| Literature DB >> 19032788 |
Georgios D Floros1, Ioanna Charatsidou, Grigorios Lavrentiadis.
Abstract
A male patient aged 43 presented with psychotic symptomatology after a traumatic event involving accidental mutilation of the fingers. Initial presentation was uncommon although the patient responded well to pharmacotherapy. The theoretical framework, management plan and details of the treatment are presented.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19032788 PMCID: PMC2605766 DOI: 10.1186/1757-1626-1-352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cases J ISSN: 1757-1626
Figure 1Case formulation – (Persistent PTSD, adapted from Ehlers and Clark [6]). Case formulation following the persistent PTSD model of Ehlers and Clark [6]. It is suggested that the patient is processing the traumatic information in a way which a sense of immediate threat is perpetuated through negative appraisals of trauma or its consequences and through the nature of the traumatic experience itself. Peri-traumatic influences that operate at encoding, affect the nature of the trauma memory. The memory of the event is poorly elaborated, not given a complete context in time and place, and inadequately integrated into the general database of autobiographical knowledge. Triggers and ruminations serve to re-enact the traumatic information while symptoms and maladaptive coping strategies form a vicious circle. Memories are encoded in the SAM rather than the VAM system, thus preventing cognitive re-appraisal and eventual overcoming of traumatic experience [4].