Yehuda Rachel
Department of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Bronx Veterans Affairs, New York, NY, USA.
Psychiatr Q. 2002 Summer;73(2):123-33. doi: 10.1023/a:1015055711424.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) describes a syndrome in which a trauma survivor experiences an inability to get the event out of his/her mind. The symptoms of PTSD were initially conceptualized as resulting from the cascade of biological and psychological responses following the activation of fear and other brain systems. In the last decade, scientific developments have led to a better understanding of why only certain individuals develop this disorder. Furthermore, studies of the neurobiology of PTSD have delineated specific alterations that help shape our understanding of how biological and psychological responses at the time of traumatic events may have long-term consequences. This review will discuss these new findings and their treatment implications.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)描述了一种综合征,即创伤幸存者无法将事件从脑海中抹去。PTSD的症状最初被概念化为恐惧和其他大脑系统激活后生物和心理反应级联的结果。在过去十年中,科学发展使人们对为何只有某些个体患上这种疾病有了更好的理解。此外,对PTSD神经生物学的研究已经明确了特定的改变,这有助于我们理解创伤事件发生时的生物和心理反应如何可能产生长期后果。本综述将讨论这些新发现及其对治疗的意义。