THE BODY KEEPS THE SCORE - MEMORY AND THE EVOLVING PSYCHOBIOLOGY OF POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS

被引:655
作者
VANDERKOLK, BA [1 ]
机构
[1] MASSACHUSETTS GEN HOSP, HARVARD MED SCH, TRAUMA CLIN, BOSTON, MA 02114 USA
关键词
D O I
10.3109/10673229409017088
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Ever since people's responses to overwhelming experiences have been systematically explored, researchers have noted that a trauma is stored in somatic memory and expressed as changes in the biological stress response. Intense emotions at the time of the trauma initiate the long-term conditional responses to reminders of the event, which are associated both with chronic alterations in the physiological stress response and with the amnesias and hypermnesias characteristic of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Continued physiological hyperarousal and altered stress hormone secretion affect the ongoing evaluation of sensory stimuli as well. Although memory is ordinarily an active and constructive process, in PTSD failure of declarative memory may lead to organization of the trauma on a somatosensory level (as visual images or physical sensations) that is relatively impervious to change. The inability of people with PTSD to integrate traumatic experiences and their tendency, instead, to continuously relive the past are mirrored physiologically and hormonally in the misinterpretation of innocuous stimuli as potential threats. Animal research suggests that intense emotional memories are processed outside of the hippocampally mediated memory system and are difficult to extinguish. Cortical activity can inhibit the expression of these subcortically based emotional memories. The effectiveness of this inhibition depends, in part, on physiological arousal and neurohormonal activity. These formulations have implications for both the psychotherapy and the pharmacotherapy of PTSD.
引用
收藏
页码:253 / 265
页数:13
相关论文
共 133 条
[1]   PARTIAL KINDLING OF THE VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPUS - IDENTIFICATION OF CHANGES IN LIMBIC PHYSIOLOGY WHICH ACCOMPANY CHANGES IN FELINE AGGRESSION AND DEFENSE [J].
ADAMEC, RE .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1991, 49 (03) :443-453
[2]   THE DEVELOPMENT OF PREDATORY AGGRESSION AND DEFENSE IN THE DOMESTIC CAT (FELIS-CATUS) .1. EFFECTS OF EARLY EXPERIENCE ON ADULT PATTERNS OF AGGRESSION AND DEFENSE [J].
ADAMEC, RE ;
STARKADAMEC, C ;
LIVINGSTON, KE .
BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY, 1980, 30 (04) :389-409
[3]  
ADAMEC RE, 1978, LIMBIC MECHANISMS
[4]   ENDOGENOUS OPIOIDS - BIOLOGY AND FUNCTION [J].
AKIL, H ;
WATSON, SJ ;
YOUNG, E ;
LEWIS, ME ;
KHACHATURIAN, H ;
WALKER, JM .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1984, 7 :223-255
[5]   HIPPOCAMPUS AND BEHAVIORAL MATURATION [J].
ALTMAN, J ;
BRUNNER, RL ;
BAYER, SA .
BEHAVIORAL BIOLOGY, 1973, 8 (05) :557-596
[6]  
American Psychiatric Association, 1987, DIAGNOSTIC STAT MANU, V3rd
[7]  
American Psychiatric Association, 1994, DIAGNOSTIC STAT MANU, V4th
[8]   STRESS HORMONES - THEIR INTERACTION AND REGULATION [J].
AXELROD, J ;
REISINE, TD .
SCIENCE, 1984, 224 (4648) :452-459
[9]   PAIN IN MEN WOUNDED IN BATTLE [J].
BEECHER, HK .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 1946, 123 (01) :96-105
[10]   CARDIAC RESPONSE TO RELEVANT STIMULI AS AN ADJUNCTIVE TOOL FOR DIAGNOSING POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER IN VIETNAM VETERANS [J].
BLANCHARD, EB ;
KOLB, LC ;
GERARDI, RJ ;
RYAN, P ;
PALLMEYER, TP .
BEHAVIOR THERAPY, 1986, 17 (05) :592-606