Dissociation Affect Dysregulation Somatization BVDK
Dissociation Affect Dysregulation Somatization BVDK
Dissociation Affect Dysregulation Somatization BVDK
SOMATIZATION:
-------------------------------------------------
Abstract
Objective. This study investigates the relationship between the current diagnostic
formulation of PTSD and the symptoms of dissociation, affect dysregulation and
somatization. Over the past century, these symptoms consistently have been shown to be
related, regardless of whether investigators have approached their subjects prospectively or
retrospectively, or from the vantage point of 1) psychological trauma, 2) dissociation, 3)
somatization, or 4) disorders of affect regulation.
Method. The DSM IV Field Trial for PTSD studied 395 patients who sought treatment for
trauma-related problems, and compared them with 125 community subjects who had been
exposed to high magnitude stressors. Data were collected about age of onset and nature of
trauma, PTSD symptomatology, dissociation, somatization and affect dysregulation.
The diagnostic criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in the American
Psychiatric Assocation's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) are focussed on
intrusive memories and disordered arousal as the distinguishing characteristics. Within this
framework, which is influenced by Lindemann's (2) and Horowitz's (3) descriptions of the
fluctuating nature of acute grief reactions, the remaining symptoms of PTSD are
understood as strategies to ward off emotions, somatic sensations and personal meaning
schemes associated with the trauma. However, a century of clinical observations and
systematic research has shown that there are a range of other symptoms associated with
exposure to extreme stress that cannot be easily understood within this framework of
alternating intrusion and numbing. The inclusion in the ICD-10 of the diagnosis of
"enduring personality changes after catastrophic stress" reflects the growing understanding
that the experience of prolonged and/or severe trauma, particularly trauma that occurs early
in the life cycle, can lead to complex clinical pictures that include disturbances of
regulation of affective arousal, an impaired capacity for cognitive integration of experience
(as in dissociation), and in impairment in the capacity to differentiate relevant from
irrelevant information, such as occurs in the misinterpretation of somatic sensations.
The symptoms of dissociation, somatization and affect dysregulation are all listed in the
DSM IV (4), both under Associated Features of PTSD, and under separate diagnoses. This
paper investigates the relationship between the current diagnostic formulation of PTSD and
these features associated with PTSD. In this paper we will examine, but not definitively
answer, the question whether these symptoms represent core features of psychic
traumatization, or whether they are merely common co-morbid diagnoses in people who
suffer from PTSD.
History and background
In the 1880s, when psychiatrists at the Salpètrière were among the first to attempt to create
order out of the chaos of mental afflictions, they noted that certain patients, then known as
hysterics, habitually reacted to life's stresses with "somnambulistic crises" (agitation and
uncontrolled outbursts of violence against the self or others), "abulia" (psychosomatic
complaints and chronic behavioral passivity), and dissociative problems. These patients
reacted inappropriately to stress and behaved "automatically", with stereotyped images,
ideas, emotions and movements. After interviewing numerous hysterics, Pierre Janet, who
ran the psychological laboratory at that hospital, came to the conclusion that some of these
behaviors represented derivations of emotional and behavioral responses to frightening past
events: "I was led to recognize in many subjects the role of one or several events in their
past life. These events, which had established a vehement emotion and a destruction of the
psychological system, had left traces. The remembrance of these events, ... absorbed a great
deal of energy and played a part in the persistent weakening" (5). Janet believed that failure
to regulate emotional reactions to reminders of past trauma caused some hysterics to
continue to dissociate and to react with automatic, excessive and irrelevant responses (6) .
Janet proposed that extreme emotions interfered with proper information processing. This
resulted in a failure to transform the mental imprints of an experience into what we would
today call declarative memory (7): the traumatized person is "unable to make the recital
which we call narrative memory, and yet he remains confronted by (the) difficult
situation"(8, p.660). The uncontrollable intrusions of the traumatic event resulted in "a
phobia of the memory" (8, p.661) that prevented the mental integration ("synthesis") of
experience and caused these memories to be split off (dissociated) from ordinary
consciousness (9, p.145). He postulated that the memory traces of these traumas were
stored as "unconscious fixed ideas" that could not be "liquidated" as long as they had not
been translated into a personal narrative (10). Janet obseved that, as long as these memories
remained dissociated, they were prone to continue to intrude as terrifying perceptions,
obsessional preoccupations, and as somatic complaints (11). According to Nemiah (12)
Janet's clinical research provided the first convincing evidence that trauma caused some
individuals to develop two or more separate, dissociated streams of consciousness, each
with a spectrum of mental contents such as memories, sensations, volitions and affects.
This is contrary to the notion that human consciousness always is a single, unbroken, and
unitary entity.
Janet was not alone in making these observations. For example, Freud, after visiting the
Salpètrière, also proposed that dissociation was the key to understanding the pathogenic
processes that underlie hysterical phenomena. In the introductory chapter of Studies on
Hysteria , Breuer and Freud noted that: "The splitting of consciousness which is so present
to a rudimentary degree in every hysteria....is the basic phenomenon of this neurosis." (13,
p. 12). Early in their work, these two clinicians firmly adhered to Janet's notion that
traumatic experiences, especially when they occurred early in life, were at the origin of
psychological conflict and symptom-formation: in 1896 Freud published his observations
of 18 consecutive hysterical patients, in all of whom he attributed the origins of their
symptoms to a history of childhood sexual trauma (14).
William James also was aware of an intimate relation between traumatic events and a
symptom constellation of dissociation, somatization and affect dysregulation: "in the
wonderful explorations by Binet, Janet, Breuer, Freud, Mason, Prince and others of the
subliminal consciousness of patients with hysteria, we have revealed to us whole systems
of underground life, in the shape of memories of a painful sort which lead a parasitic
existence, buried outside the primary fields of consciousness, and making irruptions
thereunto with hallucinations, pains, convulsions, paralyses of feeling and of motion, and
the whole procession of symptoms of hysteric disease of body and of mind." (15, p.230, as
quoted by Nemiah, 1995).
During the entire 20th century, psychiatry's attention to the effects of trauma on body and
mind has generally paralleled the urgency of massive societal traumas: interest was
paramount during both World Wars, and most recently following the Vietnam war (16).
Abram Kardiner recorded his observations of First World War veterans in the "Traumatic
Neuroses of War" (17). He noted that patients suffering from war neuroses often developed
amnesia for the trauma, while continuing to behave as if they were still in the middle of it:
"(t)he subject acts as if the original traumatic situation were still in existence and engages
in protective devices which failed on the original occasion" (p. 82). Kardiner, whose work
formed the foundation for the DSM III (and IV) diagnosis of PTSD, thought that these men
had become fixated on a traumatic experience, which was re-enacted during dissociative
fugue states. He noted that they developed an enduring vigilance for and sensitivity to
environmental threat, and he stated that "the nucleus of the neurosis is a physioneurosis ....
it outlives every intermediary accommodative device. The traumatic syndrome is ever
present and unchanged" (p.95). "From a physiologic point of view there exists a lowering
of the threshold of stimulation, and, from a psychological point of view, a state of readiness
for fright reactions"(p. 95). He noted that their "interest in the world generally shrinks:
[they] undergo a kind of deterioration that is not dissimilar to what happens in
schizophrenia. This dimunition in interest in the world is generally the result of a long and
unsuccesful battle to maintain meaningful contact with the world" (p.249).
At the end of the second World War, Grinker and Spiegel (18) described five separate, but
interrelated categories of combat stress reactions: generalized anxiety states, phobic states,
conversion states, psychosomatic reactions, and depressive states. During the subsequent
thirty years of relative peace these issues were not further elaborated and became peripheral
to psychiatry (16,19 ), though a small number of reports continued to be published on such
traumas as burns and accidents (e.g., 20, 21, 22). With the notable exception of Anna Freud
and Dorothy Burlingham's study of children's reactions to the London blitz (23), there
barely was any mention of the impact of trauma on children until 1978. Only in recent years
has the correspondence between men's reactions to the trauma of war, children's' responses
to abuse, and women's responses to sexual and domestic violence been made explicit
(24,25).
Modern trends
With the creation of the DSM III system of diagnostic classification, Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder was introduced as a new diagnosis while, simultaneously, hysteria disappeared
from psychiatric nomenclature, and was deliberately "split asunder" (26) into multiple
different diagnoses: somatoform disorders, factitious disorders, dissociative disorders,
histrionic and borderline personality disorders. Initially, there was no explicit recognition of
a relationship between traumatic stress reactions, somatization, dissociation and affect
dysregulation. However, these relationships gradually have made their way back into the
DSM system of classifying mental disorders; for example, in the DSM IV, dissociative
symptoms are included in the criterion sets for Acute Stress Disorder, Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder, Somatization Disorder, and the Dissociative Disorders themselves.
With the renewed interest in the role of overwhelming experiences in the origins of
psychopathology, modern psychiatry is rediscovering the intimate relationship between
trauma, dissociation, somatization and a host of psychological problems that can most
easily be categorized as disturbances of affect regulation: unmodulated anger and sexual
involvement, self-destructive behaviors and chronic suicidality. Regardless of whether
investigators have approached their subjects prospectively or retrospectively, whether the
studies are conducted from the vantage point of 1) psychological trauma, 2) dissociation, 3)
somatization, or 4) disorders of affect regulation, the remaining phenomena keep showing
up whenever provisions are made to measure them. To complicate matters further, even
without probing specifically for dissociation and somatization, every examination of the
relationship between PTSD and other Axis I disorders finds very high rates of comorbidity
both with affective and with other anxiety disorders (e.g. 27, 28, 29). For example,
McFarlane et al (30) found that 72% of subjects who developed PTSD after a natural
disaster also developed diagnostic criteria for other psychiatric diagnoses.
Starting from the vantage point of dissociation, two studies (38, 39) looking for the
psychological profiles of patients with high scores on the Dissociative Experiences Scale
(DES, 40) found that the DES score correlated highly with reported childhood histories of
trauma. Saxe et al. (39), after administering this instrument to 111 consecutive State
Hospital admissions, found that all patients with DES scores over 25 reported significantly
more histories of trauma than controls: 100% sexual abuse, 86% physical abuse, and 79%
witnessing domestic violence. 100% of the high Dissociation group also met diagnostic
criteria for PTSD, 100% for Dissociative Disorder, 71% for Borderline Personality
Disorder, and 64% for Somatization Disorder. Another recent study of patients with high
DES scores found that the main predictors of dissociation were familial loss in childhood,
intrafamilial sexual abuse, and extrafamilial sexual abuse (41).
Affect dysregulation. Contemporary research has fine-tuned earlier observations that people
who suffer from PTSD are prone suffer from problems with affect regulation. These
include difficulty modulating anger, chronic self-destructive and suicidal behaviors,
difficulty modulating sexual involvement, and impulsive and risk-taking behaviors (56).
Barlow (57) justifies the inclusion of PTSD within the anxiety disorders on the basis of the
consistent affect dysregulation, chronic overarousal, hypervigliance and attention-
narrowing seen in these patients. Similar observations have emerged independently in the
child development literature: as many as 80% of abused infants and children develop
disorganized/disoriented attachment patterns. These are associated with an inability to
utilize care givers for soothing and with the emergence of pathological self-regulatory
behaviors (58, 59, 60). A substantial body of research has shown that early and prolonged
trauma in childhood affects the capacity to regulate the intensity of affective responses (e.g.
51, 52, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65). This dysregulation is associated with a wide spectrum of
problems, from learning disabilities to aggression against the self and others (51, 59, 66,
67, 68). Studies consistently find a high degree of dissociation in patients who suffer from
pathological forms of affect regulation (e.g. 59, 67, 69).
The combination of chronic dissociation, physical problems for which no medical cause
can be found and a lack of adequate self-regulatory processes is likely to have a profound
impact on personality development as reflected by disturbances of the sense of self, such as
a sense of separateness and disturbances of body image, a view of oneself as helpless,
damaged and ineffective, and in difficulties with trust, intimacy, and self-assertion (24, 25,
56, 58, 61).
Current Study
The DSM IV Field Trial for PTSD collected a data base from which to investigate the
relationship between the development of PTSD in response to a high magnitude stressor
and the emergence of other psychological problems frequently reported in the research
literature as being associated with trauma, but not included in the core PTSD diagnosis.
The Field Trial attempted to define these other symptom constellations operationally, and
to investigate their interrelationships, as well as their relationship to the diagnostic
construct of PTSD itself. This report focusses on the relationships between
Dissociation, Somatization and Affect Dysregulation and their relationship to the
diagnosis of PTSD in a clinical and a cummunity sample of traumatized individuals.
METHODS
Subjects
The PTSD Field Trial assessed 395 treatment seeking adults and adolescents (age 15 or
older), who were recruited from sequential admissions to outpatient psychiatric clinics at
the five different sites. The clinical sample was obtained through five outpatient mental
health treatment sites specializing in the provision of mental health treatment for victims of
psychological trauma. These were: the Medical University of South Carolina/V.A.Medical
Center, Crime Victim Center, Charleston, South Carolina; the Trauma Clinic,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA: the Departments of Psychology and
Psychiatry, Duke University and Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; North
Shore University Hospital/ Cornell University Medical College Division of child and
adolescent psychiatry, Manhasset, NY: and the Community Psychological Services,
University of Missouri, St. Louis, MO.
The demographic characteristics of the total sample have been described in detail elsewhere
(70). To summarize: 83.3% of the participants were white; 13.3% were African-American
and 3.4% Hispanic. The majority (66.9%) was female; average age was 37.11 (SD=15.0).
Subjects were interviewed in person by research assistants who were trained in the
administration of the interviews and attented periodic training meetings to ensure that they
adhered to interviewing guidelines. Interviewers were blind to the hypothesized differences
between trauma groups.
Instruments.
1) High Magnitude Stressor Events Structured Interview (Kilpatrick D, Resnick HS, Freedy
J, unpublished, 1991). This interview comprehensively screened for lifetime history of high
magnitude events: completed rape, other sexual assault, physical assault, other violent
crimes, homicide of family members or close friends, serious accidents, natural or man-
made disasters, and military combat. This interview summarized lifetime history for
exposure to high magnitude stressor events.
3) The PTSD module of the Structure Clinical Interview for DSM- III(SCID-PTSD)(72).
Subjects were diagnosed as having PTSD if they met criteria both on the SCID and on the
DIS PTSD Interview module. Subjects were diagnosed as "having" dissociation,
somatization and various dimensions of affect dysregulation if they met criteria for these
diagnoses on the SIDES (70).
Statistical Methods
A Phi analysis was performed to establish the correlations between PTSD, dissociation,
somatization and affect dysregulation hence forth called "associated features"). To examine
these relationship as they specifically relate to PTSD, the sample was divided into two
mutually exclusive groups: Lifetime PTSD present or absent. These groups were compared
for endorsment of the associated features, using chi-square tests for proportions (or Fisher's
Exact Tests, as appropriate). These comparisons were repeated for the presence of absence
of current PTSD. In order to compare differences in the clinical presentation in treatment
seeking subjects with PTSD, versus the communirty sample, these groups were compared
for the proportions of those endorsing the associated features, using chi-square tests for
proportions (or Fisher's Exact Tests, as appropriate). To examine the relationships between
current and lifetime PTSD, No PTSD, and the presence or absence of associated features,
the sample was divided into three mutually exclusive groups: Current PTSD, Lifelong
PTSD, but not currently meeting criteria, and no PTSD. These three groups were assessed
for the presence of lifetime and current endorsement of the items of dissociation,
somatization, and affect dysregulation. These groups were compared, using chi-square tests
for proportions (or Fisher's Exact Tests, as appropriate). Pairwise comparisons were used to
determine which of the groups were significantly different. To decrease the likelihood of
spurious errors due to the large number of comparisons being made, a Bonferroni
correction for level of significance of 0.008 was used, rather than the more typical 0.05. In
order to test for the effects of the age of onset and the nature of the trauma, the sample was
divided into three other mutually exclusive groups: early onset interpersonal trauma, late
onset interpersonal trauma only and disaster only. These groups were also compared using
the same statistical procedures as before.
RESULTS.
Table 1 shows the Phi coefficients between PTSD, somatization, dissociation and affect
regulation. All were signifcant at the p<.0001 level, with correlations ranging from 0.52 for
affect dysregulation and somatization, to 0.60 for PTSD and somatization, and for
dissociation and somatization.
Table 1
Table 2
PTSD-Lifetime Only
(n=28) (n=253)
I. Affect Regulation
Self-destructive 43 58 n.s.
Table 3a
I. Affect
Dysregulation
Self-destructive 63 42 20 53.2
6
Suicidal behavior 70 51 25 56.6
9
Table 3b
I. Affect Dysregulation
Self-destructive 41 21 12 33.7
7
Subjects were divided into the following groups: early onset (age less than or equal to 14
years) interpersonal abuse (physical and/or sexual abuse) (only) [n=148], late onset
interpersonal abuse (only) [n=87], disaster only [n=59]. Table 4 shows that, using pair-wise
comparisons, the early interpersonal trauma group had significantly higher percent
endorsement on all the associated features compared with the disaster group, while the late
interpersonal trauma group had significantly higher endorsement on the items of
unmodulated anger, suicidal behavior, and somatization. The early and late interpersonal
trauma groups affected significantly on the items of unmodulated anger, being self-
destructive and suicidal, and on dissociative symptoms. These patterns of endorsement
support the hypothesis that early interpersonal traumatization gives rise to more complex
post-traumatic psychopathology than later interpersonal victimization. Exposure to natural
disasters tends to be associated with PTSD, and to a lesser degree with the development of
dissociative symptomatology, somatization and affect dysregulation problems.
Table 4
I. Affect
Dysregulation
Unmodulated 76 60 32 35.53 ^ +
anger *
Self-destructive 62 37 22 32.08 ^ +
Suicidal behavior 67 39 12 54.82 ^ +
*
All p values are <.0001 by Fisher’s exact test. p value for pair-wise comparisons = .008.
Significant early vs. disaster comparisons are noted with a " ^ ", early vs. late onset
comparisons by a " + ", and significant late onset abuse vs. disaster comparisons are noted
by a " * ".
DISCUSSION
Guze (73) has pointed out that, in studies of etiology, prognosis or treatment, it is critical to
define and control for comorbid conditions that can affect clinical outcome and research
findings. Going one step further, Barlow argues for the importance of elucidating existing
relationships among syndromes, rather than simply listing all of the diagnoses for which a
patient is eligible (57). Recognizing the relevance of co-morbidity in psychiatric patients,
Spitzer has argued how important it is to apply skilled clinical judgment to establish the
functional relationships among various symptom clusters in any given patient (74). These
admonitions may be particularly relevant in regards to psychiatric patients with histories of
traumatic exposure, who have been shown to have poorer prognoses than patients without
such histories (e.g. 38, 75, 76). Histories of prior trauma and co-morbid diagnoses of
PTSD, dissociation and somatization currently are rarely considered in outcome studies of
patients with affective and other anxiety disorders.
This study supports and amplifies the existing body of research that has demonstrated an
intimate association between the diagnoses of PTSD, dissociation, somatization and a
variety of problems with affect regulation, including difficulties modulating anger and
sexual involvement, as well as aggression against self and others. This study shows that
these associated features of PTSD tend not to occur in isolation, but are often, but not
invariably, found together in the same individuals, and that this co-occurrence is, at least in
part, a function of the age at which the trauma occurred, and the nature of the traumatic
experience.
The data from this study suggest that in the vast majority of patients with PTSD this
diagnosis does not adequately describe the full extent of their suffering. The occurrence of
pure PTSD is the exception rather than the rule: the majority of people who respond to a
trauma with persistent intrusive and avoidant symptoms also develop a complex set of
other, interrelated problems (29,30, 77). Epidemiological studies of PTSD, even those that
do not include the measurement of dissociative and somatization disorders, consistently
find a high degree of co-morbidity of PTSD with other Axis I disorders. Our data show that
the subjects who currently suffer from PTSD have significantly higher rates of endorsement
of symptoms of dissociation, somatization, and affect dysregulation than those who now no
longer meet criteria. However, even the group that no longer had PTSD had a much higher
symptom level than than those who never met criteria. This suggests either that people who
report high levels of associated features are less likely to improve than those with lower
scores, or that those subjects who no longer suffer from PTSD tend to underreport their
past associated features. Our data show that a substantial proportion of subjects who no
longer meet criteria for PTSD continue to suffer from high levels of dissociation,
somatization and affect dysregulation. In those patients, clinicians are liable to miss the
association between their patients' current symptomatology and their past histories of
trauma. It obviously is very important to further study how improvement on one dimension
of the complex PTSD-dissociation-somatization-affect dysregulation axis affects every
other dimension. This study shows that the associated features often persist, even after full-
blown PTSD symptoms subside.
Our study confirms earlier investigations that have shown a relationship between the age of
onset of the trauma, the nature of the traumatic experience, and the complexity of the
clinical outcome (56,58). Subjects who had suffered interpersonal abuse before age 14
developed significantly more dissociative problems, as well as difficulties modulating
anger, self-destructive and suicidal behaviors, than either the older victims of interpersonal
trauma, or the victims of disaster.
There were significant differences between the prevalence of associated features in the
clinical sample, compared with the community sample in the areas of dissociation and
affect dysregulation, but not in the dimension of somatization. This suggests that problems
with dissociation and affect regulation may be painful issues that bring patients who suffer
from PTSD to seek psychiatric treatment, while having physical complaints is not likely to
cause a patient to seek help in mental health settings. This implies that people whose
presenting problem consists of somatization are likely to be treated with medical
interventions, which can be expected to be ineffective in alleviating their distress. In this
regard, studies are needed to establish whether approaching patients who suffer from
somatization disorder with psychological methods that specifically address their past
trauma can lead to more favorable outcomes.
At present, no meaningful data are available for the prevalence of the associated features in
non-traumatized populations. There is no evidence that any of the symptoms: dissociation,
somatization or difficulties with affect regulation, taken by themselves, are pathognomonic
of having endured a trauma, either as a child or as an adult. The significance of these
symptoms can only be determined by a careful investigation of the total context of a
patient's life, and the totality of the patient's functioning. However, we propose that, in
patients with histories of trauma, the array of psychiatric symptoms captured in PTSD,
dissociation, somatization and problems with regulation of affective states are likely to not
constitute separate "double diagnoses", but represent the complex somatic, cognitive,
affective, and behavioral effects of psychological trauma, particularly trauma that occurs
early in the life cycle. The concept of co-morbidity does not capture the complexity of
adaptations to traumatic life experiences: complex biological and well as psychodynamic
relations cannot be captured in simple listings of symptoms.
Nemiah (1) has expressed concern that the DSM-III (and IV) diagnostic system of
classification is not conducive to thoughtful explorations of relationships between clinical
syndromes: "the DSM III, in an attempt to be atheoretical, [has] almost entirely
abandoned the psychodynamic understanding of psychiatric phenomena that had
dominated psychiatric thought for several decades. In the process they have ... discarded
the empirical psychodynamic observations that had been accumulated over the course of a
hundred years in favor of a purely descriptive, phenomenological sorting and classification
of the symptoms of psychiatric illness" (1, in press). He is concerned that the purely
superficial, descriptive, characteristics that make up the DSM diagnostic system will
obscure the dynamic relationships between clinical conditions that, judging by their
location in the DSM, appear to be unrelated clinical conditions. As an example he gives the
diagnoses of PTSD, conversion disorder and the dissociative disorders, which he believes
to be related by virtue of the underlying process of dissociation, but which now are
classified under entirely separate rubrics, even though both dynamic, and research
considerations would warrant their being subsumed under a common umbrella (1). Nemiah
believes that it is critically important to pay attention to the role of dissociation, since he
views the study of dissociation as "critical for reviving an appreciation of the importance of
unconscious mental processes and their role in the pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders at
a time when such psychodynamic concepts have all but disappeared from psychiatric
awareness" (1, in press). He views investigations into the dissociative disorders as the best
opportunity to study "the mechanisms of symptom formation [which] permits the empirical
observation of psychodynamic phenomena that complement and amplify the findings of
descriptive psychiatry" (78, p 248).
He expects that the new brain-imaging techniques will permit the the establishment of the
correlations of brain function with psychodynamic processes. The recent positron emission
tomography (PET) studies (79) that have shown that, as people are exposed to reminders of
their trauma, there is unilateral increased activity in the areas in the right hemisphere
involved in emotional arousal, as well as in the right visual association cortex, while in the
left hemisphere there is concommitant diminished activation of Broca's area in (suggesting
a decreased capacity to put the experience into communicable language), are the first
glimpses into how such brain studies can elucidate the relationships between trauma,
dissociation, somatization and affective dysregulation, as discussed in this paper.
Treatment implications.
This study raises some important issues about the treatment of people who suffer from
PTSD and associated disorders. If the fundamental deficit in people who suffer from the
long-term sequelae of trauma consists of unbidden intrusions, against which the sufferer
defends himself by avoiding stimuli reminiscent of the trauma, effective treatment needs to
include desensentization of the traumatic memory, with the goal that the afflicted
individual learns to habituate to the conditioned stimuli that precipitate traumatic re-
experiences. Indeed, good treatment results have been reported using this approach (80,
81). These studies, however, have not addressed the effects of this treatment on
dissociation, somatization and affect dysregulation. If dissociation, somatization and affect
dysregulation represent core features of the post-traumatic response, and reflect problems
with stimulus discrimination (82), desensitization is unlikely to be able to effectively
address those issues .
Blake has noted that, despite the favorable treatment outcome studies using
cognitive/behavioral treatments aimed at controllling traumatic intrusion, most clinicians
treating traumatized patients continue to practice psychodynamic therapy (83). This raises
the question whether those clinicians are misguided in their choice of interventions, or
whether patients who carry the diagnosis of PTSD may not primarily seek treatment for
their intrusive symptoms, but for dealing with other problems associated with PTSD, such
as affect dysregulation, dissociative problems, somatization and difficulties with trust and
intimacy, which may respond best to dynamic therapies (84). No treatment studies of PTSD
have as yet addressed those questions.
If, as Nemiah proposes, dissociation, i.e. "a disruption in the usually integrated functions of
consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment" (4, p. 447) represents
the core issue in PTSD, a critical treatment issue becomes the "searching out the
dissociated fragments of the patient's personal identity, raising them into consciousness,
and facilitating the emotional abreaction of the pathogenic memories of child abuse
associated with them" (1, p. In press). Recently Ross (89) has demonstrated that patients on
the extreme end of the dissociative spectrum, those with Dissociative Identity Disorder,
who were treated with such an integrative approach came within one standard deviation of
the mean of the general population on a wide range of standard psychometric scales, such
as the Hamilton Depression Scale (90), the Dissociative Experiences Scale (40), and the
SCID I and II (72). Following integration, Nemiah recommends the use of traditional
psychodynamic psychotherapy in order to solidify the gains, mourn the losses, and address
the resolution of conflict (1, 91, p.305).
REFERENCES
1 Nemiah JC: Early concepts of trauma, dissociation and the unconscious: Their history
and current implications, in Trauma, memory and dissociation. Edited by Bremner D.,
Marmar C. Washington, D.C., American Psychiatric Press, 1995.
6 van der Kolk BA, van der Hart O: Pierre Janet and the breakdown of adaptation in
psychological trauma. Am J Psychiat 1989; 146: 1530-1540
7 van der Kolk BA, van der Hart O: The intrusive past: The flexibility of memory and the
engraving of trauma. American Imago 1991; 48: 425-454.
14 Freud S: The etiology of hysteria, in The standard edition of the complete psychological
works of Sigmund Freud (Vol. 3, pp. 189-221). Edited by Strachy J. London, Hogarth
Press, 1896.
15 James W: The varieties of religious experience. New York, Modern Library, 1902.
16 Andreasen NC: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: In Friedman, Kaplan & Sadock (eds)
Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry. Vol 2, 1980.
19 van der Kolk BA, Herron N, Hostetler A: The history of trauma in psychiatry. Psychiat
Clin N America 1994; 17: 583-600.
21 Andreasen NJC, Norris AS: Long term adjustment and adaptation mechanism in severly
burned adults. J Nervous Ment Dis 1972; 154: 352.
23 Burlingham D, Freud A: Infants without families. Allen and Unwin, London, 1944.
24 van der Kolk BA: Psychological Trauma. American Psychiatric Press, 1987.
26 Hyler SE, Spitzer RL: Hysteria split asunder. Am J Psychiat 1978; 135: 1500-1504.
27 Breslau, N, Davis, GC, Andreski, P, & Peterson, E : Traumatic events and posttraumatic
stress disorder in an urban population of young adults. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1991; 48: 216-
222.
29 Kulka RA, Schlenger WE, Fairbank JA, Hough RL, Jordan BK, Marmar CR.: Trauma
and the Vietnam war generation. New York, Brunner/Mazel: 1990.
32 Marmar CR, Weiss DS, Schlenger WE, Fairbank JA, Jordan K, Kulka RA, & Hough
RL: Peritraumatic dissociation and post-traumatic stress in male Vietnam theater veterans.
Am J Psychiat 1994: 151; 902-907.
34 Bremner JD, Southwick SM, Brett E, Fontana A, Rosenheck R, & Charney DS:
Dissociation and posttraumatic stress disorder in Vietnam combat veterans. Am J Psychiat
1992; 149: 328-332.
37 Shalev AY, Peri T, Canetti L & Schreiber S: Predictors of PTSD in Injured trauma
Survivors: a prospective Study. Am J Psychiat, submitted.
38 Chu JA, Dill DL: Dissociative symptoms in relation to childhood physical and sexual
abuse. Am J Psychiat 1990; 147: 887-892.
39 Saxe GN, van der Kolk BA, Berkowitz MD, Chinman G, Hall K, Lieberg G, Chwartz J:
Dissociative disorders in psychiatric inpatients. Am J Psychiatry 1993; 150: 1037-1042.
41 Irwin HJ: Proneness to dissociation and traumatic childhood events. J Nerv Men Dis
1994; 182: 456-460.
44 Pribor EF, Yutzy SH, Dean T, Wetzel RD: Briquet's syndrome, dissociation, and abuse.
Am J Psychiat 1993; 150: 1507-1511.
46 Putnam FW, Loewenstein RJ, Silberman EK, Post RM: Multiple personality disorder in
a hospital setting. J Clin Psychiat 1984; 45: 172-175.
47 Putnam FW, Guroff JJ, Silberman EK, et al: The clinical phenomenology of multiple
personality disorder: Review of 100 recent cases. J Clin Psychiat 1986; 47: 285-293.
48 Ross CA, Heber S, Norton GR, et al: Somatic symptoms in multiple personality
disorder. Psychosomatics 1989; 30: 154-160.
49 Lowenstein RJ: Somatoform disorders in victims of incest and child abuse. In Kluft RP
(ed.). Incest related syndromes and adult psychopathology. American Psychiatric Press,
Washington, DC, 1991.
50 Gross RJ, Doerr H, Caldirola D, Guzinski GM, Ripley HS: Borderline syndrome and
incest in chronic pelvic pain patients. Int J Psychiat in Medicine 1980; 10: 79-89.
51 Walker EA, Katon WJ, Neraas K Jemelka, RP, Massoth D: Dissociation in women with
chronic pelvic pain. Am J Psychiat 1992; 149: 534-537.
52 Saxe GN, Chinman G, Berkowtiz R, Hall K, Lieberg G, Schwartz J, van der Kolk BA:
Somatization in patients with dissociative disorders. Am J Psychiat 1994; 151: 1329-1334.
57 Barlow DH, DiNardo PA, Vermilyea BB, Blanchard EB: Co-morbidity and depression
among the anxiety disorders: Issues in diagnosis and classification. J Nerv Ment Dis 1986;
174: 63-72.
58 van der Kolk BA, Fisler RE: Childhood abuse and neglect and loss of self-regulation.
Bull Menn Clinic 1994; 58: 145-168.
61 Cole P, Putnam FW: Effect of incest on self and social functioning: A developmental
psychopathology perspective. J Consult Clin Psychol 1992; 60: 174-184.
63 Browne A, Finkelhor D: Impact of child sexual abuse: A review of the research. Psychol
Bull 1986; 99: 66-77.
65 Pynoos RS, Nader K: Children who witness the sexual assaults of their mothers. J Am
Acad Child Adolesc Psychiat 1988; 27: 567-572.
67 van der Kolk BA, Perry JC, Herman JL: Childhood origins of self-destructive behavior.
Am J Psychiat 1991; 148: 1665-1671.
69 Terr L: Childhood traumas: An outline and overview. Am J Psychiatry 1991; 27: 96-
104.
70 Pelcovitz D, van der Kolk BA, Roth S, Mandel F, Kaplan S, Resick P: Development
and validation of the Structured Interview for Disorders of Extreme Stress. J Traum Stress,
in press.
71 Robins LN, Helzer JE, Croughan JL, Williams JBW, Spitzer RL. NIMH Diagnostic
Interview Schedule, Version III, Rockville, MD; NIMH, Public Health Service, 1981.
(Publication no. ADM-T- 42-3 [5-81, 8-81].
72 Spitzer RJ, & Williams JB: Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III (SCID 3/15/83).
New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1987.
75 Bryer JB, Nelson BA, Miller JB, Krol PA: Childhood sexual and physical abuse as
factors in adult psychiatric illness. Am J Psychiat 1987; 144: 1426-1430.
76 Carmen EH, Reiker PP, Mills T: Victims of violence and psychiatric illness. Am J
Psychiat 1984; 141: 378-379.
77 Breslau N, Davis GC, Andreski, P: Risk factors for PTSD-related traumatic events: A
prospective analysis. Am J Psychiat 1995; 152: 529-535.
79 Rauch S, van der Kolk BA, Fisler R, Alpert N, Orr S, Savage C, Jenike M, Pitman R: A
symptom provocation study using Positron Emission Tomography and Script Driven
Imagery. Arch Gen Psychiat, submitted.
80 Foa EB, Rothbaum BO, Riggs DS, Murdock T: Treatment of post-traumatic stress
disorder in rape victims: A comparison between cognitive-behavioral procedures and
counseling. J Cons Clin Psychology 1991; 59: 715-723.
81 Keane TM, Fairbank JA, Caddell JM, Zimering RT: Implosive (flooding) therapy
reduces symptoms of PTSD in Vietnam combat veterans. Behavior Therapy 1989; 20: 245-
260.
82 McFarlane AC, Weber DL, Clark CR: Abnormal stimulus processing in PTSD. Biol
Psychol, In press.
83 Blake DD, Abueg FR, Woodward SH, & Keane TM: Treatment efficacy in
posttraumatic stress disorder. In Giles TR (ed): Handbook of effective psychotherapy. New
York, Plenum Press, 1993.
84 van der Kolk BA, McFarlane AC, van der Hart O: The treatment of post traumatic stress
disorder. In van der Kolk BA, & McFarlane AC (eds): Traumatic stress: human adaptations
to overwhelming experience. New York, Guilford Press, 1995.
85 Krystal H: Trauma and Affects. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child 1978; 33: 81-116.
86 Pennebaker JW: Putting stress into words: Health, linguistic, and therapeutic
implications. Behav. Res. Therapy 1993; 31: 539-548.
88 van der Hart O, Steele K, Boon S, & Brown P: The treatment of traumatic memories:
Synthesis, realization, and integration. Dissociation 1993; 6: 162-180.
89 Ross CA: Dissociative disorders:scientific state of the art. Paper presented at the
International Society for the Study of Dissociation, Amsterdam, May, 1995.
90 Hamilton M: A rating scale for depression. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1960; 23: 56-
62.
92 van der Hart O, Brown P, van der Kolk BA: Le traitement psychologique du stress post-
traumatique de Pierre Janet. Annales médico-psychologiques. 147: 976-980, 1989.