Yehuda Rachel, LeDoux Joseph
Division of Traumatic Stress Studies, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, James J Peters Veteran Affairs, New York, NY 10468, USA.
Neuron. 2007 Oct 4;56(1):19-32. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2007.09.006.
Exposure to traumatic stress is a requirement for the development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, because the majority of trauma-exposed persons do not develop PTSD, examination of the typical effects of a stressor will not identify the critical components of PTSD risk or pathogenesis. Rather, PTSD represents a specific phenotype associated with a failure to recover from the normal effects of trauma. Thus, research must focus on identifying pre- and posttraumatic risk factors that explain the development of the disorder and the failure to reinstate physiological homeostasis. In this review, we summarize what is known about the clinical and biological characteristics of PTSD and articulate some of the gaps in knowledge that can be addressed by basic neuroscience research. We emphasize how knowledge about individual differences related to genetic and epigenetic factors in behavioral and brain responses to stress offers the hope of a deeper understanding of PTSD.
暴露于创伤性应激是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)发生的必要条件。然而,由于大多数经历过创伤的人并未患上PTSD,因此对压力源典型影响的研究无法确定PTSD风险或发病机制的关键组成部分。相反,PTSD代表了一种特定的表型,与无法从创伤的正常影响中恢复有关。因此,研究必须集中于识别创伤前和创伤后的风险因素,这些因素可以解释该障碍的发生以及无法恢复生理稳态的原因。在本综述中,我们总结了关于PTSD临床和生物学特征的已知信息,并阐明了一些基础神经科学研究可以填补的知识空白。我们强调,关于行为和大脑对压力反应中与遗传和表观遗传因素相关的个体差异的知识,为更深入理解PTSD带来了希望。