Abstract

BackgroundIntrusive mental imagery (MI) plays a crucial role in the maintenance of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in adults. Evidence on the characteristics of MI in adolescents suffering from PTSD is sparse. The aim of this study was to thoroughly assess MI in an adolescent sample suffering from PTSD after the experience of childhood sexual abuse and/or childhood physical abuse (CA).MethodsThirty-two adolescents with a primary diagnosis of PTSD after CA and 32 adolescents without any mental disorder and without a history of CA, matched for age and gender, completed questionnaires assessing the characteristics of negative and positive MI, as well as images of injury and death that lead to positive emotions (ID-images).ResultsThe PTSD group reported significantly more frequent, more vivid, more distressing and more strongly autobiographically linked negative MI compared to the control group. Although positive MI was highly present in both groups (PTSD: 65.6%; controls: 71.9%), no significant differences emerged between the two groups regarding the distinct characteristics of positive MI. The frequency of the ID-images did not significantly differ between the two groups (PTSD: 21.9%; controls: 9.4%), although the ID-images were more vivid in the PTSD group.DiscussionNegative MI appears to be crucial in adolescent PTSD, whilst positive MI are unexpectedly common in both the PTSD and the control group. The role of positive MI as well as that of ID-images remain unclear. Specific interventions for changing negative MI that are tailored to the developmental challenges in adolescents with PTSD should be developed.Trial registrationSome of the PTSD patients in this study were also part of a randomized controlled trial on Developmentally adapted Cognitive Processing Therapy (D-CPT). This trial was registered at the German Clinical Trial Registry (GCTR), DRKS00004787, 18 March 2013.

Highlights

  • Intrusive mental imagery (MI) plays a crucial role in the maintenance of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in adults

  • Participants PTSD group The PTSD group consisted of 32 adolescents with a primary diagnosis of childhood physical abuse (CA)-related PTSD according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR, [36]) with a lowered threshold for avoidance symptoms

  • Our results indicate that adolescent PTSD seems not to be related to an impoverished positive MI ability

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Summary

Introduction

Intrusive mental imagery (MI) plays a crucial role in the maintenance of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in adults. Mental imagery (MI) refers to image-based thoughts. Despite intrusive imageries that represent fragments of the trauma, there are images that do not represent fragments of any traumatic experience [13]. In adult PTSD, experiencing intrusive images with a field-perspective appears to be related to more intense emotions, dissociation, and physiological sensations, as well as altered psychological states similar to those experienced during the traumatic event [7, 14]. Adult PTSD patients tend to use the observer- more frequently than the fieldperspective [14] which can be seen as an avoidance mechanism to escape burdening emotions [15]

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