Literature DB >> 7533284

Trauma and the development of borderline personality disorder.

B A van der Kolk1, A Hostetler, N Herron, R E Fisler.   

Abstract

Prolonged and severe trauma, particularly trauma that occurs early in the life cycle, tends to result in a chronic inability to modulate emotions. When this occurs, people can mobilize a range of behaviors that are best understood as attempts at self-soothing. Some of these attempts include clinging and indiscriminate relationships with others in which old traumas are re-enacted over time, as well as more self-directed behaviors such as self-mutilation, eating disorders, and substance abuse. Usually, these behaviors will coexist. Patients with complicated trauma histories often repetitively attempt suicide or engage in chronic self-destructive behavior, and need to address issues of childhood trauma, neglect, and abandonment, both in the past and as re-experienced in current relationships. When treating these patients, therapists must anticipate that painful affects related to interpersonal safety, anger, and emotional needs may give rise to dissociative episodes, which may, in turn, be accompanied by increased self-destructive behavior. The therapy must clarify how current stresses are experienced as a return of past traumas and how small disruptions in present relationships are seen as a repetition of prior abandonment. As part of this, it is essential that the therapist provide validation and support, and avoid participating in a re-enactment of the trauma. Fear needs to be tamed in order for people to be able to think and be conscious of current needs. This bodily response of fear can be mitigated by safety of attachments, security of meaning schemes, and by a body whose reactions to environmental stress can be predicted and controlled. One of the great mysteries of the processing of traumatic experience is that as long as the trauma is experienced as speechless terror, the body continues to keep score and react to conditioned stimuli as a return of the trauma. When the mind is able to create symbolic representations of these past experiences, however, there often seems to be a taming of terror, a desomatization of experience. As Ducey and van der Kolk found in the Rorschachs of Vietnam veterans, patients were unresponsive to outside influences (good or bad) as long as they remained in a state of psychic numbing. Faced with intrusions of past trauma in their current emotional life, patients' initial sense of being overwhelmed was mastered only when a link between past trauma and current perceptions became understood.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7533284

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


  15 in total

Review 1.  Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction as a neurobiological correlate of emotion dysregulation in adolescent suicide.

Authors:  María Dolores Braquehais; María Dolores Picouto; Miquel Casas; Leo Sher
Journal:  World J Pediatr       Date:  2012-08-12       Impact factor: 2.764

2.  Adapting Dialectical Behavior Therapy for the Treatment of Dissociative Identity Disorder.

Authors:  Brad Foote; Kim Van Orden
Journal:  Am J Psychother       Date:  2016-12-31

3.  The Trauma Recovery and Empowerment Model (TREM): conceptual and practical issues in a group intervention for women.

Authors:  Roger D Fallot; Maxine Harris
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2002-12

4.  Effects of integrated trauma treatment on outcomes in a racially/ethnically diverse sample of women in urban community-based substance abuse treatment.

Authors:  Hortensia Amaro; Jianyu Dai; Sandra Arévalo; Andrea Acevedo; Atsushi Matsumoto; Rita Nieves; Guillermo Prado
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2007-07       Impact factor: 3.671

5.  LinkPositively: A Trauma-Informed Peer Navigation and Social Networking WebApp to Improve HIV Care among Black Women Affected by Interpersonal Violence.

Authors:  Jamila K Stockman; Katherine M Anderson; Kiyomi Tsuyuki; Keith J Horvath
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2021-05

6.  More Exposure to Childhood Trauma Associates with Reduced Displeasure at Self-Referential Criticism.

Authors:  Xinying Zhang; Lizhu Luo; Jiehui Hu; Zhao Gao; Shan Gao
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Trauma       Date:  2022-02-15

7.  Regional cerebral changes and functional connectivity during the observation of negative emotional stimuli in subjects with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Authors:  Monica Mazza; Daniela Tempesta; Maria Chiara Pino; Alessia Catalucci; Massimo Gallucci; Michele Ferrara
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2013-02-06       Impact factor: 5.270

8.  Different traumatic experiences are associated with different pathologies.

Authors:  Jiri Modestin; Roman Furrer; Tina Malti
Journal:  Psychiatr Q       Date:  2005

Review 9.  Post-traumatic stress disorder in women: current concepts and treatments.

Authors:  Marian I Butterfield; Mary Becker; Christine E Marx
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 5.285

10.  Stress load during childhood affects psychopathology in psychiatric patients.

Authors:  Katja Weber; Brigitte Rockstroh; Jens Borgelt; Barbara Awiszus; Tzvetan Popov; Klaus Hoffmann; Klaus Schonauer; Hans Watzl; Karl Pröpster
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2008-07-23       Impact factor: 3.630

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