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Gillian Mezey a Forensic Psychiatry,
St George's Hospital Medical School, Jenner Wing, London SW17 0RE, b Traumatic Stress Service, South West London and St George's
Mental Health NHS Trust, Clare House, St George's Hospital, London
SW17 0QT Correspondence to: G Mezey, gmezey{at}sghms.ac.uk
Post-traumatic stress disorder has attracted controversy
and scepticism since its first appearance in the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders in the 1980s.1
Over the years the diagnostic criteria have been refined and revised,
but the causal relation between the diagnosis and an external trauma
has remained fundamentally unchanged. Post-traumatic stress disorder is
associated with clinically important distress that transcends ordinary
misery and unhappiness as well as with disruption and impairment of
daily functioning. We argue that the diagnosis is valid and important for both patients and doctors.
One of the main criticisms of the diagnosis of post-traumatic
stress disorder is that it has been constructed out of sociopolitical ideas rather than psychiatric ones.2 However, most
psychiatric conditions reflect changes in human thinking over
time.3 For example, changes in the political climate and
fashion were more influential than advances in medical research in
altering the categorisation of homosexuality as a disease. Social
factors such as poverty also contribute to mental illness, stress,
suicide, family integration, and substance misuse.4
Sociocultural factors may determine whether the person is able to cope
with the potentially traumatising experiences that set the stage for
the development of post-traumatic stress disorder.5
The diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder was developed
partly as an attempt to normalise the psychological, cognitive, and
behavioural symptoms observed in many traumatised people. It redefined
the symptoms of the disorder as a normal response to an abnormal event
rather than a pathological condition. The diagnosis of post-traumatic
stress disorder helped to deflect blame away from the sufferer and
diminish his or her sense of guilt, shame, and failure. Nevertheless,
the disorder is associated with low rates of referral for treatment and
high rates of early drop out from
treatment.6
The main purposes of a diagnostic classification are to
facilitate communication between clinicians and researchers, promote research activity, encourage the development of specific treatments, provide information about prognosis, and allow services to be developed.7 The diagnosis of post-traumatic stress
disorder meets these requirements. This contrasts with the diagnosis of personality disorder; not only is this a socially constructed condition, but the classification offers little guidance for treatment or diagnostic validity, and the diagnosis is, by definition, highly stigmatising.8
The fact that the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder has
been internationally recognised is an indication of its usefulness and
perceived validity. However, awareness is increasing that the diagnosis
has more validity for some groups of trauma survivors than others.
People who have suffered repeated chronic trauma, including victims of
torture, intrafamilial violence, or childhood abuse, tend to present
with a more chronic and complex clinical picture.9 This is
more closely embodied by the ICD-10 (international classification of
diseases, 10th revision) diagnosis, "enduring personality change
after catastrophic experience."10 Post-traumatic stress
disorder is now known to be only one of several possible psychiatric
responses to trauma, and it should not be allowed to trump other
equally serious and disabling mental disorders that may
arise.11
Although an external traumatic event is the central aetiological
factor in the development of post-traumatic stress disorder, pre-existing vulnerability factors are important, particularly after
less severe trauma.12 This is also true for psychiatric illnesses such as schizophrenia and depression, in which vulnerability factors may predispose the individual to develop the illness but do not
influence the phenomenology and are not incorporated into the
diagnostic criteria.
Summary points
Post-traumatic stress disorder is a valid and useful diagnosis
but is not the only psychiatric response to trauma
Prevalence in the general population is estimated between 1% and 7.8%
The disorder is associated with high rates of psychiatric
comorbidity and impairment in social and occupational functioning
Post-traumatic stress disorder can be differentiated from other
psychiatric diagnoses by biochemical, neuroanatomical, and
phenomenological characteristics
Concerns about the diagnosis in victims of chronic and lifelong trauma
could be resolved by further refinement of the diagnostic criteria
![]()
Social or psychiatric diagnosis?
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What does diagnosis achieve?
![]()
Validity of diagnosis
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Causes and effects of post-traumatic stress disorder

(Credit: SUE SHARPLES)
Epidemiological studies in the United States have found rates of
post-traumatic stress disorder between 1% and
7.8%.
13 14
There has been no study on the epidemiology
of trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder in the United Kingdom, but
comparative data from other developed countries suggest the rates of
post-traumatic stress disorder are similar to those in the United
States.15 People who have post-traumatic stress disorder
are at increased risk of developing other psychiatric
disorders14 and are at significantly increased risk of
committing suicide.16 The effect of post-traumatic stress
disorder on employment and work productivity is similar to that
associated with depression and translates into an annual loss of
productivity above $3bn (£2.1bn) in the United States.16
The national comorbidity survey identified increased odds of school and
college failure, teenage pregnancy, marital instability, and current
unemployment associated with a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress
disorder.14 Thus, the socioeconomic consequences, as well
as the personal distress associated with diagnosis, are substantial.
| |
Biochemical and anatomical evidence |
|---|
Evidence is accumulating that post-traumatic stress disorder is a discrete nosological entity with biochemical, neuroanatomical, and phenomenological characteristics that differentiate it from other major psychiatric disorders. Dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder results in low urinary cortisol concentrations,17 raised concentrations of cerebrospinal fluid corticotrophin releasing factor,18 increased numbers of lymphocyte glucocorticoid receptor sites,17 and hypersuppression of cortisol with low dose dexamethasone.19 Recent research on the neurobiology of severe stress has shown a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, changes in neuronal function, and altered gene expression and abnormal neurotransmitter production.20
Neuroanatomical abnormalities affecting the medial prefrontal cortex,
hippocampus, and visual association cortex have been identified in
patients with post-traumatic stress disorder.21 These
areas of the brain are involved in memory. Neurotransmitters and
neuropeptides released during stress may result in overconsolidation of
memory traces, giving rise to the intrusive memories of post-traumatic stress disorder.22 According to recent dual representation
theory, vivid re-experiencing and ordinary biographical memories of
trauma are represented by separate memory systems23 so
that sensory data, associated with an emotionally important event, is
stored in memory without cortical processing.
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Litigation |
|---|
In spite of this growing body of research supporting post-traumatic stress disorder as a separate and distinct psychiatric diagnosis, there is widespread criticism, not only of the diagnosis, but of the concept of a discrete psychiatric response to trauma. Much of this criticism has been focused on the sometimes indiscriminate use of the diagnosis in civil litigation and the apparent growth of a trauma industry. Post-traumatic stress disorder is the only psychiatric disorder for which compensation can be paid. It thus gives rise to the potential for malingering and the intentional production or exaggeration of psychiatric symptoms and disability. Although in some instances the legal process, and more specifically the promise of financial compensation, may promote and prolong psychiatric symptoms,24 the potential for secondary gain has been recognised for years in psychiatry, and studies of the effect of compensation on post-traumatic symptoms have been inconclusive.
Summerfield recently argued that in Britain, victims of trauma should
resort to the "time honoured constructions" of "stiff upper
lip" rather than importing the "blame culture" from the United
States.2 Whether the increasing emotionality of the British people is to be applauded or deplored, depends on your political and philosophical viewpoint. However, the fact that something
is not talked about does not mean that it doesn't exist, merely that
we are not inconvenienced by having to think about or deal with it. It
is only relatively recently, for example, that the extent and effects
of domestic violence and childhood abuse have been recognised by health
professionals. Before this, the problem was invisible because of the
social pressure on women and children to deny their suffering. As with
the arguments about psychological trauma, the increasing willingness in
society for these issues to be discussed is not in itself responsible
for causing the problem. Nor should the fact that many victims require treatment for a range of post-traumatic psychiatric symptoms be interpreted as an attempt by the psychiatric profession to medicalise normal human misery.
| |
Conclusions |
|---|
Post-traumatic stress disorder is precipitated by events
that are distressing and disturbing not only to the person who recounts them but also to the listener. Denial of suffering may be one way of
coping with distress and anxiety; accepting psychic trauma as a fact
requires acknowledgement of our own vulnerability to trauma and
victimisation. However, dismissing post-traumatic stress disorder as a
valid diagnosis denies the ongoing suffering of people who have been
exposed to severe and life threatening trauma. Although we recognise
the current limitations of the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress
disorder, especially across cultures and to victims of chronic lifelong
trauma, we believe this is merely an argument for further refinement of
the diagnosis, underpinned by high quality research. It is not an
argument for abandoning the diagnosis altogether.
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Footnotes |
|---|
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
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| 2. |
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The invention of post-traumatic stress disorder and the social usefulness of a psychiatric category.
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| 20. | Kaufer D, Friedman A, Seidman A, Soreq H. Acute stress facilitates long lasting changes in cholinergic gene expression. Nature 1998; 393: 373-377[CrossRef][Medline]. |
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(Accepted 29 June 2001)
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