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Ayesha Ahmed is a trainee psychiatrist at Bradgate Mental Health Unit (Glenfield General Hospital, Groby Road, Leicester LE3 9EJ, UK. Email: ayeshasahmed25{at}yahoo.co.uk). Her interest in post-traumatic stress disorder stems from involvement with the British Pakistani Psychiatrists Associations Earthquake Trauma Relief Initiative (ETRI) for the victims of the earthquake in Pakistan in October 2005. She has a keen interest in teaching and has set up a website, Simply Psychiatry (http://www.simplypsychiatry.co.uk) for the MRCPsych part I OSCE exam.
| Abstract |
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| Conceptualisation |
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Post-traumatic stress disorder was introduced as a diagnostic entity in the DSM classification in DSM–III (American Psychiatric Association, 1980). In the first and second versions of the DSM (American Psychiatric Association, 1952, 1968), stress response syndromes were described as transient reactive processes. If the psychological disturbances were chronic, another diagnosis had to be used. DSM–IV has gone further and incorporates the individuals reaction or emotional response to the traumatic event within the diagnostic criteria, requiring that the persons response involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror (American Psychiatric Association, 1994: p. 428).
| Epidemiology |
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A meta-analysis of the behavioural consequences of terrorism (DiMaggio & Galea, 2006) indicates that in the year following a terrorist act the prevalence of PTSD in people directly affected by the act varies between 12 and 16%. It also shows that this prevalence can be expected to decline by 25% over the course of that year.
Avoidance symptoms, especially numbing, are associated more strongly with chronic PTSD. Symptoms of hyperarousal are also significantly associated with chronicity but less strongly (Marshall et al, 2006). In the National Comorbidity Survey, the median time to remission was 36 months with treatment and 64 months without treatment, but in some people symptoms lasted up to 10 years (Kessler et al, 1995).
| Resilience and vulnerability |
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Resilience and vulnerability are related concepts in a number of scientific disciplines but unlike resilience, vulnerability has not been conceptualised in a comprehensive manner. There are different disciplinary approaches to the concept of vulnerability. Vulnerability has been defined as the potential for loss (Mitchell, 1989) or the potential for casualty when exposed to a hazard or threat. The International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (2004) defines vulnerability as the predisposition of individuals or societies to be affected and the inability to manage disaster. Chambers (1989) divides vulnerability into external and internal factors. The external factors relate to external shocks and environmental stresses, whereas the internal factors are associated with inability to cope with trauma. Vulnerability is difficult to quantify but it may be increased or decreased depending on the type of action taken in dealing with it.
Multiple studies have consistently highlighted the following factors underlying vulnerability and resilience.
Genetics
It has been suggested that trauma victims who develop PTSD are more likely than those who do not to have parents and first-degree relatives with mood, anxiety and substance use disorders (Davidson et al, 1985). The children of Holocaust survivors who experienced PTSD were themselves more likely to develop the disorder than the children of survivors without PTSD (Yehuda et al, 1998). A study of prevalence of PTSD in monozygotic v. dyzygotic twins of Vietnam veterans has shown that genetic factors account for as much as 34% of PTSD symptoms (True et al, 1993).
Neurobiology
There is growing evidence that specific neurobiological dysfunctions are present in people with PTSD. In stressful or threatening situations, the sympathetic nervous system becomes activated and adrenaline and noradrenaline are released. Unrestrained activation of the sympathetic nervous system, leading to hypervigilance, anxiety and intrusive memories, has been seen in people with PTSD (Southwick et al, 1999), whereas resilient individuals may be able to restrict sympathetic activation to only dangerous or stressful situations (Morgan et al, 2000).
Neuropeptide Y is an amino acid released with noradrenaline on activation of the sympathetic system. One of its actions is to control the continued release of noradrenaline. Low levels of neuropeptide Y have been seen in combat veterans with chronic PTSD (Rasmusson et al, 2000), and some studies have linked resilience with high levels of neuropeptide Y.
Corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) and cortisol are important mediators of stress. In stressful situations, CRH is released from the hypothalamus into the hypothalamic–pituitary circulation, resulting in activation of the hypothalamic–pituitary axis and subsequent secretion of cortisol from the adrenal glands. This stress-induced increase in cortisol is constrained through a negative feedback system involving glucocorticoid and mineralo-corticoid receptors. The ability to restrain CRH has been suggested to be associated with resilience (Charney, 2004), and increased levels of CRH in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have been linked to PTSD (Bremner et al, 1997). Blunted hypothalamic–pituitary axis response to stress has been implicated in susceptibility to PTSD, as patients exhibit low circulating cortisol levels (Cohen et al, 2006). There is evidence that this is due to enhanced negative feedback in the hypothalamic–pituitary axis secondary to enhanced glucocorticoid receptor sensitivity. Hyper-suppression of cortisol has also been noted with a dexamethasone suppression test, which suggests that cortisol receptors are more sensitive in people with PTSD (Yehuda et al, 1995). As elevated cortisol levels inhibit memory retrieval in healthy people, a pilot study was carried out in which low-dose (10 mg/day) cortisol was administered to reduce excessive retrieval of traumatic memories in people with chronic PTSD. The results indicated that low-dose cortisol reduces the cardinal symptoms of the disorder (Aerni et al, 2004).
Increased platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) concentration has been recorded in war veterans with psychotic PTSD and may be used as a trait marker of psychotic symptoms in the disorder but not as a state marker for the disorder itself (Pivac et al, 2006). Several clinical trials have reported increased urinary and plasma dopamine concentrations in PTSD (Hamner & Diamond, 1993). The D2 dopamine receptor (DRD2) gene is associated with severe comorbid psychopathology (anxiety, insomnia, social dysfunction, somatic concerns and depression) in people with PTSD (Lawford et al, 2006).
Brain structure
People with post-traumatic disorder show morphological and functional abnormalities of the brain. Areas implicated include the amygdala, hippocampus and prefrontal cortex.
When conditioned stimuli are presented without the unconditioned stimuli, the conditioned fear response decreases. This forms the basis of extinction. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex plays a role in extinction as its lesions impair recall of extinction and its stimulation strengthens extinction memory. Compromise of extinction circuits in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex has been suggested in PTSD. Neural pathways, especially those linked to fear conditioning and consolidation of memory and extinction, play a role in vulnerability and resilience. It has been suggested that resilient individuals are less likely to consolidate emotional memories and have a greater ability to extinguish traumatic memories (Charney, 2004). Along with a hyporesponsive prefrontal cortex, hyperresponsive amygdala in PTSD has been suggested (McNally, 2006). The amygdala plays a central role in the processing and storage of memory of emotional events.
The hippocampus is another key region implicated in the pathogenesis of PTSD, with reduced hippocampal activity associated with more severe symptoms of the disorder (Astur et al, 2006). A study involving monozygotic twins in which one twin in each pair was a Vietnam war veteran (Pitman et al, 2006) revealed smaller hippocampal volume in both twins in pairs in which the veteran had PTSD compared with pairs in which the veteran did not. These results support the authors hypothesis that hippocampal abnormalities represent antecedent and familial vulnerability for developing PTSD on exposure to a traumatic event.
In a study comparing twins in which one sibling in each pair had PTSD with a control group of twins in which neither had the disorder, Gurvits et al(2006) found that both twins in the PTSD pairs showed significantly higher scores on tests of soft neurological signs than did twins in the control group. This suggests that soft neurological signs may represent a familial vulnerability for developing PTSD.
Psychosocial factors
Many psychosocial factors underpin vulnerability. They include the nature of the trauma; the perception that ones life is at risk; strong initial emotional reaction (fright/fear and helplessness); witnessing someone being killed or seriously injured; and the demographic grouping of the survivor, including low socio-economic status, being divorced, widowed and unemployed. Being elderly, adolescent or a child and having lower education also increase susceptibility. Experiences of sexual assault, especially at an early age, and pre-existing mental health problems are related to greater susceptibility to lifetime PTSD, with prevalence being higher in women (Stuber et al, 2006). Unresolved childhood trauma increases the risk of PTSD more than seven-fold and has been associated with the avoidant rather than dissociative symptoms of the disorder (Stovall-McClough & Cloitre, 2006). A study of terrorism in Israel revealed that authoritarian beliefs and ethnocentrism were related to PTSD, suggesting that PTSD may be related to a defensive style of coping (Hobfoll et al, 2006). Lack of internal locus of control is a contributor to the development of PTSD. External factors such political, social, economic and environmental instability, and lack of resources may also increase susceptibility.
Above-average cognitive ability has been identified as a protective factor (McNally, 2006). Securely attached individuals exhibit fewer symptoms of PTSD (Fraley et al, 2006), whereas an avoidant style of attachment predicts increase in PTSD symptoms (Scarpa et al, 2006).
Refugee experience
Refugees present a particularly vulnerable group. They often come from regions where conflict of varying intensity has been present for long periods, leading to social and economic ruin. In civil wars there is seldom any distinction between soldiers and civilians, forced recruitment is common and the final aim is extinction and destruction of a population rather than conquest of land.
The severity of trauma faced by refugees ranges from personal torture, the concept of which differs in different cultures, and incarceration to losses in combat. Refugees experience sequential stresses: the process of migration, loss of social role, stress of acculturation, change from a majority to minority status, social isolation and lack of knowledge about the norms of the new culture compound over time. It has been suggested that multiple traumatic events can increase the severity of PTSD symptoms (Karunakara et al, 2004). The assumption is that previous traumatic events increase vulnerability either through a direct dose effect or through the process of desensitisation.
| Comorbidity |
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Self-medication with drugs and alcohol to reduce arousal symptoms has been suggested. An Australian national survey (Mills et al, 2006) revealed that alcohol was the most common substance of misuse by people with PTSD who had a comorbid substance use disorder. Analysing the data another way, of the national population with a substance use disorder, PTSD was most prevalent among those using opioids. It has also been reported that people who had experienced sexual abuse in childhood or adulthood had more symptoms of PTSD. They were also more likely to use drugs or alcohol to cope, to act sexually and to withdraw from people (Filipas & Ullman, 2006).
In addition to psychiatric comorbidity, it has been suggested that chronic or elevated pain is associated with PTSD. Geracioti et al(2006) set out to test the hypothesis that concentrations of pain-transmitting neuropeptide substance P are elevated in people with PTSD. They found that marked increase in CSF substance P concentrations occurred when patients were exposed to stimuli that provoked PTSD symptoms but not to neutral stimuli. In another study (Dahl et al, 2006), a significant association was found between severe chronic pain and PTSD. Use of analgesic medication is also higher in patients with PTSD (Schwartz et al, 2006).
Misdiagnosis
It is important to note that PTSD can go undiagnosed or can be misdiagnosed as refractory depression. Substance misuse and eating disorders often mask underlying PTSD, and flashbacks may be erroneously labelled as psychotic symptoms.
| Assessment |
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| Box 1 Vulnerability factors Internal characteristics
External factors
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Resilience can be evaluated by exploring internal and external resources such as those listed in Box 2
. To assess for vulnerability it is important to listen to the individuals subjective appraisal of the event and to ask about their use of coping strategies. Also explore prior exposure to traumatic events such as childhood adversities, current or past psychopathology, familial susceptibility and support networks.
| Box 2 Factors promoting resilience Internal characteristics
External factors
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Resilience can be measured using the Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale (Connor, 2006). This is self-rated and consists of 25 items, each rated on a 5-point scale. The total score ranges from 0 to 100, with higher score reflecting greater resilience. Other scales include the Resilience Scale for Adults (Friborg et al, 2003) and the Adolescent Resilient Scale (Oshio et al, 2003). The Stress Vulnerability Scale (Connor, 2006) measures the degree of perceived distress following setbacks. It is a self-rated, single-item, 11-point, visual analogue scale, with higher scores predicting greater vulnerability.
There are currently no validated, culturally and linguistically sensitive screening instruments for at-risk refugee populations.
No assumptions should be made about the meaning or the impact of traumatic events, as ones own reactions may be inconsistent with the patients feelings and experiences. Refugees often find it difficult to engage with mental health services, and practitioners need to improve their understanding of the traditions, systems of meaning and priorities of such patients. Mental health service providers also need to be aware of their own cultural countertransference.
| Therapeutic interventions |
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Brief cognitive therapy (four or five sessions) initiated within 5 weeks of the event reduced the severity of PTSD symptoms in victims of assault (Foa et al, 1995). Cognitive–behavioural therapy can be used to identify resilient behaviour, coping strategies, automatic thoughts and underlying assumptions. Group work with trauma victims can provide an environment in which individuals can realise their own potential for self- healing, which can lead to enhanced autonomy and self-regard.
Early work on the use of drugs such as beta-adrenergic blockers to block the action of stress hormones in the consolidation of traumatic memories has shown promising results (Pitman et al, 2002), but further study is necessary.
| Conclusions |
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| Declaration of interest |
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| MCQs |
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MCQ answers
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