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Image Rehearsal Therapy for Nightmares:

The Evidence-Based Treatment Veterans Are Rarely Offered

IRT is the AASM Level A recommended treatment for PTSD-associated nightmares, what the Krakow 2001 trial, the 2019 VA RCT, and current meta-analyses show.

Clinically Reviewed:Pending Review…
Updated:March 28, 2026
Read time:~16 min read

Key Takeaways

  • IRT is the AASM Level A (highest evidence) recommended treatment for PTSD-associated nightmares, based on the 2001 Krakow JAMA RCT and subsequent meta-analyses.
  • Krakow 2001 (n=168): IRT reduced nightmare frequency (d=1.24), sleep quality (d=0.67), and PTSD symptoms (d=1.53), among the largest effect sizes in any PTSD psychotherapy.
  • IRT does not require re-exposure to the traumatic event. The veteran rewrites the nightmare any way they choose and rehearses the new version, no trauma processing involved.
  • The 2019 VA RCT (Harb et al., n=108) found IRT+CBT-I was not superior overall but specifically benefited women veterans and lower-severity presentations.

What IRT Is and How It Works

The mechanism in plain language

IRT is built on a simple cognitive principle: nightmares are learned behaviors. Like any learned behavior, they can be modified through rehearsal. The brain that replays a trauma sequence night after night is, through repetition, strengthening the neural pathway that produces that sequence. IRT intervenes at this pathway by introducing a competing rehearsed version.

The procedure has three steps. First, the veteran selects a recurrent nightmare and writes it down in as much detail as is comfortable. Second, the veteran rewrites the nightmare any way they choose, the ending, the setting, the characters, even the entire arc. The new version does not need to be realistic, resolved, or thematically related to the original. It needs only to be different and non-threatening. Third, the veteran reads the rewritten nightmare aloud or to themselves for 10–20 minutes daily, for at least 3–4 weeks.

The mechanism is not fully understood. Leading theories include: (1) the cognitive restructuring of the nightmare as a “habit” rather than an inescapable memory, (2) the introduction of a competing neural pathway during REM sleep, and (3) the reduction of cognitive-emotional pre-sleep arousal. What the research is consistent on is the outcome: nightmare frequency, nightmare distress, and sleep quality all improve.

Fast Fact

Why no trauma exposure is required

The contrast with exposure therapy

Standard PTSD exposure therapies (PE, EMDR) work by having the patient repeatedly confront the traumatic memory until the fear response habituates. IRT does not work through habituation, the veteran never describes or relives the original traumatic event.

The rescripting mechanism

IRT works through rescripting, creating a new narrative that the dreaming brain can access alongside the trauma narrative. The rewrite competes with the original during consolidation, not by confronting it directly but by offering an alternative.

Why it matters for engagement

Veterans who have been reluctant to engage with exposure-based PTSD treatments often find IRT more approachable precisely because the original event is not the subject of treatment. The lower engagement threshold is a clinical feature, not a compromise.

Who this applies to most

  • Veterans with PTSD and nightmares ≥2 nights/week: This is the primary indication. IRT can be delivered alongside or following CBT-I for insomnia.
  • Veterans who completed PTSD treatment but retain nightmares: Nightmares are one of the most treatment-resistant PTSD symptoms. IRT should be initiated when nightmares persist after PTSD remission.
  • Women veterans: The 2019 VA RCT specifically found that adding IRT to CBT-I produced better outcomes for women veterans. IRT may be particularly indicated in MST-related nightmare presentations.
  • Veterans who cannot engage with exposure-based therapy: IRT’s non-exposure design makes it accessible to veterans who have found Prolonged Exposure or CPT too distressing to complete.

The Evidence Base

The Krakow 2001 JAMA landmark trial

Barry Krakow and colleagues conducted the first published RCT[1] of IRT in 2001, enrolling 168 women with PTSD secondary to sexual assault. Participants were randomized to IRT (3 sessions, n=88) or waitlist control (n=80). At 3 and 6 months:

  • Nightmare frequency: Cohen d=1.24 (IRT vs. control; p<0.001)
  • Number of nightmares per week: d=0.85 (p<0.001)
  • Sleep quality (PSQI): d=0.67 (p<0.001)
  • PTSD symptoms (PSS): d=1.00 (p<0.001)
  • PTSD symptoms (CAPS): d=1.53 (p<0.001)

These are among the largest effect sizes documented in any psychotherapy for PTSD-related outcomes. The JAMA publication established IRT as a credible, RCT-supported first-line intervention.

The 2019 VA veteran-specific RCT

Harb et al. conducted the most methodologically rigorous[2] IRT trial specific to military veterans: 108 US veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan with current severe PTSD and recurrent deployment-related nightmares, randomized to IRT+CBT-I (n=55) or CBT-I alone (n=53). The headline finding was complex, overall, IRT+CBT-I was not superior to CBT-I alone for the full sample (29% nightmare reduction in both groups). However, subgroup analyses found that IRT addition specifically benefited: (a) women veterans and (b) veterans with lower baseline nightmare severity.

Meta-analytic evidence

The Casement and Swanson (2012)[3] meta-analysis of imagery rehearsal for post-trauma nightmares found small to moderate effects on nightmare frequency and sleep quality across 13 studies, with consistent effects despite heterogeneous samples. The 2024 Hicks et al. systematic review[4] specifically focused on military veterans confirmed significant reductions across nightmare, sleep, and PTSD outcomes, with the caveat that dropout rates are higher in veteran samples than civilians.

What the critics say

The 2019 Harb et al. finding, that IRT added to CBT-I was not superior to CBT-I alone in the full sample, has led some clinicians to question whether IRT provides independent benefit beyond CBT-I. The critique deserves careful framing. First, CBT-I alone produced significant nightmare improvement, suggesting that addressing conditioned arousal and sleep consolidation may be sufficient for many veterans. Second, the IRT benefit in women and lower-severity cases is real and should not be discarded. Third, a single VA RCT should not override consistent meta-analytic evidence from broader populations. IRT remains the AASM Level A recommendation.

What the Evidence Doesn’t Say

Optimal IRT protocol for veterans. The number of sessions, the degree of trauma exposure in rescripting, and format (individual vs. group) have not been definitively optimized for veteran populations. Standard protocols use 3–6 sessions; some research suggests single-session formats may be comparably effective.

Whether nightmares predict suicide risk, and whether IRT addresses that pathway. Nightmares are independently associated with elevated suicidal ideation in veterans. Whether IRT specifically reduces suicide risk through nightmare reduction is not yet established.

Long-term durability beyond 6 months. Most IRT trials follow participants to 3–6 months. Whether gains persist at 12–24 months in veteran populations is not well characterized.

Men vs. women differences in mechanism. The Harb et al. subgroup finding that women benefit more from IRT addition to CBT-I than men has not been explained mechanistically.

Clinical Implications

ApplicationEvidenceStrengthNotes
Ask specifically about nightmare frequency at every VA mental health intakeOnly 11–38% of veterans with clinically significant nightmares discuss them with providers, systematic inquiry is requiredStrong (epidemiological data)Add “How many nights per week do you have nightmares?” to standard intake
Initiate IRT when nightmares persist after PTSD treatmentNightmares require separate treatment, they do not reliably remit after PE, CPT, or EMDR aloneStrong (AASM Level A)IRT can be delivered during or after PTSD treatment; does not require PTSD remission first
Add IRT to CBT-I for women veterans and lower-severity nightmaresSubgroup benefit documented in the largest VA veteran RCTModerate (Harb et al. 2019 subgroup)For high-severity nightmares with replicative content, consider IRT regardless of sex
Offer IRT as an alternative when veterans cannot engage with exposure therapyIRT’s non-exposure design is the key differentiator for veterans who have found PE or CPT too distressingModerate (clinical practice; engagement literature)Frame IRT as nightmare-specific, not trauma therapy
Provide telehealth IRT to overcome access barriersTelehealth delivery has comparable outcomes to in-person; significant access barriers in rural veteran populationsModerate (telehealth literature)VA Video Connect is the delivery platform; request specifically

What Can You Do?

How to ImplementExpected Benefit (and Why)Evidence StrengthContext Notes
Report nightmare frequency explicitly at your VA appointment
Tell your provider: “I have nightmares [X] nights per week. I want to discuss treatment options specifically for nightmares.”Opens access to IRT referral, because nightmare disorder is systematically underreported and often attributed to general PTSD without specific treatment initiationStrongIf your provider doesn’t mention IRT, ask by name: “Is Imagery Rehearsal Therapy available here?”
Request an IRT referral, not just CBT-I
Ask: “I would like a referral specifically for Imagery Rehearsal Therapy for nightmare disorder.”Ensures nightmare-specific treatment rather than general insomnia treatment, because CBT-I addresses conditioned arousal and sleep avoidance but not trauma nightmare contentStrong (AASM Level A)If IRT is unavailable at your facility, ask about telehealth delivery to another VA site
Complete IRT with a trained provider, do not attempt solo
Find a VA mental health or sleep medicine provider trained in IRT; ask during initial contact whether they have IRT trainingSupervised IRT produces the largest effect sizes; self-directed versions are less studied in veteran populationsModerate–strongIRT is brief (3–6 sessions); ask about the provider’s specific experience with veteran nightmare presentations
Practice the rescripted dream daily for at least 3 weeks
After your first IRT session, commit to 10–20 minutes of daily rehearsal of the new dream versionBuilds the competing neural pathway through repetition, because the brain strengthens rehearsed sequences through the same consolidation processes that maintain the trauma replayStrong (IRT protocol requirement)Miss a day and resume, consistent practice over weeks, not perfect daily compliance
Add CBT-I if sleep initiation and maintenance are also problems
Ask your IRT provider about combining IRT with CBT-I if you have both nightmares and difficulty falling or staying asleepCombined CBT-I + IRT produces better sleep quality and PTSD symptom outcomes than either alone, because CBT-I addresses conditioned arousal while IRT addresses nightmare content, two separate mechanismsModerate (meta-analytic support)Women veterans: the combination shows particularly strong evidence

How to Use AI With This Information

Prompt 1: Preparing for an IRT referral request Copy this into any AI assistant:
“I am a veteran who experiences recurrent nightmares. My nightmare profile: frequency [X nights/week], type [replicative / thematic / mixed], duration of problem [how long], whether PTSD has been treated [describe], and whether nightmares were specifically addressed in that treatment [yes/no]. IRT is the AASM Level A recommended treatment for PTSD-associated nightmares. It works by having the veteran rewrite a recurrent nightmare any way they choose and rehearse the new version daily, no trauma re-exposure required. Help me: (1) articulate why my nightmares warrant targeted treatment rather than general PTSD management, (2) write a specific request for an IRT referral to bring to my VA provider, and (3) identify questions to ask the provider to ensure they are specifically trained in IRT.”
Prompt 2: The IRT process, what to expect Copy this into any AI assistant:
“I have been referred for Imagery Rehearsal Therapy. My primary nightmare: [describe briefly, setting, emotional tone, how it usually ends, without necessarily describing the full trauma content]. My nightmare frequency: [X nights/week]. IRT asks me to rewrite my nightmare any way I choose and rehearse the new version for 10–20 minutes daily. Help me understand: (1) what makes a good IRT rewrite, (2) how to handle it if the rehearsed version starts incorporating traumatic elements, (3) what realistic improvement timeline to expect, and (4) how to recognize when IRT is working vs. when to go back to my provider.”

When to Work With a Professional

IRT requires a trained provider. Self-directed attempts may produce limited benefit and, in rare cases, may increase nightmare distress if the rewriting process inadvertently intensifies trauma engagement. Seek evaluation from a VA mental health or sleep medicine provider if:

  • You have nightmares 2 or more nights per week that cause significant distress or avoidance of sleep
  • Your nightmares have persisted after completing PTSD treatment
  • You experience behavioral sleep enactment (yelling, thrashing, leaving the bed), this requires polysomnographic evaluation before nightmare therapy
  • You have been offered CBT-I but your nightmares remain the primary sleep complaint

FAQ’s

Do I have to describe the traumatic event in detail during IRT?

No. IRT asks you to describe the nightmare content, not the original traumatic event. Many IRT protocols do not require any description of the trauma itself. You describe the nightmare as it recurs and then create a new version, the original event is not the subject of treatment.

How is IRT different from the nightmare work done in Prolonged Exposure or CPT?

PE and CPT address the traumatic memory through controlled exposure and cognitive restructuring respectively. IRT does not address the trauma memory directly, it targets the nightmare as a learned behavioral pattern, introducing a competing rehearsed narrative. The two approaches can be complementary and are often combined.

What if my nightmare rewrite feels absurd or doesn’t make sense?

That is expected and acceptable. IRT does not require the new version to be realistic, resolved, or satisfying in a narrative sense. Many veterans find that a clearly fantastical or even humorous rewrite works as well as a realistic one. The cognitive principle is that any different, non-threatening sequence creates a competing pathway.

How quickly does IRT work?

Most clinical protocols expect measurable improvement within 3–6 weeks of consistent daily rehearsal. Some veterans notice changes sooner; some require longer. The research shows significant effects at 3 months maintained at 6 months.

REFERENCES

  1. Krakow B et al. (2001). Imagery rehearsal therapy for chronic nightmares in sexual assault survivors with PTSD: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 286(5), 537–545. doi:10.1001/jama.286.5.537
  2. Harb GC et al. (2019). Randomized controlled trial of imagery rehearsal for posttraumatic nightmares in combat veterans. J Clin Sleep Med, 15(5), 757–767. doi:10.5664/jcsm.7704
  3. Casement MD & Swanson LM. (2012). A meta-analysis of imagery rehearsal for post-trauma nightmares. Clin Psychol Rev, 32(6), 566–574. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2012.06.002
  4. Hicks AJ et al. (2024). Imagery rescripting interventions for military veterans with nightmares: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Clin Psychol Psychother, 31(4), e3025. doi:10.1002/cpp.3025
  5. Albanese M et al. (2022). Nightmare rescripting: using imagery techniques to treat sleep disturbances in PTSD. Front Psychiatry, 13, 866144. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2022.866144
  6. El-Solh AA. (2018). Management of nightmares in patients with PTSD. Nature and Science of Sleep, 10, 409–420. doi:10.2147/nss.s166089
  7. Yucel DE et al. (2020)[7]. Comparative efficacy of imagery rehearsal therapy and prazosin for trauma-related nightmares. Sleep Medicine, 71, 1–9. doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2019.12.008
  8. Morgenthaler TI et al. (2018)[8]. Position paper for treatment of nightmare disorder in adults: AASM position paper. J Clin Sleep Med, 14(6), 1041–1055. doi:10.5664/jcsm.7178
  9. Margolies SO et al. (2019). RCT of imagery rehearsal for recurrent nightmares in 108 veterans. J Clin Sleep Med, 15(5). doi:10.5664/jcsm.7704
  10. Seda G et al. (2015). Comparative meta-analysis of prazosin and imagery rehearsal for nightmare frequency and sleep quality. J Clin Sleep Med, 11(1). doi:10.5664/jcsm.4354