| Literature DB >> 24695633 |
Verónica Vitriol1, Alfredo Cancino2, Kristina Weil3, Carolina Salgado4, Maria Andrea Asenjo5, Soledad Potthoff4.
Abstract
In the last two decades, different research has demonstrated the high prevalence of childhood trauma, including sexual abuse, among depressive women. These findings are associated with a complex, severe, and chronic psychopathology. This can be explained considering the neurobiological changes secondary to early trauma that can provoke a neuroendocrine failure to compensate in response to challenge. It suggests the existence of a distinguishable clinical-neurobiological subtype of depression as a function of childhood trauma that requires specific treatments. Among women with depression and early trauma receiving treatment in a public mental health service in Chile, it was demonstrated that a brief outpatient intervention (that screened for and focused on childhood trauma and helped patients to understand current psychosocial difficulties as a repetition of past trauma) was effective in reducing psychiatric symptoms and improving interpersonal relationships. However, in this population, this intervention did not prevent posttraumatic stress disorder secondary to the extreme earthquake that occurred in February 2010. Therefore in adults with depression and early trauma, it is necessary to evaluate prolonged multimodal treatments that integrate pharmacotherapy, social support, and interpersonal psychotherapies with trauma focused interventions (specific interventions for specific traumas).Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24695633 PMCID: PMC3948592 DOI: 10.1155/2014/608671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Depress Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1321
Prevalences of childhood trauma among general morbidity patients and psychiatric patients in Chile.
| Place/authors | Sample | At least one item in | % sexual abuse |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 General hospitals | 505 general medicine patients, | 54.7% | 6.8% |
| Hospital Curico | 130 women ingressed for severe depression | 87.5% | 42% |
| CES Curico-Centro | 510 patients (442 women and 68 men) | 84% | 38.8% |
| Hospital TALCA | 593 psychiatric patients | 52.1% | 35.2% |
*Marshall scale [31] is a screening that inquires whether an individual has memories of having one or more of the following traumatic experiences before the age of 15: traumatic separation from a parent or caregiver, alcohol or drug abuse by a family member, physical violence between parents or caregivers, systematic punishment by parent or caregiver, physical injury associated with punishment, and forced sexual contact with a relative or a nonrelative.
Average scores in Hamilton, OQ 45 and PTO 8 between 81 women with severe depression and childhood trauma and 49 women with severe depression and without childhood trauma [77].
| Test | Average with trauma | DS | Average without trauma | DS |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marshall1 | 4.17 | 1.34 | 1.57 | 1.37 | 10.32 | 0.01 |
| Hamilton D2 | 34.67 | 6.24 | 24.02 | 9.57 | 7.59 | 0.01 |
| OQ 1 total3 | 115.04 | 20.0 | 84.84 | 31.6 | 6.58 | 0.01 |
| OQ symptoms4 | 73.08 | 12.2 | 56.57 | 20.9 | 5.63 | 0.01 |
| OQ Interpers. Rel.5 | 24.08 | 6.59 | 15.86 | 8.63 | 6.005 | 0.01 |
| OQ 1 Social role6 | 18.02 | 6.06 | 12.09 | 6.61 | 5.096 | 0.01 |
| PTO 87 | 18.00 | 8.17 | 8.18 | 8.85 | 6.264 | 0.01 |
1Marshall scale: scores between 0 and 7 points according to childhood trauma events.
2Hamilton depression scale: scores between 0 and 63 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
3OQ 45 global scale: scores between 0 and 180 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
4OQ 45 symptoms scale: scores between 0 and 100 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
5OQ 45 interpersonal scale: scores between 0 and 44 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
6OQ 45 social role scale: scores between 0 and 36 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
7PTO 8 scale: scores between 0 and 32 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
Symptoms changes over time among 87 severe depressive women with childhood trauma, 44 of them assigned to protocolized interpersonal model of trauma (IMT) versus 43 who received usual treatment. Curicó, Chile [78].
| Outcome measures and groups | Admission | Discharge | 6 months follow up | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | (SD) | Mean | (SD) | Mean | (SD) | |
| Hamilton1 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 34.09 | 6.2 | 22.1 | 8.8* | 19.4 | 8.8** |
| Control group | 34.42 | 6.7 | 27.5 | 9.7 | 25.0 | 11.1 |
| OQ45 total2 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 112.73 | 19.7 | 92.7 | 28.3* | 85.8 | 37.6* |
| Control group | 114.72 | 22.5 | 105.4 | 31.0 | 102 | 31.7 |
| OQ45 symptoms3 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 71.07 | 12.2 | 59.1 | 18.4 | 53.5 | 22.8* |
| Control group | 73.37 | 13.6 | 65.6 | 17.0 | 63.4 | 18.9 |
| OQ45 Interpers. Rel.4 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 24.5 | 6.6 | 19.0 | 7.7 | 18.7 | 10.2 |
| Control group | 23.1 | 6.9 | 22.6 | 11.1 | 21.6 | 8.7 |
| OQ45 social5 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 17.4 | 5.5 | 14.5 | 6.8 | 13.5 | 8.2* |
| Control group | 18.3 | 6.7 | 17.1 | 7.9 | 16.8 | 7.1 |
| Posttraumatic symptoms scale (PTO-8)6 | ||||||
| Protocol group | 16.6 | 7.6 | 12.6 | 7.8 | 11.7 | 7.9 |
| Control group | 19.1 | 8.4 | 14.9 | 8.1 | 15.0 | 7.8 |
1Hamilton: scores between 0 to 63 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
2OQ45 global scale: scores between 0 to 180 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
3OQ45 symptomatic scale: scores between 0 to 100 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
4OQ45 interpersonal scale: scores 0 to 44 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
5OQ45 social role scale: scores between 0 to 36 points with higher scores indicating worse function.
6PTO 8 scale: scores between 0 to 32 points with higher scores indicating a greater severity of symptoms.
* < 0.005, ** < 0.001.