Title: Trauma and Womens Health
1Trauma and Womens Health
- Amy House, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor
- Medical College of Georgia
2Outline
- Section 1
- Trauma and PTSD definitions and epidemiology
- Trauma, PTSD, and health outcomes
- Section 2
- The psychobiology of traumatic stress
- Clinical implications
3 4Trauma Defined
- DSM-IV
- When a person experiences, witnesses, or is
confronted with an event or events that involve
actual or threatened death or serious injury, or
a threat to the physical integrity of self or
others, and - The persons response involves intense fear,
helplessness, or horror.
5Examples of Traumatic Events
- Intimate partner violence
- Child abuse
- Sexual assault
- Being a crime victim
- Military combat
- Car accident
- Natural disaster
- Other life threatening event
6Responses to Trauma
- Most people adjust well
- Some are resilient
- Some develop symptoms then recover within 3-6
months - Partial PTSD
- PTSD
7Prototypical Responses
8Stress Reaction Symptoms
- PHYSICAL
- Fatigue
- Nausea/vomiting
- Muscle tremors
- Chest pain
- Shortness of breath
- Increased blood pressure
- Increased heart rate
- Headaches
- Grinding teeth
- Dizziness
- Chills
- Fainting
9Stress Reaction Symptoms
- COGNITIVE
- Confusion
- Poor attention/concentration
- Difficulty making decisions/poor decisions
- Memory problems
- Loss of time, place, person orientation
- Nightmares
- Intrusive images
10Stress Reaction Symptoms
- EMOTIONAL
- Anxiety
- Guilt
- Grief
- Denial
- Fear
- Depression
- Agitation
- Anger
- Feeling overwhelmed
11Stress Reaction Symptoms
- BEHAVIORAL
- Change in activity level
- Withdrawal
- Outbursts
- Change in appetite
- Restlessness
- Disturbed sleep
- Jumpiness
- Change in speech patterns
12Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
- A. Traumatic event
- (one month ago or more)
- B. Re-experiencing of the event (1)
- C. Avoidance of reminders and numbing (3)
- D. Increased arousal symptoms (2)
- E. Duration of sx at least one month
Note Numbers in parentheses represent the number
of symptoms needed in that category to meet
diagnosis.
13Lifetime Prevalence of DSM-III-RMajor
Psychiatric DisordersNCS Data
Mood Disorders Major depressive
episode 17.1 Dysthymia 6.4 Manic
episode 1.6 Anxiety Disorders Social
phobia 13.3 Simple phobia 11.3 PTSD 7.8 Agoraphobi
a without panic 5.3 GAD 5.1 Panic
disorder 3.5 Substance Use Disorders Alcohol
abuse/dependence 23.5 Drug abuse/dependence 11.9
Adapted from Kessler et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
199451819. Kessler et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
19955210481060.
14PTSD Risks of Specific Traumas in the US
Population
Percentage
N/A
Natural Disaster
Rape
Combat
Criminal Assault
About 30 of people exposed to trauma developed
PTSD
Kessler RC et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
19955210481060.
15PTSD Rates Related to Specific Traumas
Percentage
Natural Disaster
Rape
Combat
Criminal Assault
Kessler RC et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
19955210481060.
16What makes it traumatic? Characteristics of the
Event
- Human-made events vs. natural disasters
- Malicious intent vs. accidents
- Perpetrator is known vs. a stranger
- Event is unexpected vs. expected
- Duration and intensity of event
- Amount of physical violation
- Amount of destruction and loss
17Characteristics of Vulnerable People
- Those who perceive a greater threat
- Those who experience panic or dissociation during
the event - Children, elderly
- Lacking in psychosocial resources
- Poor pre-existing psychological health
- Previous traumatic experiences
18 19Case Example Lynn
- 35 y.o. white female, married, 2 children
- Obese, Type II Diabetes
- Fatty liver, elevated liver enzymes
- Hx of hyperthyroidism thyroid surgery,
currently hypothyroid controlled with medication - Hx of appendectomy
- Gallbladder disease and removal
- Hx of hysterectomy secondary to fibroid tumors
- Hx of pregnancy loss at 6 mos gestation
- Unexplained symptoms that interfere with her
functioning - muscle cramps gradually worsening in severity
over many years, tried on multiple medications
without benefit - Severe, chronic childhood sexual abuse, chronic
depression, chronic PTSD
20Case Example Mary
- 40 y.o. African American female, married, 2
children - Hypertension
- Migraine headaches
- Hypothyroidism
- Breast cancer
- Aggressive tumor
- Hx of severe, chronic childhood physical and
sexual abuse, chronic depression, chronic PTSD,
severe dissociative symptoms
21Case Example Tonya
- 35 y.o. African American female, separated, 2
children - Polycystic kidney disease
- Chronic pain
- Fibromyalgia
- Hypertension
- Asthma allergic rhinitis
- Multiple episodes of childhood sexual abuse,
recurrent major depression, chronic PTSD
22Trauma Self-Reported Health
- Trauma exposure linked to self-reports of
impaired physical health in representative U.S.
sample. - Lower ratings of global health
- More physical symptoms
- Greater numbers of chronic health conditions
- True even when controlling for demographics,
psychiatric history, and other stressful life
events
23Trauma Self-Reported Health
- Adverse Childhood Experiences Study
- 9500 adult HMO patients.
- Pts surveyed regarding adverse childhood events
abuse, exposure to parental violence, living in a
household where a family member was a substance
abuser, mentally ill, suicidal, or imprisoned. - Compared to those without adverse events, those
who reported 4 or more adverse events were more
likely to also report - chronic bronchitis or emphysema
- stroke
- cancer
- ischemic heart disease
- skeletal fractures
- hepatitis
24Trauma Self-Reported Health
- 239 female pts in a gastroenterology clinic with
GI disorders - 65.5 reported some type of sexual and/or
physical abuse in lifetime - Those with sexual abuse hx reported more
- Pain
- Non-GI somatic sx
- Bed disability days
- Lifetime surgeries
- Functional disability
- Psychological distress
- Invasiveness/severity of sexual and physical
abuse predicted worse health outcomes
25Trauma Objective Health Indicators
- 1225 female HMO patients
- Women with hx of child maltreatment evidenced
- greater numbers of medically documented
psychiatric AND non-psychiatric diagnoses in the
past year including - minor infectious disease
- pain disorders
- hypertension
- diabetes
- asthma
- allergy
- abnormal uterine bleeding
- 2x the emergency room visits
26Trauma Objective Health Indicators
- 2005 women enrolled in a multi-site metropolitan
HMO who reported intimate partner violence within
the past eight years. - Abused women had 50 to 70 more gynecological,
central nervous system, and stress-related
problems compared to women not experiencing
intimate partner violence.
27Trauma Objective Health Indicators
- Women with advanced HIV had significantly more
trauma exposure than a demographically matched
comparison group from the same community. - Extent of trauma associated with
- physical symptoms
- poorer functional status
- faster rate of disease progression
28Trauma Disease Progression
- Recent study by Rose, R.C., Pereira, D.B.,
Antoni, M.H. (2006) - Having had trauma increased the HIV HPV womans
odds 35 times of having their SIL stay the same
or become worse - Also, if the woman was in a cognitive-behavioral
stress management group, this decreased their
odds significantly of progression or persistence
of SIL compared to women who were not in the group
29Trauma Mortality
- 10-yr follow up of 1567 men and women exposed to
war-related stressors in Lebanon - increased of stressors ---gt increased risk for
cardiovascular disease specific deaths and
all-cause mortality - At particular risk
- Women who experienced loss-related trauma
- Women and men who were displaced
30Trauma Mortality
- Vietnam Experience Study
- Compared 4600 women Vietnam veterans with 5300
women veterans who served elsewhere - All-cause mortality rates did not differ
- Vietnam veterans had twice the risk for mortality
from cancers of the pancreas and uterine corpus
31Sexual Abuse/Assault Health
- Sexual abuse/assault related to
- 2x the risk of reporting GI complaints (abdominal
pain, nausea, diarrhea, constipation) - 2x the risk of reporting pelvic pain and vaginal
discharge - 2x the risk of painful intercourse
- 3x the risk of lack of sexual pleasure
- Increased risk of painful menstruation
- 2x the risk for recurrent headache
- Increased risk of shortness of breath, chest
pain, dizziness - 1.4x the risk of ischemic heart disease
32- Does PTSD account for the link between trauma and
health outcomes?
33PTSD as a Mediator
- A mediator is a variable that explains the
relationship between two other variables. - For example
- Cholesterol levels mediate the relationship
between the amount of fried chicken eaten and the
degree of coronary artery disease.
Cholesterol
Fried Chicken
CAD
34PTSD Self-Reported Health
- Men and women Vietnam veterans with PTSD
- report a greater number of chronic health
conditions and have poorer perceived health
(Kulka et al., 1990) - increased reports of a number of chronic
disorders across systems - True even when controlling for intelligence,
race, region of birth, enlistment status, army
medical profile, hypochondriasis, age, smoking,
substance abuse, education, and income.
(Boscarino, 1997)
35PTSD Objective Health Indicators
- Vietnam veterans study PTSD associated with
- EEG abnormalities
- Atrioventricular defects
- Infarctions
- True even when controlling for age, ethnicity,
education, location of service, medications, drug
alcohol use, body mass index, and cigarette
smoking.
36Function and Quality of Life In Vietnam
Veterans With and Without PTSD
Percent
Not Working
PhysicalLimitation
ReducedWell-Being
Fair orPoorHealth
Violent BehaviorPast Year
Zatzick DF et al. Am J Psychiatry.
199715416901695.
37PTSD as a Mediator
- Studies of female Vietnam veterans
- PTSD completely or mostly mediated the
relationship between trauma exposure and health
status (Friedman Schnurr, 1995 Kimerling,
Clum, Wolfe, 2000) - Female sexual assault victims
- Depression and PTSD completely accounted for the
relationship between traumatic exposure and
health perceptions (Clum, Calhoun, Kimerling,
2000)
38PTSD as a Mediator
- Multisite study of 502 primary care patients with
anxiety disorders - 46 had trauma histories
- 37 met full criteria for PTSD
- Those with PTSD had more medical conditions than
those with other anxiety disorders. - PTSD was a stronger predictor of medical problems
than - trauma history, physical injury, lifestyle
factors, or depression
39What about other psychological symptoms?
- Female veterans with PTSD
- Women with PTSD (n 4348) had more medical
conditions and worse physical health status than
women with depression alone (n 7580) or neither
(n 18,937) (Frayne, Seaver, et al., 2004) - Rape victims with chronic PTSD (Zoellner,
Goodwin, Foa, 2000) - PTSD severity predicted self-reported physical
symptoms - True even when controlling for anger, depression,
and other negative life events - Sexual assault victims (Clum, Calhoun,
Kimerling, 2000) - Both depression and PTSD contributed uniquely to
explaining global health perceptions and physical
symptom reports
40What about other psychological symptoms?
- Summary of findings
- PTSD continues to predict health outcomes when
anger, depression, and other psychiatric
disorders are controlled for - However, the effect is reduced
- Depression also plays a unique role
41- How Traumatic Stress
- Impacts Health
- The Psychobiology of PTSD
42The Allostatic Load Model
- Allostasis the bodys ability to achieve
stability through change - Allostatic systems
- Autonomic nervous system
- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
- Cardiovascular system
- Immune system
- Metabolic system
- In contrast to homeostatic systems
- Body temperature, blood oxygen, etc.
43The Allostatic Load Model
- Allostatic load the cumulative cost to the
organism (i.e., wear and tear) that results from
repeated accommodations to stress (underactivity
or overactivity of allostatic systems)
44Human Stress Response
- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
- Locus ceruleus/norepinephrine-sympathetic system
(LC/NE system) - Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF)
- The ignition switch for both
45Normal HPA Axis
Hypothalamus secretes CRF
Pituitary Gland releases ACTH
If not
Adrenal Gland releases cortisol and other
glucocorticoids
If sufficient numbers of receptors are occupied,
CRF secretion is inhibited
Hypothalamus monitors circulating cortisol
through glucocorticoid receptors
46LC/NE System
- Includes adrenergic mechanisms in the CNS and SNS
- The classic fight or flight stress response
- Catecholamines norepinephrine and epinephrine
47Human Stress Response
- Effectiveness of the stress response
- Ability to mobilize systems
- Ability to return quickly to baseline
- When recovery is not achieved ?
- Chronic stress syndrome
48Chronic Stress Syndrome
- Persistent elevation in CRF secretion?
- Increased HPA axis activation
- Higher ACTH and cortisol levels
- Increased LC/NE activation
- Increased adrenergic reactivity
- Increased catecholamine levels
- Increased endogenous opioids
- Thyroid decreased TSH T3
- Reduction in the activity of
- Reproductive system (GnRH, LH, FSH)
- Growth mechanisms (GH, Growth factors)
- Immunologic system (immunosupression,
increased inflammatory cytokines) - Metabolic Syndrome X
49- Does PTSD impact health the same way chronic
stress does? - Often, but not always
50PTSD the HPA Axis
- CSA survivors ?
- Those with PTSD have elevated CRF levels
enhanced hypothalamic release of CRF vs. without
PTSD (Yehuda et al., 1996) - Urinary cortisol levels
- Elevated among women with PTSD (Rasmussen
Friedman, 2002) - Decreased among male combat veterans
- May reflect gender, methodological, or
tonic/phasic differences - Glucocorticoid receptors may be super sensitive
(Yehuda, 1999) - Low cortisol, but increased HPA activity
- PTSD ? hippocampal atrophy
51PTSD the SNS
- Men and women with PTSD (compared to
trauma-exposed non-PTSD controls) - Markedly greater SNS responses to threatening
stimuli - Blood pressure
- Heart rate
- Skin conductance
- EMG responses
- Slower return to baseline
- Higher resting heart rate and blood pressure
52PTSD THE LC/NE System
- Catecholamine levels
- Elevated baseline levels
- Hyperreactivity in challenge studies
- Contributes to the reexperiencing and
hyperarousal symptoms of PTSD - Lower baseline Neuropeptide Y (NPY)
- Blunted NPY response in challenge studies
- Gender considerations
- In healthy subjects Men higher levels of
catecholamines in response to stress than women - Women have increased SNS responses in luteal
phase of menstrual cycle - Oral contraceptives reduce stress response
- Testosterone increases NPY
- Women have relative decreases in NPY during
luteal phase of menstrual cycle
53PTSD Brain Function
- Women with hx of CSA PET scans while listening
to traumatic scripts - Compared women with PTSD to those without PTSD
- PTSD associated with deactivation of the medial
prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and visual
cortex, and activation of the posterior cingulate
and motor cortex.
54PTSD Thyroid Function
- Elevated T3 and T4 in combat veterans
- Associated with PTSD severity
- Elevated T3 in female CSA survivors with PTSD
55PTSD the Immune System
- Acute stress enhances immune response chronic
stress suppresses immune response - Traumatic stress research results are mixed
- Of 15 studies of immune functioning and trauma
- 8 showed enhanced immunological functioning
- 5 showed immunosuppression
- 2 showed both types of changes
- Explanations?
- Timing of the stressor and the measurement
- Different subgroups recovery vs. PTSD
56Trauma, PTSD, Health
Personal, Social, Cultural Factors
Attentional Processes e.g., altered symptom
perception, mislabeling
Illness Behavior e.g., symptom reports,
utilization, functional status
Psychological Alterations e.g., depression,
anxiety, hostility, poor coping, dissociation
PTSD
Health Risk Behaviors e.g., substance abuse,
smoking, poor self-care
Biological Alterations e.g., HPA axis,
noradrenergic function, immune function
Morbidity Mortality
Trauma Exposure
57 58Should you screen for trauma and PTSD?
- The AMA recommends routine screening of women for
interpersonal violence victimization. - However, few physicians do so.
- Barriers
- Lack of comfort
- Fear of offending patients
- Sense of futility
- Time constraints
- Most women believe healthcare providers should
screen for abuse. - Most are reluctant to disclose violence if
physicians do not address the issue as part of
their health care.
59When to screen for trauma abuse
- When the patient has any of these
- Numerous painful chronic health symptoms
- Psychiatric symptoms consistent with PTSD, panic,
depression, or dissociation - Difficulty establishing trust
- Feelings of helplessness and shame
- Extreme difficulty with medical procedures
- When you have
- Established rapport
- Reason to think the information will improve
patient care - Access to psychological referral sources
60How to screen for trauma abuse
- Start with general inquiry questions and become
more specific. - Normalizing introductory statements are helpful.
EX - Trauma and abuse are very common in womens
lives, and can have an important impact on
health, so Ive begun to ask about it routinely. - Ask behaviorally specific questions
- Do Have you had anyone touch you sexually when
you did not want them to? - Dont Have you been sexually abused?
61- Does psychological treatment help?
62Psychotherapy for PTSD
- Cognitive-behavioral approaches, especially
exposure therapy, have the most research support
for their efficacy in reducing PTSD symptoms. - More effective than supportive therapy
- Often more effective than medications
- No research on whether psychotherapy for PTSD
improves physical health
63Intriguing possibilities
- Emotional disclosure studies
- Writing about ones worst trauma
- Studied in students and those with chronic
medical illness - Has positive health effects
- Reduced depression, pain, physical symptoms,
number of health center visits - Improved physical functioning
64Intriguing possibilities
- Large literature showing that CBT reduces pain
and disability among patients with chronic pain
conditions. - Cognitive-behavioral stress management (CBSM)
improves immune response and reduces cortisol
levels among breast cancer patients (McGregor et
al., 2004 Cruess et al., 2000). - Recent research shows benefits of CBSM in
HIVHPV women with trauma histories (Rose et
al., 2006).
65Intriguing possibilities
- Rape/sexual abuse survivors with IBS show marked
improvement in symptoms after treatment with
psychotherapy or paroxetine (Creed et al., 2005). - What we dont know
- Does exposure therapy improve pain and other
physical symptoms in traumatized patients with
PTSD?