M Noll-Hussong1. 1. Klinik und Poliklinik für Psychosomatische Medizin und Psychotherapie, Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Albert-Einstein-Allee 23, 89081, Ulm, Deutschland, minohu@gmx.net.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinically relevant posttraumatic stress disorders are almost always associated with physical symptoms, which are, on the one hand, classified as somatoform and, on the other hand, may also present as somatic comorbidities. The psychological, neurobiological, endocrinological and immunological correlations are only now beginning to be understood. Thereby, integration into a meaningful biopsychosocial model is still pending. PURPOSE: The following article gives a concise summary of the knowledge concerning the relationship between body and psyche in posttraumatic stress spectrum disorders and provides the neuroscientific foundation which could establish a biological link between the phenomenologies of the disorder. RESULTS: Neurobiological data on posttraumatic disorders and somatoform disorders are diverse and not uniform. This is even more true when it comes to those disorders that are within the intersection of these two entities and, above all, their special features in the elderly. Psychophysiological, neuroanatomical, endocrine-immunological, genetic, and epigenetic factors play an important role here. With regard to posttraumatic stress disorder, for example, higher autonomic reactivity was observed, which indicates an acquired general sensitization of the nervous system.
BACKGROUND: Clinically relevant posttraumatic stress disorders are almost always associated with physical symptoms, which are, on the one hand, classified as somatoform and, on the other hand, may also present as somatic comorbidities. The psychological, neurobiological, endocrinological and immunological correlations are only now beginning to be understood. Thereby, integration into a meaningful biopsychosocial model is still pending. PURPOSE: The following article gives a concise summary of the knowledge concerning the relationship between body and psyche in posttraumatic stress spectrum disorders and provides the neuroscientific foundation which could establish a biological link between the phenomenologies of the disorder. RESULTS: Neurobiological data on posttraumatic disorders and somatoform disorders are diverse and not uniform. This is even more true when it comes to those disorders that are within the intersection of these two entities and, above all, their special features in the elderly. Psychophysiological, neuroanatomical, endocrine-immunological, genetic, and epigenetic factors play an important role here. With regard to posttraumatic stress disorder, for example, higher autonomic reactivity was observed, which indicates an acquired general sensitization of the nervous system.
Authors: Michael Noll-Hussong; Alexander Otti; Leonhard Laeer; Afra Wohlschlaeger; Claus Zimmer; Claas Lahmann; Peter Henningsen; Thomas Toelle; Harald Guendel Journal: J Psychosom Res Date: 2010-03-16 Impact factor: 3.006
Authors: Kaundinya Gopinath; Parina Gandhi; Aman Goyal; Lei Jiang; Yan Fang; Luo Ouyang; Sandeepkumar Ganji; David Buhner; Wendy Ringe; Jeffrey Spence; Melanie Biggs; Richard Briggs; Robert Haley Journal: Neurotoxicology Date: 2012-02-04 Impact factor: 4.294
Authors: Carsten Spitzer; Sven Barnow; Kay Gau; Harald J Freyberger; Hans Joergen Grabe Journal: Aust N Z J Psychiatry Date: 2008-04 Impact factor: 5.744