Wesarg-Menzel Christiane, Gallistl Mathilde, Niconchuk Michael, Engert Veronika
Social Stress and Family Health Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Institute for Psychosocial Medicine, Psychotherapy and Psychooncology, Jena University Hospital, Friedrich-Schiller University, Jena, Germany.
Transl Psychiatry. 2025 Aug 30;15(1):331. doi: 10.1038/s41398-025-03548-4.
Many refugees experience multiple traumatic events, which set them at increased risk to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To refine interventions aimed at improving refugees' mental health, a better understanding of the factors modulating vulnerability to war-related trauma is needed. In the present study, we focused on stress resonance as a potential vulnerability factor. Stress resonance reflects the empathic sharing of others' subjective and physiological stress experience. Sixty-seven participants who came from Arabic-speaking countries and had entered Germany as refugees or migrants took part in an empathic stress test, in which they observed a native German speaker undergo a psychosocial laboratory stressor. Meanwhile, different stress markers (subjective stress, heart rate, heart rate variability, and cortisol release) were simultaneously captured in the stressed targets and passive observers. Moderation analyses did not support our hypothesis that the extent to which someone resonates with others' stress is a vulnerability factor in the development of PTSD symptoms after trauma exposure. Rather, higher levels of subjective and autonomic stress resonance were directly related to PTSD symptom severity when controlling for sex, age, and trauma exposure. Our findings suggest that heightened stress resonance may constitute a malleable correlate of PTSD symptoms rather than a trait modulating health risk. In the future, efforts should be made to test whether individuals with a history of war-related trauma would benefit from interventions aimed to reduce the tendency to excessively share others' stress.
许多难民经历过多次创伤性事件,这使他们患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险增加。为了优化旨在改善难民心理健康的干预措施,需要更好地了解调节对与战争相关创伤易感性的因素。在本研究中,我们将压力共鸣作为一个潜在的易感性因素进行了重点研究。压力共鸣反映了对他人主观和生理压力体验的共情分享。67名来自阿拉伯语国家、以难民或移民身份进入德国的参与者参加了一项共情压力测试,在测试中他们观察一名以德语为母语的人经历心理社会实验室应激源。与此同时,在承受压力的目标对象和被动观察者身上同时捕捉不同的压力指标(主观压力、心率、心率变异性和皮质醇释放)。调节分析并不支持我们的假设,即某人与他人压力共鸣的程度是创伤暴露后PTSD症状发展中的一个易感性因素。相反,在控制了性别、年龄和创伤暴露因素后,较高水平的主观和自主压力共鸣与PTSD症状严重程度直接相关。我们的研究结果表明,增强的压力共鸣可能是PTSD症状的一个可改变的相关因素,而不是调节健康风险的一种特质。未来,应该努力测试有与战争相关创伤史的个体是否会从旨在减少过度分享他人压力倾向的干预措施中受益。