receive MBSR therapy (n = 47) or present-centered group therapy (PCGT; n = 51; an active-control condition). Pre- and post-intervention measures of PTSD symptom severity (PTSD Checklist) and brain activity measures of electroencephalography (EEG) were assessed, including spectral power of spontaneous neural oscillatory activities during resting and meditation periods, time-frequency (TF) power of cognitive task-related brain responses, and TF power of heartbeat-evoked brain responses (HEBR) that reflect cardiac…
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