Literature DB >> 25630586

The relationship between course of PTSD symptoms in deployed U.S. Marines and degree of combat exposure.

Alyssa M Boasso1, Maria M Steenkamp, William P Nash, Jonathan L Larson, Brett T Litz.   

Abstract

Large cohort studies suggest that most military personnel experience minimal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms following warzone deployment, an outcome often labeled resilience. Very low symptom levels, however, may be a marker for low exposure, not resilience, which requires relatively high-magnitude or high-frequency stress exposure as a precondition. We used growth mixture modeling (GMM) to examine the longitudinal course of lifetime PTSD symptoms following combat exposure by disaggregating deployed U.S. Marines into upper, middle, and lower tertiles of combat exposure. All factor models fit the data well; Tucker-Lewis Index (TLI) and comparative fit index (CFI) values ranged from .91 to .97. Three distinct trajectories best explained the data within each tertile. The upper tertile comprised True Resilience (73.2%), New-Onset Symptoms (18.3%), and Pre-existing Symptoms (8.5%) trajectories. The middle tertile also comprised True Resilience (74.5%), New-Onset Symptoms (16.1%), and Pre-existing Symptoms (9.4%) trajectories. The lower tertile comprised Artifactual Resilience (86.3%), Pre-existing Symptoms (7.6%), and New-Onset Symptoms (6.1%) trajectories. True Resilience involved a clinically significant symptom increase followed by a return to baseline, whereas Artifactual Resilience involved consistently low symptoms. Conflating artifactual and true resilience may inaccurately create the expectation of persistently low symptoms regardless of warzone exposure.
Copyright © 2015 International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.

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Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25630586     DOI: 10.1002/jts.21988

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Stress        ISSN: 0894-9867


  7 in total

1.  Susceptibility and Resilience to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder-like Behaviors in Inbred Mice.

Authors:  Stephanie E Sillivan; Nadine F Joseph; Sarah Jamieson; Michelle L King; Itzamarie Chévere-Torres; Illeana Fuentes; Gleb P Shumyatsky; Alicia F Brantley; Gavin Rumbaugh; Courtney A Miller
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2017-07-08       Impact factor: 13.382

2.  Posttraumatic stress disorder symptom trajectories within the first year following emergency department admissions: pooled results from the International Consortium to predict PTSD.

Authors:  Sarah R Lowe; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Betty S Lai; Willem van der Mei; Anna C Barbano; Richard A Bryant; Douglas L Delahanty; Yutaka J Matsuoka; Miranda Olff; Ulrich Schnyder; Eugene Laska; Karestan C Koenen; Arieh Y Shalev; Ronald C Kessler
Journal:  Psychol Med       Date:  2020-02-03       Impact factor: 7.723

3.  Mental Health Over Time in a Military Sample: The Impact of Alcohol Use Disorder on Trajectories of Psychopathology After Deployment.

Authors:  Laura Sampson; Gregory H Cohen; Joseph R Calabrese; David S Fink; Marijo Tamburrino; Israel Liberzon; Philip Chan; Sandro Galea
Journal:  J Trauma Stress       Date:  2015-12

4.  Expression and methylation in posttraumatic stress disorder and resilience; evidence of a role for odorant receptors.

Authors:  Yuanxiu Chen; Xin Li; Ihori Kobayashi; Daisy Tsao; Thomas A Mellman
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2016-07-25       Impact factor: 3.222

5.  Sex-differential PTSD symptom trajectories across one year following suspected serious injury.

Authors:  Mirjam van Zuiden; Sinha Engel; Jeanet F Karchoud; Thomas J Wise; Marit Sijbrandij; Joanne Mouthaan; Miranda Olff; Rens van de Schoot
Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol       Date:  2022-02-15

6.  Fear response-based prediction for stress susceptibility to PTSD-like phenotypes.

Authors:  Min-Jae Jeong; Changhee Lee; Kibong Sung; Jung Hoon Jung; Jung Hyun Pyo; Joung-Hun Kim
Journal:  Mol Brain       Date:  2020-10-07       Impact factor: 4.041

7.  Time course of symptoms in posttraumatic stress disorder with delayed expression: A systematic review.

Authors:  Jens Peter Ellekilde Bonde; Johan Høy Jensen; Geert E Smid; Esben Meulengracht Flachs; Ask Elklit; Ole Mors; Poul Videbech
Journal:  Acta Psychiatr Scand       Date:  2021-10-04       Impact factor: 7.734

  7 in total

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