Abstract

This study examined the prevalence of somatic symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a population-based military sample (N = 14,445). Descriptive statistics explored somatic symptom endorsement in the entire sample. A latent class analyses was conducted on participants with a posttraumatic stress checklist (PCL) score ≥29 (n = 2433), with class differentiated by somatic symptom endorsement.Multinomial logistic regression explored correlates of latent class. Somatic disorder was more prevalent in probable-PTSD (59.6%) and subsyndromal-PTSD (26.5%) than no-PTSD (5.0%) groups, supporting an intersection of pathophysiological processes between somatic and PTSD symptoms. A 3-class solution of Syndromal (26.7%),Psychological (17.7%), and Somatic (55.5%) classes provided the optimal representation of latent somatic symptom typologies in probable PTSD and subsyndromal PTSD. Differences between classes on key characteristics supported potentially meaningful class distinctions. Class was not predicted by number of deployments nor whether a member had ever deployed. However, class was predicted by life-time trauma, indicating that the PTSD somatic symptom relationship is not confined to combat related PTSD or the effect of toxic exposures on deployment, but that pre-existing pathophysiology related to life-time trauma may drive the relationship.The high degree of coincidence between PTSD and somatic symptoms and the high prevalence of somatic distress in the Syndromal and Somatic classes support somatic symptoms are a ubiquitous aspect of the clinical presentation and should be considered a central characteristic of PTSD and therefore included in the diagnostic criteria, as suggested by the original formulations of PTSD.

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