Woodward, Steven H.Kaloupek, Danny G.Grande, Laura J.Stegman, Wendy K.Kutter, Catherine J.Leskin, LorainePrestel, RebeccaSchaer, MarieReiss, Allan L.Eliez, Stephan2010-11-302010-11-302010-11-30200910.1017/S1355617709990476https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/59583WOS:000272114500003The proposition that declarative memory deficits are systematically related to smaller hippocampal Volume was tested in a relatively large sample (n = 95) of U.S. military veterans with and without combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder. This correlative analysis was extended by including multiple measures of verbal and visual declarative memory and multiple memory-relevant regional brain volumes that had been shown to exhibit main effects of PTSD in prior work. Small-to-moderate effects were observed on verbal declarative memory in line with a recent meta-analysis; nevertheless, little or no evidence of systematic linear covariation between memory measures and brain Volumes was observed. (JINS, 2009, 15, 830-839.)PtsdMemoryCognitionHippocampusNeocortexMagnetic resonance imagingPosttraumatic-Stress-DisorderChildhood Sexual-AbuseSurface-Based AnalysisHuman Cerebral-CortexCortical SurfaceAlzheimers-DiseaseCoordinate SystemVerbal MemoryArea Ca3MriHippocampal volume and declarative memory function in combat-related PTSDtext::journal::journal article::research article