Literature DB >> 2664732

The compulsion to repeat the trauma. Re-enactment, revictimization, and masochism.

B A van der Kolk1.   

Abstract

Trauma can be repeated on behavioral, emotional, physiologic, and neuroendocrinologic levels. Repetition on these different levels causes a large variety of individual and social suffering. Anger directed against the self or others is always a central problem in the lives of people who have been violated and this is itself a repetitive re-enactment of real events from the past. People need a "safe base" for normal social and biologic development. Traumatization occurs when both internal and external resources are inadequate to cope with external threat. Uncontrollable disruptions or distortions of attachment bonds precede the development of post-traumatic stress syndromes. People seek increased attachment in the face of external danger. Adults, as well as children, may develop strong emotional ties with people who intermittently harass, beat, and threaten them. The persistence of these attachment bonds leads to confusion of pain and love. Assaults lead to hyperarousal states for which the memory can be state-dependent or dissociated, and this memory only returns fully during renewed terror. This interferes with good judgment about these relationships and allows longing for attachment to overcome realistic fears. All primates subjected to early abuse and deprivation are vulnerable to engage in violent relationships with peers as adults. Males tend to be hyperaggressive, and females fail to protect themselves and their offspring against danger. Chronic physiologic hyperarousal persists, particularly to stimuli reminiscent of the trauma. Later stresses tend to be experienced as somatic states, rather than as specific events that require specific means of coping. Thus, victims of trauma may respond to contemporary stimuli as a return of the trauma, without conscious awareness that past injury rather than current stress is the basis of their physiologic emergency responses. Hyperarousal interferes with the ability to make rational assessments and prevents resolution and integration of the trauma. Disturbances in the catecholamine, serotonin, and endogenous opioid systems have been implicated in this persistence of all-or-none responses. People who have been exposed to highly stressful stimuli develop long-term potentiation of memory tracts that are reactivated at times of subsequent arousal. This activation explains how current stress is experienced as a return of the trauma; it causes a return to earlier behavior patterns. Ordinarily, people will choose the most pleasant of two alternatives. High arousal causes people to engage in familiar behavior, regardless of the rewards. As novel stimuli are anxiety provoking, under stress, previously traumatized people tend return to familiar patterns, even if they cause pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2664732

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatr Clin North Am        ISSN: 0193-953X


  22 in total

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4.  Childhood sexual abuse and bulimic behavior in a nationally representative sample.

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Review 5.  A Review of the Neurobiological Basis of Trauma-Related Dissociation and Its Relation to Cannabinoid- and Opioid-Mediated Stress Response: a Transdiagnostic, Translational Approach.

Authors:  Ruth A Lanius; Jenna E Boyd; Margaret C McKinnon; Andrew A Nicholson; Paul Frewen; Eric Vermetten; Rakesh Jetly; David Spiegel
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2018-11-07       Impact factor: 5.285

6.  Enduring good memories of infant trauma: rescue of adult neurobehavioral deficits via amygdala serotonin and corticosterone interaction.

Authors:  Millie Rincón-Cortés; Gordon A Barr; Anne Marie Mouly; Kiseko Shionoya; Bestina S Nuñez; Regina M Sullivan
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-01-05       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Psychiatric Features in Neurotic Excoriation Patients: The Role of Childhood Trauma.

Authors:  Murat Yalçin; Evrim Tellioğlu; Deniz Uluhan Yildirim; B Mert Savrun; Mine Özmen; Ertuğrul H Aydemir
Journal:  Noro Psikiyatr Ars       Date:  2015-12-01       Impact factor: 1.339

8.  Maternal abuse history and self-regulation difficulties in preadolescence.

Authors:  Brianna C Delker; Laura K Noll; Hyoun K Kim; Philip A Fisher
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2014-10-31

9.  The social construction of violence among Northern Plains tribal members with antisocial personality disorder and alcohol use disorder.

Authors:  Lori L Jervis; Paul Spicer; Annie Belcourt; Michelle Sarche; Douglas K Novins; Alexandra Fickenscher; Janette Beals
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2013-09-17

10.  Outcome of crisis intervention for borderline personality disorder and post traumatic stress disorder: a model for modification of the mechanism of disorder in complex post traumatic syndromes.

Authors:  Andreas Laddis
Journal:  Ann Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2010-04-27       Impact factor: 3.455

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