Biological Need of Trauma

He conformity that trauma is collectively various from stress and results in lasting biological emergency feedback after a while traumatic experiences may account for the biphasic trauma response, and the accompanying memory disturbances. The advances in our understanding of the underlying biology of this "physioneurosis". In inclusion to classically conditioned physiological reactions, changes now have been demonstrated in startle response in people with post-traumatic stress disorder and in central nervous system catecholamine, serotonin, and endogenous opioid systems. This paper reviews the research data which have demonstrated changes in these systems and explores how these biological changes may be related to the characteristic-hyper-reactivity, loss of neuromodulator, numbing of responsiveness, dissociative states, and memory disturbances seen in PTSD. There is expanding evidence that trauma has different biological effects at different stages of primate human, development. This article relates these findings to the studies which have demonstrated clear linkages between childhood trauma, and a variety of psychiatric disorders, including borderline personality disorder, and a range of self-destructive behaviours.

 

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