δείτε την πρωτότυπη σελίδα τεκμηρίου στον ιστότοπο του αποθετηρίου του φορέα για περισσότερες πληροφορίες και για να δείτε όλα τα ψηφιακά αρχεία του τεκμηρίου*
Biology of post-traumatic stress disorder in childhood and adolescence
Diverse patterns of cortisol secretion with consistently high
circulating catecholamines have been reported in post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), an anxiety state that develops after exposure to
traumatic life events. Indeed, peripheral cortisol levels have been
reported to be low or normal in the majority of adult chronic PTSD
studies, whereas, in most paediatric studies, high cortisol values have
been documented. Longitudinal studies on PTSD biology, including the
transition from childhood to adulthood, may shed light on these
discrepancies. In children, elevated evening salivary cortisol in the
aftermath of the trauma was predictive of PTSD development 6 months
later, whereas plasma interleukin-6 correlated positively with evening
cortisol and was equally predictive of later PTSD. Longitudinal
assessment of PTSD children 1 and 6 months later revealed progressive
normalisation of cortisol levels, whereas noradrenaline concentrations
became gradually higher. We hypothesise that, in adults with chronic
PTSD, low cortisol levels, together with high catecholamines, may
reflect a late event in the natural history of the disorder, months or
years after the trauma. The progressive divergence of cortisol and
noradrenaline concentrations over time may be responsible for PTSD
maintenance in children and explain the differences between the child
and adult PTSD endophenotypes. In adults studied immediately after the
trauma, and by contrast to children, low cortisol levels are predictive
of later PTSD development. Our hypothesis that low cortisol levels may
reflect a previous trauma, earlier in development, is supported by the
well established observation that prior trauma is a risk factor for a
new PTSD diagnosis. The developmental stage of an individual in relation
to previous exposure to trauma and PTSD vulnerability are crucial
variables that may determine clinical and biological PTSD phenotypes and
explain the discrepancies between adults and children in reported
cortisol levels.
(EN)
*Η εύρυθμη και αδιάλειπτη λειτουργία των διαδικτυακών διευθύνσεων των συλλογών (ψηφιακό αρχείο, καρτέλα τεκμηρίου στο αποθετήριο) είναι αποκλειστική ευθύνη των αντίστοιχων Φορέων περιεχομένου.
Biology of post-traumatic stress disorder in childhood and adolescence
Biology of post-traumatic stress disorder in childhood and adolescence
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