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1.
Refugees who suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) often react with strong emotions when confronted with trauma reminders. In this study, we aimed to investigate the associations between low emotion regulation capacity (as indexed by low heart rate variability [HRV]), probable PTSD diagnosis, and fear and anger reaction and recovery to trauma‐related stimuli. Participants were 81 trauma‐exposed refugees (probable PTSD, n = 23; trauma‐exposed controls, n = 58). The experiment comprised three 5‐min phases: a resting phase (baseline); an exposition phase, during which participants were exposed to trauma‐related images (stimulus); and another resting phase (recovery). We assessed HRV at baseline, and fear and anger were rated at the end of each phase. Linear mixed model analyses were used to investigate the associations between baseline HRV and probable DSM‐5 PTSD diagnosis in influencing anger and fear responses both immediately after viewing trauma‐related stimuli and at the end of the recovery phase. Compared to controls, participants with probable PTSD showed a greater increase in fear from baseline to stimulus presentation, d = 0.606. Compared to participants with low emotion regulation capacity, participants with high emotion regulation capacity showed a smaller reduction in anger from stimulus presentation to recovery, d = 0.548. Our findings indicated that following exposure to trauma‐related stimuli, probable PTSD diagnosis predicted increased fear reactivity, and low emotion regulation capacity predicted decreased anger recovery. Impaired anger recovery following trauma reminders in the context of low emotion regulation capacity might contribute to the increased levels of anger found in postconflict samples.  相似文献   

2.
An infrequently studied and potentially promising physiological marker for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is pupil response. This study tested the hypothesis that pupil responses to threat would be significantly larger in trauma‐exposed individuals with PTSD compared to those without PTSD. Eye‐tracking technology was used to evaluate pupil response to threatening and neutral images. Recruited for participation were 40 trauma‐exposed individuals; 40.0% (n = 16) met diagnostic criteria for PTSD. Individuals with PTSD showed significantly more pupil dilation to threat‐relevant stimuli compared to the neutral elements (Cohen's d = 0.76), and to trauma‐exposed controls (Cohen's d = 0.75). Pupil dilation significantly accounted for 12% of variability in PTSD after time elapsed since most recent trauma, cumulative violence exposure, and trait anxiety were statistically adjusted. The final logistic regression model was associated with 85% of variability in PTSD status and correctly classified 93.8% of individuals with PTSD and 95.8% of those without. Pupil reactivity showed promise as a physiological marker for PTSD.  相似文献   

3.
Research suggests that cognitive processing therapy (CPT) may be a particularly well‐suited intervention for trauma survivors who endorse self‐blame; however, no study has examined the impact of self‐blame on response to CPT. Accordingly, the current study compared response to CPT between two groups of veterans seeking residential treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In one group, participants endorsed low self‐blame at pretreatment (n = 133) and in the other group, participants endorsed high self‐blame (n = 133). Results from multilevel modeling analysis suggest that both groups experienced significant reductions in PTSD symptoms as measured by the PTSD Checklist, B = ?1.58, SE = 0.11; 95% CI [?1.78, ?1.37]; t(1654) = ?14.97, p < .001. After controlling for pretreatment symptom severity and additional covariates, there was no difference in treatment response between the low‐ and high‐self‐blame groups, Time × Self‐blame interaction: B = 0.18, SE = 0.12; 95% CI = [?0.06, 0.42]; t(1646) = 1.49, p = .138. This suggests that CPT is an effective treatment for individuals exposed to trauma, regardless of level of self‐blame.  相似文献   

4.
The present study investigated the relationship between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and emotional eating in a sample of medically healthy and medication‐free adults. Participants with PTSD (n = 44) and control participants free of lifetime psychiatric history (n = 49) completed a measure of emotional eating. Emotional eating is the tendency to eat or overeat in response to negative emotions. PTSD participants exhibited greater emotional eating than control participants (η2 = .20) and emotional eating increased with higher PTSD symptom severity (R2 = .11). Results supported the stress‐eating‐obesity model whereby emotional eating is a maladaptive response to stressors. Over time, this could lead to weight gain, particularly abdominal stores, and contribute to higher risk for comorbid medical disorders. Findings suggest the importance of future longitudinal research to understand whether emotional eating contributes to the high rates of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease in PTSD.  相似文献   

5.
In the current study, we explored exaggerated physiological startle responses in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and examined startle reactivity as a biomarker of PTSD in a large veteran sample. We assessed heart rate (HR), skin conductance (SC), and electromyographic (EMG) startle responses to acoustic stimuli under low‐, ambiguous‐, and high‐threat conditions in Gulf War veterans with current (n = 48), past (n = 42), and no history of PTSD (control group; n = 152). We evaluated PTSD status using the Clinician‐Administered PTSD Scale and trauma exposure using the Trauma History Questionnaire. Participants with current PTSD had higher HR, ds = 0.28–0.53; SC, d = 0.37; and startle responses than those with past or no history of PTSD. The HR startle response under ambiguous threat best differentiated current PTSD; however, sensitivity and specificity analyses revealed it to be an imprecise indicator of PTSD status, ROC AUC = .66. Participants with high levels of trauma exposure only showed elevated HR and SC startle reactivity if they had current PTSD. Results indicate that startle is particularly elevated in PTSD when safety signals are available but a possibility of danger remains and when trauma exposure is high. However, startle reactivity alone is unlikely to be a sufficient biomarker of PTSD.  相似文献   

6.
This study investigated preferential encoding of threat material in subjects with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with a modified dot-probe paradigm. This paradigm indexes attentional bias by measuring response latency to name neutral target words that are presented adjacent to or distant from threat words. Motor vehicle accident survivors with PTSD (n = 15), subclinical PTSD (n = 15), and low anxiety (n = 15) were required to name target words that were presented either adjacent to or distant from strong threat, mild threat, positive, and neutral words. PTSD subjects named targets faster when they were in close proximity to mild threat words. Results suggested that PTSD subjects' attention was drawn to the mild threat stimuli and are discussed in the context of network models of PTSD.  相似文献   

7.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is related to dysfunctional emotional processing, thus motivating the search for physiological indices that can elucidate this process. Toward this aim, we compared pupillary response patterns in response to angry and fearful auditory stimuli among 99 adults, some with PTSD (n = 14), some trauma‐exposed without PTSD (TE; n = 53), and some with no history of trauma exposure (CON; n = 32). We hypothesized that individuals with PTSD would show more pupillary response to angry and fearful auditory stimuli compared to those in the TE and CON groups. Among participants who had experienced a traumatic event, we explored the association between PTSD symptoms and pupillary response; contrary to our prediction, individuals with PTSD displayed the least pupillary response to fearful auditory stimuli compared those in the TE, B = ?0.022, p = .077, and CON, B = ?0.042, p = .002, groups, but they did not differ on angry auditory stimuli, B = 0.019, p = .118 and B = 0.006, p = .634, respectively. It is important to note that within‐group analyses revealed that participants with PTSD differed significantly in their response to angry versus fearful stimuli, B = ?0.032, p = .015. We also found a positive association between PTSD symptoms and pupillary response to angry stimuli. Our findings suggest that differential pupil response to anger and fear stimuli may be a promising way to understand emotional processing in PTSD.  相似文献   

8.
This population‐based longitudinal study examined the rates and predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among 725 differentially exposed survivors of the 1988 Spitak earthquake in Armenia, 23 years after the event. Participants had been previously evaluated in 1991. Evaluations included assessment of current PTSD (based on DSM‐5 criteria), and a variety of potential risk and protective factors. For the whole sample, the rate of PTSD attributed to the earthquake decreased from 48.7% in 1991 to 11.6% in 2012 (p < .001). A “dose of exposure” pattern persisted, and 15.7% of participants who were in Spitak (high exposure) and 6.6% of participants who were in Kirovagan (low exposure) during the earthquake met the criteria for PTSD (p = .003). Additionally, in 2012, another 9.9% of participants met PTSD criteria due to post‐earthquake traumas, which is a 5‐fold increase from pre‐ to postearthquake (p < . 001). Factors positively associated with PTSD included earthquake‐related job loss, exposure to post‐earthquake traumas, depression at baseline, and chronic illness since the earthquake. Factors inversely associated with PTSD included housing assistance within two years after the earthquake, support of family and/or friends, and to a lesser degree, higher education and high living standard. These variables accounted for 23.1% of the variance in current PTSD severity scores. These findings indicate that PTSD rates subside significantly after a catastrophic disaster, although earthquake‐related PTSD persists among a subgroup of exposed individuals. Predictors of PTSD identified in this study provide guidance for planning acute and longer‐term postdisaster public mental health recovery programs.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the longitudinal course of primary care patients in the active duty Army with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and identified prognostic indicators of PTSD severity. Data were drawn from a 6‐site randomized trial of collaborative primary care for PTSD and dpression in the military. Subjects were 474 soldiers with PTSD (scores ≥ 50 on the PTSD Checklist ‐Civilian Version). Four assessments were completed at U.S. Army installations: baseline, and follow‐ups at 3 months (92.8% response rate [RR]), 6 months (90.1% RR), and 12 months (87.1% RR). Combat exposure and 7 validated indicators of baseline clinical status (alcohol misuse, depression, pain, somatic symptoms, low mental health functioning, low physical health functioning, mild traumatic brain injury) were used to predict PTSD symptom severity on the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale (Cronbach's α = .87, .92, .95, .95, at assessments 1–4, respectively). Growth mixture modeling identified 2 PTSD symptom trajectories: subjects reporting persistent symptoms (Persisters, 81.9%, n = 388), and subjects reporting improved symptoms (Improvers 18.1%, n = 86). Logistic regression modeling examined baseline predictors of symptom trajectories, adjusting for demographics, installation, and treatment condition. Subjects who reported moderate combat exposure, adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 0.44, 95% CI [0.20, 0.98], or who reported high exposure, OR = 0.39, 95% CI [0.17, 0.87], were less likely to be Improvers. Other baseline clinical problems were not related to symptom trajectories. Findings suggested that most military primary care patients with PTSD experience persistent symptoms, highlighting the importance of improving the effectiveness of their care. Most indicators of clinical status offered little prognostic information beyond the brief assessment of combat exposure.  相似文献   

10.
Objectives. Mast cells and leukocyte populations in bladder biopsies from women with interstitial cystitis (IC) or idiopathic reduced bladder storage (sensory urgency [SU]) were compared to determine whether any evidence of a common etiology between these conditions could be found.Methods. Biopsies from 40 patients (9 meeting the National Institute of Arthritis, Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases criteria [IC] and 31 who did not [SU]) and 20 controls (having colposuspension for stress incontinence) were stained with monoclonal antibodies against leukocyte antigens and mast cell tryptase. The median cell counts from 10 high power fields were calculated and compared between cases and controls. The clinical and urodynamic data were also compared.Results. Nocturia (odds ratio 26.7; 95% confidence interval 3.3 to 245.5) and bladder pain (odds ratio 18.5; 95% confidence interval 1.8 to 193.1) were associated with significant odds ratios for disease (IC or SU compared with controls) in logistic regression analysis. Patients with IC were significantly older than those with SU (P = 0.05). Leukocyte populations showed only increased CD20+ cells in patients with IC compared with the others (P = 0.03).Conclusions. The analysis of the clinical, urodynamic, and cystoscopic data showed no differences between patients with IC and those with SU, except for age. Nocturia or bladder pain discriminated between patients and controls. The lymphocytic infiltrate in SU is similar to that seen in IC but with fewer CD20+ cells. These data support the work of others and may indicate that SU has a common etiology with IC.  相似文献   

11.
This study is an evaluation of a psychosocial intervention involving child and adolescent survivors of the 2008 Sichuan China earthquake. Sociodemographics, earthquake‐related risk exposure, resilience using the Connor‐Davidson Resilience Scale, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) using the UCLA‐PTSD Index were collected from 1,988 intervention participants and 2,132 controls. Mean resilience scores and the odds of PTSD did not vary between groups. The independent factors for risk and resilience and the dependent variable, PTSD, in the measurement models between control and intervention groups were equivalent. The structural model of risk and 2 resilience factors on PTSD was examined and found to be unequivalent between groups. In contrast to controls, risk exposure (B = ?0.32, p < .001) in the intervention group was negatively associated with PTSD. Rational thinking (B = ?0.48, p < .001), a resilience factor, was more negatively associated with PTSD in the intervention group. The second resilience factor explored, self‐awareness, was positively associated with PTSD in both groups (B = 0.46 for controls, p < .001, and B = 0.69 for intervention, p < .001). Results highlight the need for more cross‐cultural research in resilience theory to develop culturally appropriate interventions and evaluation measures.  相似文献   

12.
Existing literature has provided support for an association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and emotion dysregulation. However, few studies have examined the relation between PTSD and emotion dysregulation that stems from positive emotions. Moreover, the role of trauma exposure, per se, on positive emotion dysregulation is unknown. Addressing these limitations, the current study compared levels of positive emotion dysregulation among (a) individuals without trauma exposure, (b) trauma-exposed individuals without probable PTSD, and (c) trauma-exposed individuals with probable PTSD. Participants were 400 community-dwelling individuals (M age = 43.76 years, 68.6% female; 24.2% Asian, 23.7% Black, 24.5% Hispanic, 27.6% White). Lower levels of positive emotion dysregulation were found among trauma-exposed participants without probable PTSD compared to trauma-exposed participants with probable PTSD, ds = 0.66–0.73, and unexposed participants, ds = 0.58–0.64. The present findings suggest the potential protective role of low levels of positive emotion dysregulation following trauma exposure. If replicated in longitudinal studies, these results may indicate the utility of enhancing skills for regulating positive emotions among individuals at risk for trauma exposure.  相似文献   

13.
The September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center (WTC) in New York City (9/11) had health-related consequences, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD is associated with functional impairment, which varies by symptom severity and other factors. This study aimed to identify predictors of functional impairment in individuals with low versus high PTSD symptom severity levels. WTC Health Registry enrollees exposed to 9/11 were surveyed four times between 2003 and 2015; cumulated data for individuals who endorsed at least one symptom on the PTSD Checklist–Civilian Version (PCL-C) at Wave 4 (2015–2016) were included (N = 30,287) and examined cross-sectionally. Individuals were classified based on PCL-C scores as having low/no (2–29) or high levels of PTSD symptom severity (≥ 44). Functional impairment was defined as subsequent difficulties in daily living. Among low/no PTSD severity participants, adjusted odds ratios (aORs) for the associations between functional impairment and poor self-rated health (vs. good), low social support (vs. high), and no physical activity (vs. active) were 1.23–1.92. In the same group, low versus high household income was associated with more functional impairment, aOR = 1.34, 95% CI [1.13, 1.59]. Among participants with high-level PTSD symptoms, women, aOR = 1.70, 95% CI [1.31, 2.20], and Hispanic enrollees, aOR = 1.76, 95% CI [1.31, 2.36], were more likely to report an absence of impairment. Self-rated health, social support, and physical activity emerged as important predictors of PTSD-related functional impairment across PTSD symptom severity levels, supporting clinical interventions targeting these factors.  相似文献   

14.
This study assessed the frequency and seventy of panic attack symptoms and panic attacks that develop in relation to the experience of traumatic events in 62 subjects seeking treatment for trauma-related symptomatology. Results indicated a high incidence of panic attacks (69%). Many individuals also thought they were going crazy or losing control (72%) or having a heart attack (38%) within the 2 weeks prior to assessment. These findings indicate that similar to panic disordered patients, many trauma victims with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) not only experience physiological symptoms of panic, but are also fearful of these symptoms.  相似文献   

15.
Individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) experience elevated concerns about their capacity to control, and the consequences of, strong emotions that occur in response to trauma reminders. Anxiety is theorized to compromise attentional control (Eysenck, Derakshan, Santos, & Calvo, 2007). In turn, diminished attentional control may increase vulnerability to threat cues and emotional reactivity (Ehlers & Clark, 2001). Consequently, attentional control may play a role in the fear of emotions frequently experienced by individuals with PTSD. Study participants included 64 men and 64 women with a mean age of 37 years, 86% of whom were White, non‐Hispanic. Participants experienced an average of 7.68 types of traumatic events, most commonly including motor vehicle accidents and intimate partner violence. PTSD symptoms positively correlated with fear of emotions (r = .53) and negatively correlated with attentional control (r = ?.38). Attentional control was negatively correlated with fear emotions (r = ?.77) and partially mediated the link between PTSD and fear of emotions (R2 = .22). Given the findings regarding top‐down attentional control, these results have implications for cognitive and emotional processing theories of PTSD and emphasize the importance of clinical consideration of fear of emotions and attentional control in the treatment of PTSD.  相似文献   

16.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been linked to deficits in response inhibition, and neuroimaging research suggests this may be due to differences in prefrontal cortex recruitment. The current study examined relationships between PTSD from intimate partner violence (IPV) and neural responses during inhibition. There were 10 women with PTSD from IPV and 12 female control subjects without trauma history who completed the stop signal task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Linear mixed models were used to investigate group differences in activation (stop–nonstop and hard–easy trials). Those with PTSD exhibited greater differential activation to stop–nonstop trials in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the anterior insula and less differential activation in several default mode regions (d = 1.12–1.22). Subjects with PTSD exhibited less differential activation to hard–easy trials in the lateral frontal and the anterior insula regions (driven by less activation to hard trials) and several default mode regions (i.e., medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate; driven by greater activation to easy trials; d = 1.23–1.76). PTSD was associated with difficulties disengaging default mode regions during cognitive tasks with relatively low cognitive demand, as well as difficulties modulating executive control and salience processing regions with increasing cognitive demand. Together, these results suggest that PTSD may relate to decreased neural flexibility during inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
Investigators have used various experimental paradigms to study how individuals with different emotional disorders process emotional information. However, little research has been done on relatives of individuals with emotional disorders, despite developments in the area of emotional contagion. In the current experiment, children of adults with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (n = 18) and control participants (n = 21), ages 9–17 years, participated in a modified Stroop color-naming task. The results indicated that the children of adults with PTSD showed increased Stroop interference for threat-related relative to neutral words and to the performance of the controls. These findings are discussed with respect to the literature on information processing in PTSD and emotional contagion in families.  相似文献   

18.

OBJECTIVE

To confirm abnormal glycosylation of Tamm‐Horsfall protein (THP) in patients with interstitial cystitis (IC).

PATIENTS, SUBJECTS AND METHODS

The sialic acid content of THP, a critical component of its biological activity, is reduced in patients with IC. N‐glycan shows reduced levels of high molecular weight tri‐ and tetra‐antennary sialylated oligosaccharides. These results are supported by quantitative monosaccharide analysis of neutral and amino sugars in patients vs control subjects. THP was isolated from urine samples of 23 patients with IC and 24 control subjects by salt precipitation. The sialic acid contents were measured using 1,2‐diamino‐4,5‐methylene dioxybenzene‐high performance liquid chromatography analysis. For N‐glycan profiling, purified THP was treated with peptide:N‐glycosidase F to release N‐glycans. The purified N‐glycans were labelled with 2‐aminobenzamide and were profiled by high‐pH anion exchange chromatography (HPAEC) with fluorescence detection. The neutral and amino sugars were determined by HPAEC with pulsed amperometric detection.

RESULTS

The total sialic acid in patients was half of that in controls. There was a pattern of reduced level of high molecular weight sialylated oligosaccharide in 17 of 23 patients vs four of 24 controls. The total neutral and amino sugars showed a ≈30% reduction in patients. The mean (sem ) for the controls was 133.79 (6.51) vs 94.76 (6.67) nmol/200 µg of THP for patients (P < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

THP in patients with IC has reduced sialylation and overall glycosylation, and by inference, THP has a role in the pathophysiology of IC.  相似文献   

19.
It has been well established that warfare‐related stress puts service members at risk for a range of mental health problems after they return from deployment. Less is known about service members’ experience of family stressors during deployment. The aims of this study were to (a) evaluate whether family stressors would contribute unique variance to posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depressive symptoms above and beyond combat threat during deployment and (b) examine whether family stressors would amplify the negative effects of combat threat on postmilitary mental health 5 years postdischarge. Study participants reported their experience of objective and subjective family stressors and combat threat during deployment. Objective family stressors demonstrated unique associations with PTSD and depression symptoms and remained significant after accounting for ongoing family stressors reported at follow‐up. A significant interaction was found between objective family stressors and combat threat on PTSD symptoms, r = ?.10. Although the association between combat threat and PTSD was significant for participants who reported high, B = 0.04; and low, B = 0.09, exposure to family stressors, the steeper slope for those exposed to fewer family stressors indicates a stronger effect of combat threat. Follow‐up analyses revealed that veterans who experienced high amounts of family stress and high levels of combat threat reported significantly worse PTSD symptoms than those who reported low family stress, t(256) = 3.98, p < .001. Findings underscore the importance of attending to the role that family stressors experienced during deployment play in service members’ postmilitary mental health.  相似文献   

20.
Concurrent posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common in military populations. The purpose of this study was to examine long-term neurobehavioral outcomes in service members and veterans (SMVs) with versus without PTSD symptoms following TBI of all severities. Participants were 536 SMVs prospectively enrolled from three military medical treatment facilities who were recruited into three experimental groups: TBI, injured controls (IC), and noninjured controls (NIC). Participants completed the PTSD Checklist, Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory, and the TBI–Quality of Life (TBI-QOL) and were divided into six subgroups based on the three experimental categories, two PTSD categories (i.e., present vs. absent), and two broad TBI severity categories (unMTBI, which included uncomplicated mild TBI; and smcTBI, which included severe TBI, moderate TBI, and complicated mild TBI): (a) NIC/PTSD-absent, (b) IC/PTSD-absent, (c) unMTBI/PTSD-absent, (d) unMTBI/PTSD-present, (e) smcTBI/PTSD-absent, and (f) smcTBI/PTSD-present. There were significant main effects across the six groups for all TBI-QOL measures, ps < .001. Select pairwise comparisons revealed significantly lower scores, p < .001, on all TBI-QOL measures in the PTSD-present groups when compared to the PTSD-absent groups within the same TBI severity classification, ds = 0.90–2.11. In contrast, when controlling for PTSD, there were no significant differences among the TBI severity groups for any TBI-QOL measures. These results provide support for the strong influence of PTSD but not TBI severity on neurobehavioral outcomes following TBI. Concurrent PTSD and TBI of all severities should be considered a risk factor for poor long-term neurobehavioral outcomes that require ongoing monitoring.  相似文献   

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