Publication | Open Access
Cardiovascular and psychological responses to voluntary recall of trauma in posttraumatic stress disorder
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Citations
43
References
2018
Year
Experimental PsychopathologyPsychological Co-morbiditiesHeart RatePsychopathologyPsychiatryEmotion RegulationAffective NeuroscienceTrauma-informed CounselingEducationPsychological ResponsesSocial StressSocial SciencesPosttraumatic Stress DisorderTrauma RecallEmotionVoluntary RecallPsychologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Voluntary recall of trauma is a key element in exposure-based psychotherapies and can trigger spontaneous dissociative responses such as flashbacks, depersonalisation, and derealisation. In order to examine the associations between cardiovascular and psychological responses to voluntary recollection of trauma, individuals with PTSD recalled a traumatic memory. Heart rate and heart rate variability were recorded continuously and the episodes when different forms of dissociation were experienced during the recall were identified. A significant increase in parasympathetic activity was found during trauma recall, with greater parasympathetic dominance being indicative of greater state depersonalisation/derealisation. Whereas overall decreases in heart rate during trauma recall were associated with increased fear and perceived threat, flashbacks were accompanied by short-term increases in heart rate. These findings demonstrate different types of cardiovascular responses associated with different psychological experiences during trauma recall. Future research directions were discussed.
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