Complex Trauma - Defining the Damage
- Complex PTSD (C-PTSD): Results from prolonged, repeated interpersonal trauma (e.g., childhood abuse, torture, domestic violence), where escape is difficult or impossible.
- Goes beyond core PTSD symptoms (re-experiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal).
- Key feature: Disturbances in Self-Organization (DSO) criteria (ICD-11):
- Affective dysregulation (e.g., volatile emotions, persistent dysphoria).
- Negative self-concept (e.g., shame, guilt, worthlessness).
- Disturbances in relationships (e.g., difficulty sustaining relationships, feeling distant).
⭐ C-PTSD is a distinct diagnosis in ICD-11 (6B41), separate from PTSD (6B40). DSM-5 does not have a separate C-PTSD diagnosis, often capturing features through PTSD with dissociative symptoms or comorbid conditions.
Complex Trauma - Many Faces of Hurt
- Results from prolonged, repeated interpersonal trauma (e.g., childhood abuse, domestic violence), often in a context where escape is difficult.
- Distinguished from PTSD by broader, more pervasive impact.
- Core Features (ICD-11: Complex PTSD):
- All PTSD criteria (re-experiencing, avoidance, sense of threat).
- PLUS Disturbances in Self-Organization (DSO):
- Affective Dysregulation: Persistent dysphoria, emotional lability, intense anger.
- Negative Self-Concept: Feelings of worthlessness, shame, guilt.
- Disturbances in Relationships: Difficulty sustaining relationships, feeling distant or cut off from others.
- Other Common Manifestations:
- Somatization: Unexplained physical symptoms.
- Dissociation: Feeling detached from oneself or reality.
- Distorted perceptions of the perpetrator.
- Impaired sense of meaning and purpose.
⭐ Complex PTSD (C-PTSD) is characterized by the three PTSD clusters plus disturbances in self-organization (DSO), which include affective dysregulation, negative self-concept, and disturbances in relationships. This distinction is crucial for diagnosis and management compared to single-incident PTSD.
- Often co-occurs with personality disorders, depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders.
- 📌 Mnemonic for DSO: Affective dysregulation, Negative self-concept, Disturbed relationships (AND that's what makes it complex!).
Complex Trauma - Roots of Wounds
- Etiology: Chronic, relational trauma; often in formative years.
- Sources: Child abuse (emotional, physical, sexual), neglect, domestic violence, torture, human trafficking.
- Key Contributing Factors:
- Early age of onset & prolonged duration.
- Betrayal by primary caregivers.
- Trapped/powerless situations.
- Lack of protective relationships or social support.
- Cumulative effect of multiple traumas.
⭐ Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) score is strongly correlated with risk of developing complex trauma and later-life health issues.
Complex Trauma - Pathways to Recovery
- Goal: Symptom reduction, improved functioning, enhanced quality of life.
- Core Approach: Phase-oriented therapy (e.g., Herman's Triphasic Model).
- Phase 1: Safety & Stabilization
- Establish physical/emotional safety.
- Psychoeducation on trauma's impact.
- Develop coping skills (grounding, affect regulation).
- Phase 2: Trauma Processing (Remembrance & Mourning)
- Carefully process traumatic memories (EMDR, TF-CBT, NET).
- Grieve trauma-related losses.
- Phase 3: Reintegration & Reconnection
- Re-establish social connections.
- Foster new sense of self and future.
- Address relational difficulties.
- Phase 1: Safety & Stabilization
- Pharmacotherapy: Adjunctive; targets symptoms (SSRIs for mood/anxiety; Prazosin for nightmares).
- Other Modalities: Somatic therapies (e.g., Sensorimotor Psychotherapy), DBT skills, group therapy.
⭐ Phase-oriented treatment, addressing safety, processing, and reintegration, is the cornerstone for C-PTSD recovery.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- C-PTSD stems from prolonged, repeated trauma, often in captivity or early life.
- Characterized by Disturbances in Self-Organization (DSO): affective dysregulation, negative self-concept, relationship difficulties.
- ICD-11 includes C-PTSD; DSM-5 acknowledges features but lacks a distinct diagnosis.
- Core PTSD symptoms (re-experiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal) are also present.
- Management involves phased, trauma-informed therapy: stabilization, processing, reintegration.
- Dissociation and emotional dysregulation are prominent features, often more so than in single-incident PTSD.
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