Severe PTSD Damages Children's Brains
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthAlso Included In: Anxiety / Stress; Neurology / Neuroscience; Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 08 Mar 2007 - 10:00 PDT
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Severe stress can damage a child's brain, say researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. The researchers found that children with post-traumatic stress disorder and high levels of the stress hormone cortisol were likely to experience a decrease in the size of the hippocampus - a brain structure important in memory processing and emotion.
Although similar effects have been seen in animal studies, this is the first time the findings have been replicated in children. The researchers focused on kids in extreme situations to better understand how stress affects brain development.
"We're not talking about the stress of doing your homework or fighting with your dad," said Packard Children's child psychiatrist Victor Carrion, MD. "We're talking about traumatic stress. These kids feel like they're stuck in the middle of a street with a truck barreling down at them."
Carrion, assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the medical school and director of Stanford's early life stress research program, and his collaborators speculate that cognitive deficits arising from stress hormones interfere with psychiatric therapy and prolong symptoms.
The children in the study were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, as a result of undergoing physical, emotional or sexual abuse, witnessing violence or experiencing lasting separation and loss. This type of developmental trauma often impairs the child's ability to reach social, emotional and academic milestones.
"We'd really like to understand why some children are more resilient than others, and what the long-term effects of extreme stress are," said Carrion, who is the first author of the research, to be published in the March issue of Pediatrics. "We know, for example, that these children are at higher risk of developing depression and/or anxiety as adults."
One theory posits that everyone carries an ongoing stress burden that accumulates throughout life. Once a certain threshold is reached, either through one or two very traumatic events or through chronic, high levels of stress, adults and children can begin to exhibit PTSD symptoms such as re-experience (including flashbacks, intrusive thoughts or nightmares), avoidance and emotional numbing, and physiological hyperarousal (such as an elevated resting heart rate). These behavioral symptoms make PTSD difficult to differentiate from other conditions such as attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
Children predisposed by genetics or environment to be more anxious than their peers are also more likely to develop PTSD in response to emotional trauma, perhaps because their responses to other life experiences simply left them closer to that threshold than less-anxious children.
The researchers studied 15 children from ages 7 to 13 suffering from PTSD. They measured the volume of the hippocampus at the beginning and end of the 12- to 18-month study period. After correcting for gender and for physiological maturity, they found that kids with more severe PTSD symptoms and higher bedtime cortisol levels (another marker of stress) at the start of the study were more likely to have reductions in their hippocampal volumes at the end of the study than their less-affected, but still traumatized peers.
It is significant that the change in the hippocampal volume corresponds to both PTSD symptom severity and increased cortisol levels. Cortisol belongs to a class of human hormones known as glucocorticoids that have been shown to kill hippocampal cells in animals. In a vicious cycle, a reduction in hippocampal size can make it more difficult for a child to process and deal with traumatic events, which in turn may raise both stress and cortisol levels that cause even more damage.
"Although everyday levels of stress are necessary to stimulate normal brain development, excess levels can be harmful," said Carrion, likening the biological effects of increasing amounts of stress to an inverted U. "One common treatment for PTSD is to help a sufferer develop a narrative of the traumatic experience. But if the stress of the event is affecting areas of the brain responsible for processing information and incorporating it into a story, that treatment may not be as effective."
Carrion and his colleagues are now using an imaging technique known as functional MRI to visualize whether and how the children's brains differ when performing emotional and cognitive tasks.
"What we have now is basically a snapshot," said Carrion. "We can't yet say much about function. But we know that PTSD is chronic and pervasive. Hopefully with further research we can develop more effective, targeted interventions to help these kids."
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The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and the Aloha Foundation.
Other co-authors include professor of psychiatry Allan Reiss, MD, and former postdoctoral scholar Carl Weems, PhD, who is now an associate professor of psychology at the University of New Orleans.
Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu/.
Ranked as one of the best pediatric hospitals in the nation by U.S.News & World Report and Child magazine, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford is a 264-bed hospital devoted to the care of children and expectant mothers. Providing pediatric and obstetric medical and surgical services and associated with the Stanford University School of Medicine, Packard Children's offers patients locally, regionally and nationally the full range of health care programs and services - from preventive and routine care to the diagnosis and treatment of serious illness and injury. For more information, visit http://www.lpch.org/.
Contact: Krista Conger
Stanford University Medical Center
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14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/64484.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (6)
PTSD is serious!
posted by Kitty on 1 Oct 2010 at 4:49 amPTSD is just like many other mental disorders, and it's very serious, and sometimes ruins someones life.
People live their lives suffering in fear, and pain.
Also many people can't understand that its a real diagnosable disorder, you can't 'just get over it' or something. people often can't trust, sometimes cant leave their homes..and they get flashbacks constantly, and have so much anxiety they can't be in public without vomiting from the fear.
PTSD is much worse in some cases
posted by marko on 2 Nov 2010 at 11:36 pmim suffering from severe PTSD, childhood to adulthood, constant for years, i cant seem to find treatment for the ones i got were more damaging, medication/day treatments wow so sad.. eather i cant afford it. i just hope i survive, prolly wont, not cuacidal but it probably would be better if i was.. sad part im in Canada.. ive called every institution and health canada and my experience in the search was much much damaging, i dont eat sleep, hell a animals survives better, empty like a ghost..
I just feel like nobody understands and nothing helps
posted by samantha lamb on 2 Dec 2010 at 3:53 pmThis study is amazing. I just want help. I want to feel alive instead of see through. I want the anger, and jumpiness and flashbacks and blackouts to disappear forever. I want to die to get rid of the anguish but I want to live more. I just want freedom. Everyone has opinions on what will fix it and nothing works. I feel tormented and very discouraged. I want my life back. My life was stolen from me at a very very young age and it just keeps getting worse and worse. Help, please.
Me Too:(
posted by LostLindsay on 30 Jun 2011 at 2:44 amI understand what you've written. 17 Years of therapy. A lost childhood (yes stolen), teenage years lost, insecure, misunderstood, adulthood lost, insecure, feeling helpless, feeling unworthy and unloved...married...divorced (what a surprise). Beautiful child - and here I am alone, lost, frightened, lonely, Fearful, unworthy, unloved. A failure in almost everything but putting on the mask everyday pretending I'm ok. I'm not. I'm a childhood PTSD sufferer. Still nobody gives a damn...not then, not now. I am invisible. I am lost. Trapped in the memories of pain, fear, anxiety, uncertainty. The little girl with the seemingly simple dream or ideal world picture - survive, grow up, fall in love, find safety & security, have children, not worry excessively, live happily ever after because I DESERVE IT! I was robbed as a child and that robbery left me with nothing for adult relationships. I married a man just like my father.he hurt me again. And now what? Trapped, overweight alone. My life has always been "alone" haunted by memories...my biggest fear or phobia has eventuated. I will live and eventually die alone. 17 years of therapy. Thousands of dollars, thousands of pills - nothing really works. Sometimes it cant be switched off. Find the answer PLEASE.
Hanna's Experiencing This!!!
posted by AMY on 26 Sep 2011 at 12:17 am''Prolonged and sudden separation from a loved one can cause this in children'' [along with extreme never ending stress and worry ....just my opinion].
PTSD Cure?
posted by Rick Walter on 16 Dec 2011 at 5:02 pmI have suffered for years. Recently I started a therapy that has absolutely given me the stability to keep a job. Manage triggers and even start to see the world as it is, instead of how I think it is. Just an example so you know that I know what you are all talking about. I would have horrible nightmares and would sit in my car day after day watching the parking lot accross the street from where I work. I would stop everything and just sit for days hyper focused scouring the internet for answers to problem that had nothing to do with what I was feeling. Months would go by and I would loose total grasp on what was important and the worse it got the less people seemed to understand what I was going through.
I would feel like I did when I was ten and would have waking memories that seemed to go off for no reason. I was starting to loose hope.
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