A MEG scan can diagnose PTSD. So what?
I'm a little lost on why this technology would be helpful in diagnosing PTSD. Is it hard to diagnose in the office? Is it really better to wait weeks or months for a scan? Isn't this kind of like running viral cultures on everyone who has the Common Cold?
I can certainly see how this may lead to information about the anatomy and neurophysiology of PTSD, and therefore could lead to improved treatments over time, but I just don't see the utility of using it for diagnosis.
If, however, it becomes a reliable way to diagnose PTSD in complicated, co-morbid patients, or to differentiate PTSD from exaggerated symptoms and flat-out malingering, then it might be useful. However, I have this suspicion that even malingering PTSD symptoms for a long time (long enough to get through the VA system to the point where brass ring of permanent disability and lifetime service connected benefits are on the table) may well change neurophysiology in the direction of actual PTSD to the point that the scans become "inconclusive." After all, wouldn't thinking about having a syndrome, acting like you have the syndrome, forcing yourself to believe the syndrome in order to act like you have it, all be likely to have an effect on the neurophysiology in such a way that it begins to mimic the scans of people with "real" PTSD?
Once this research gets a little further along, I'd be really interested to see if it can accurately differentiate PTSD from other disorders in people who claim PTSD and report the full complement of symptoms from a combat situation which never took place (as documented by indisputable records of when/where the veteran was stationed and clear inaccuracies in the vets story). It's clear to me that some of these poor men and women really believe they were in/near a Viet Nam battle, even though their service record shows they could not possibly have been in-country at the time of that battle.
My own opinion (scans or not) is this:
They served. They're suffering. They get my full attention.
Whether or not the story is real or whether I think it's PTSD or schizophrenia or delusional disorder or personality disorder.
But how this will all shake out regarding various types of scans will be interesting.