Meinhausen Corinne, Fatehpuria Anusha, Bhangu Jaifreen, Edmondson Donald, Kronish Ian M, Wilson Patrick, Sumner Jennifer A
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
J Trauma Stress. 2025 Feb;38(1):86-98. doi: 10.1002/jts.23106. Epub 2024 Nov 1.
Given their sudden onset and life-threatening consequences, strokes and transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) can trigger posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To gain a deeper understanding of the potential influence of factors in patients' descriptions of these medical events on PTSD, we conducted a standardized trauma interview with a convenience sample of patients hospitalized for suspected stroke/TIA (N = 98) to assess the details and emotional experience of the stroke/TIA event. Three researchers reviewed the interviews and the research literature on risk and protective factors for PTSD. From this analysis, a codebook with descriptions, examples, and scoring protocols for eight Likert scale, two categorical, and four binary codes was developed. Upon demonstrating sufficient interrater reliability, the research team scored all narratives. Three superordinate themes were identified in the analysis: distress (e.g., fear, helplessness), potential protective factors (e.g., positive expectancies, concern for loved ones), and level of detail (e.g., somatic detail, emotional detail). Differences in perceptions, themes, and expectations emerged in the narratives, indicating a wide range of responses following stroke/TIA. Additionally, patient age was negatively correlated with scores for the fear, r = -.34, p < .001, and negative consequences, r = -.24, p = .018, codes and positively associated with the likelihood of having positive expectancies, OR = 1.05, 95% CI [1.00, 1.10], p = .039. These findings provide a more comprehensive understanding of how patients reflect on their experiences post-stroke/TIA and can inform future research on the contributions of trauma narrative characteristics and emotional responses to PTSD risk.
由于中风和短暂性脑缺血发作(TIA)起病突然且后果危及生命,可能引发创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。为了更深入了解患者对这些医疗事件描述中的因素对PTSD的潜在影响,我们对因疑似中风/TIA住院的患者(N = 98)进行了一项标准化创伤访谈,以评估中风/TIA事件的细节和情感体验。三位研究人员回顾了访谈内容以及关于PTSD风险和保护因素的研究文献。通过该分析,制定了一个编码手册,其中包含八个李克特量表、两个分类代码和四个二元代码的描述、示例及评分协议。在证明具有足够的评分者间信度后,研究团队对所有叙述进行了评分。分析中确定了三个上位主题:痛苦(如恐惧、无助)、潜在保护因素(如积极期望、对亲人的关心)以及细节程度(如身体细节、情感细节)。叙述中出现了认知、主题和期望方面的差异,表明中风/TIA后有广泛的反应。此外,患者年龄与恐惧得分呈负相关,r = -0.34,p < 0.001,与负面后果得分呈负相关,r = -0.24,p = 0.018,与具有积极期望的可能性呈正相关,OR = 1.05,95% CI [1.00, 1.10],p = 0.039。这些发现为患者如何反思中风/TIA后的经历提供了更全面的理解,并可为未来关于创伤叙述特征和情感反应对PTSD风险影响的研究提供参考。