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Affect Of General Environment On The Development Of Ptsd?

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This morning I got on the internet to find out more information relating to the development of PTSD in children. I found a very interesting article and have posted the link at the end of my post. The last two or three weeks my thinking and emotional state have been totally out of "whack".

On Saturday I flipped out over a post I read, thinking first it was brought on by a bad childhood memory. I now realise it was more than that, as I've been this way for weeks. Crying, sadness and depression. Trying to break up with my friend, as it has become too hard. It is a combination of issues, and I hate it. I have never considered myself to be normal. Never seemed to fit in. Have been accused of being morbid, unusual and strange. Sadness comes easy to me. My dream is to be loved, understood, accepted like most of us. It always seems to be elusive.

The article is titled " Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. What Happens in the Brain?" by Sethanne Howard and Mark W. Crandall, MD. Some of what I read relating to small children really surprised me, however it gave me a clearer understanding of my PTSD. I suppose that PTSD is not one size fits all. The same as what could be said for diabetes. A lot of people including the medical profession think and treat people for either Type 1 and Type 2. There is also Latent autoimmune diabetes of adults (LADA), sometimes called diabetes type 1.5, is a concept introduced in 1993 to describe slow-onset type 1 autoimmune diabetes in adults. Adults with LADA are often initially misdiagnosed as having type 2 diabetes, based on age, not etiology. I, my father, his family and my brothers and sisters fall into this category. We are all insulin dependent. The majority of them died between the ages of 42 and 60.


This is part of the article I was referring to and how PTSD affects the development of a small child's brain. This is only a portion the whole article is brilliant. In my opinion anyway.

"There is a special and sad vulnerability for children. During early development, the brain enters a hyper-alert phase as part of the learning and growing process. Children absorb an amazing of information in a short time. They learn walking, talking, communication, and how to control information. Children learn the difference between their actions and themselves. They learn to separate themselves from their environment. They build their identities. One pictures that alert little amygdala busy processing all that new information from the world, storing up experiences, defining rules, figuring out language and the power of words (that’s the terrible twos.), figuring out society, and “look! See what happens when I drop the ball – it falls to the floor and makes a noise and rolls away. Will it do that again? Let’s see.” Children are wonderful scientists and natural experimenters. It must be an exciting time for the brain.

What if there is trauma? Trauma can push this alert state to such extremes that there is damage to the brain cells (PTSD). If the child stays this way for an extended time, then memories that might have become long term (and therefore retrievable later to the adult brain) are never connected. She loses her memory of childhood. And she never fully builds
an integrated personality. This is not necessarily a multiple personality, although in the most extreme cases, the child can develop the Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) that results in multiple personalities. Some people have improperly characterized all such injuries as DID. Far more common than DID, however, is the injured, traumatized personality that develops
PTSD.

In the case of a young child this is especially serious. It seems as if children are born with a brain filled with templates, some complete, most needing some input from the environment to complete their structure. The child fills in these templates as she grows and learns human behavior. At 16 Washington Academy of Sciences some critical point the child integrates all the templates into an executive control, an identity, a self. The safer the environment the healthier the final product. Probably by the age of six the templates are complete
enough to define a whole person.

If the child completes the integration, then she/he can endure a lot of physical and mental attacks and not lose their identity. She/he will develop their own strategies for survival. If however the trauma is severe enough, then depending upon the trauma and when it occurred, one or more particular templates may remain incomplete; she/he does not
integrate. Sadly, they do not know this has occurred. The painful future, the misunderstandings to come, the failures and confusions, these will all make little sense to them. They think that their brain is operating the same way that everyone else’s brain does. They think they have the same genetic templates and the same completed personality. They do not understand why they have problems.

If there is enough fear, then the brain recognizes almost all realtime input as a threat, and if the links are weak to begin with, the child never learns to “touch” reality".


I hope I have done this right, as I'm not to good at it.

[DLMURL]http://www.washacadsci.org/Journal/Journalarticles/V.93-3-post%20Traumatic%20Stress%20Disorder.%20Sethanne%20Howard%20and%20Mark%20Crandalll.pdf[/DLMURL]
 
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Thank you Loloma! I'm going to read this article. ( :cry::arghh; the link doesn't work!)

Abstract, did you know the DSM5 is coming out soon with a new PTSD section?
 
I'm still looking for your article Loloma, it's a good one I think! It helps me to understand why I react so differently to stress and fear than I think others do. :tup:
 
Movin'On, it takes you to Washington Academy of Sciences.

You then click on Journal and then "Journal Articles"

Scroll down to V.93-3-Post Traumatic Stress disorder. And download the PDF

That's the best I can do.
 
Hi Loloma!

Thank you for that article. It's really good. Very clearly presented without dumbing down the content. And I love the information you quoted.

I am also sorry you are in a bad place right now. I had already been thinking that if in your situation I would deteriorate badly. Situations such as that have a very destabilising affect on me. Its like a domino affect isn't it? Hang in there as it will settle eventually and you are doing the right thing.

I suppose that PTSD is not one size fits all.




"There is a special and sad vulnerability for children. During early development, the brain enters a hyper-alert phase as part of the learning and growing process. Children absorb an amazing of information in a short time. They learn walking, talking, communication, and how to control information. Children learn the difference between their actions and themselves. They learn to separate themselves from their environment. They build their identities. ...

. She loses her memory of childhood. And she never fully builds
an integrated personality.

.....They think they have the same genetic templates and the same completed personality. They do not understand why they have problems.


I think way to often we expect that one size fits all and human beings are way more complex than that. And what they say makes so much more sense. I can't see any way that there would not be differences when trauma happens in childhood. When we have not yet formed and are learning intensely.

I see the identity issue very often on here and know it is so for myself too. And the effect of it is so complex and life/self sabotaging.

And the confusion and self judgement when we don't respond like others...
 
I agree, it would be nice to finally have explained a more accurate diagnosis of PTSD. Just my opinion, so many people seem to be jumping of the PTSD wagon, doing self diagnosis from reading the system. In a lot of cases they haven't sort medical help at all.

From my point of view, who in their right mind would want PTSD. A debilitating illness that can in some cases rule your life, not knowing when the next wave will come over you is terrible. Some of the first posts we get here on the forum, are from people who have experienced "normal" trauma that we all face in our daily lives. Therefore I am will be glad once DSM5 is released.
 
Hi loloma,

I am sorry that those posts bother you. I sympathise with people getting angry about it or resentful as I can see why it may feel invalidating. Especially when one is struggling with the intense pain of PTSD. It certainly seems to happen a lot.

But, personally, I don't have a thing about it even though I sometimes think :wideeyed:. Possibly partly because I spend so much time thinking I am doing the same thing. The evaluating aspect of it feeds my own crazy internal stuff.

Also because I always have a slightly open mind in that I wonder if there is not some PTSD trauma prior to what they are discussing and that the event is a trigger not the trauma. That is probably unlikely for most but there you go.

The difference I guess is that I would never have thought I had PTSD. I always wonder if some of them have invalidation issues that they are trying to express their pain in this manner rather than just being able to be as they are and get help there. A little like some people use self harm. Yes its hard to understand how anyone would want PTSD. I think part of it is that people can't understand what it feels like unless they have felt it.

I never thought I had trauma and at the "beginning" was obsessed with what I now think was a trigger precipitating the PTSD taking off properly. Escalating the symptoms that I am guessing I had since early childhood (I have very few clear memories and no self awareness then and seemed to look "past" things such as intrusive images and dissociation etc). I would not look at the real trauma. It was separate to me. It was the little mirrors in the smaller event that got me initially.

Or maybe I am making it all up and fabricating after all! ;-) Lots of the time I can't tell up from down.

But I am glad about the criteria changes as the addition of the self judgement criteria and the dissociative category make sense to me. And of course that it will help clear up confusion. Criterion A is clearer and that can only be a good thing.
 
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