Abstract

Background: The direct and long-term effects of children’s exposure to traumatic events can be seen in a complex continuum, based first of all on the type of trauma. Children’s reactions to trauma may have different manifestations from the clinical picture of the PTSD, exhibiting dissociative, somatic, depressive or anxiety symptoms, and/or disruptiveness.Aim: we conducted a cross-sectional study in a psychiatric patients sample to determine the extent to which complex trauma history is associated with disease-related characteristics (diagnosis, dissociative symptoms, somatic symptomatology, impairment degree).Methods: We have enrolled 107 subjects, aged between 12 and 18 years, who consecutively referred for a psychiatric evaluation to the Child Neuropsychiatry Unit of the Del Ponte Hospital in Varese. All subjects underwent a clinical evaluation performed by infantile neuropsychiatrists. The battery of tests that was administered to patients included CGI and CGAS (filled out by the clinician), CBCL (filled out by parents), MMPI-A and TSSC-A (filled out by patients), and Wechsler scale.Results: We found out that 35.5% of subjects had a mood disorder, 23.4% a personality disorder, 13.1% a psychotic disorder, 20.6% a post-traumatic stress disorder, while 26.2% were classified as other diagnostic categories (more frequently ADHD, DOP and conduct disorders). 58.9% of patients had at least one comorbidity. 33.6% of subjects also experienced a complex trauma. In multivariate logistic regression analyses, subgroup fellows were collapsed to compare the single trauma and no trauma versus complex trauma group. Gender, age and affective disorders were generally unrelated to subjects’, clinicians’, and parents’ scores. About subjects’ self-assessment (MMPI-A Structural Summary Factors), complex trauma history was a statistically significant contributor to high scores on the Immaturity, Health Concerns, Familial Alienation and Psychoticism Factors, followed by presence of dissociative symptoms (except for Familial Alienation factor). Presence of dissociative symptoms, personality and psychotic disorder diagnosis was related to higher clinician impairment scores (CGI-S > 4).Conclusion: These results reinforce available evidence that in trauma-exposed adolescents, the full burden of trauma, including other psychiatric diagnosis than PTSD (such as affective, personality, and psychotic disorders), dissociative and somatic symptomatology, is substantial and needs appropriate assessment and therapeutic interventions.

Highlights

  • Psychological trauma is the individual experience of an event or prolonged conditions in which the individual’s ability to integrate his/her emotional experience is overwhelmed or the individual experiences a threat to life, bodily integrity or sanity, intense fear, terror, and helplessness

  • Complex trauma history was not a significant contributor in CGI-S score (>4); presence of dissociative symptoms, personality and psychotic disorder diagnosis was related to higher clinician impairment scores (Table 3)

  • The type of trauma does not appear to significantly affect psychiatric diagnosis, clinical severity, nor on the type or intensity of symptoms reported by patients or by caregiver, with one exception

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Summary

Introduction

Psychological trauma is the individual experience of an event or prolonged conditions in which the individual’s ability to integrate his/her emotional experience is overwhelmed or the individual experiences a threat to life, bodily integrity or sanity, intense fear, terror, and helplessness. A traumatic event or situation creates psychological trauma when it overcomes the individual’s ability to cope and leaves the person fearing death, destruction, mutilation or psychosis. Children’s reactions to trauma may have different manifestations from the clinical picture of the PTSD described in the DSM-5; for example after experiencing a trauma children may present somatic, depressive or anxiety symptoms, inattention/hyperactivity symptoms, and/or disruptiveness. Children’s reactions to trauma may have different manifestations from the clinical picture of the PTSD, exhibiting dissociative, somatic, depressive or anxiety symptoms, and/or disruptiveness

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