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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Emotion Modulation in PTSD: Clinical and Neurobiological Evidence for a Dissociative Subtype

TLDR
The neural manifestations of the dissociative subtype in PTSD are compared to those underlying the reexperiencing/hyperaroused subtype and have important implications for treatment of PTSD, including the need to assess patients with PTSD for Dissociative symptoms and to incorporate the treatment of dissociatives symptoms into stage-oriented trauma treatment.
Abstract
In this article, the authors present evidence regarding a dissociative subtype of PTSD, with clinical and neurobiological features that can be distinguished from nondissociative PTSD. The dissociative subtype is characterized by overmodulation of affect, while the more common undermodulated type involves the predominance of reexperiencing and hyperarousal symptoms. This article focuses on the neural manifestations of the dissociative subtype in PTSD and compares it to those underlying the reexperiencing/hyperaroused subtype. A model that includes these two types of emotion dysregulation in PTSD is described. In this model, reexperiencing/hyperarousal reactivity is viewed as a form of emotion dysregulation that involves emotional undermodulation, mediated by failure of prefrontal inhibition of limbic regions. In contrast, the dissociative subtype of PTSD is described as a form of emotion dysregulation that involves emotional overmodulation mediated by midline prefrontal inhibition of the same limbic regions. Both types of modulation are involved in a dynamic interplay and lead to alternating symptom profiles in PTSD. These findings have important implications for treatment of PTSD, including the need to assess patients with PTSD for dissociative symptoms and to incorporate the treatment of dissociative symptoms into stage-oriented trauma treatment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Considering PTSD for DSM-5

TL;DR: A new set of diagnostic criteria is proposed for DSM‐5 that attempts to sharpen the A1 criterion, eliminates the A2 criterion, proposes four rather than three symptom clusters, and expands the scope of the B–E criteria beyond a fear‐based context.
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Into the unknown: A review and synthesis of contemporary models involving uncertainty.

TL;DR: The current review and synthesis serves to define and contextualize fear of the unknown relative to related constructs, such as intolerance of uncertainty, and contemporary models of emotion, attachment, and neuroticism, to provide a robust foundation for transdiagnostic theoretical and empirical explorations into fearing the unknown and intolerance of Uncertainty.
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Evaluation of the Evidence for the Trauma and Fantasy Models of Dissociation

TL;DR: There is strong empirical support for the hypothesis that trauma causes dissociation, and that dissociation remains related to trauma history when fantasy proneness is controlled, and little support is found for the hypotheses that the dissociation-trauma relationship is due toantasy proneness or confabulated memories of trauma.
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Childhood maltreatment, emotional dysregulation, and psychiatric comorbidities.

TL;DR: To understand how the developmental effects of childhood maltreatment contribute to emotional dysregulation and psychiatric sequelae, the research evidence of associations between childhood trauma, emotional Dysregulation, and psychiatric comorbidities in children, adolescents, and adults is examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional processing of fear : exposure to corrective information

TL;DR: Mechanisms that govern the processing of emotional information, particularly those involved in fear reduction, are proposed and applications to therapeutic practice and to the broader study of psychopathology are discussed.
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Functional Neuroimaging of Anxiety: A Meta-Analysis of Emotional Processing in PTSD, Social Anxiety Disorder, and Specific Phobia

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography studies of posttraumatic stress disorder, social anxiety disorder, specific phobia, and fear conditioning in healthy individuals provided neuroimaging evidence for common brain mechanisms in anxiety disorders and normal fear.
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Symptomatology and management of acute grief

TL;DR: The points to be made in this paper are as follows: i.
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Childhood traumas: an outline and overview.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors divide childhood trauma into two basic types and define the findings that can be used to characterize each of these types, including full, detailed memories, "omens," and misperceptions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Childhood trauma, the neurobiology of adaptation, and "use-dependent" development of the brain: How "states" become "traits."

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of childhood trauma on the development and function of the brain is discussed in context of basic principles of neurodevelopment, including hyperarousal and dissociation.
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