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THE ROOTS OF TRAUMA

This article explores new theories of dissociation and their applications to therapy and healing. It discusses the roots of trauma and the freeze response, as well as the importance of discharging the freeze response for survival. The role of hypnosis, memory in trauma, conditioning, and dissociation in psychiatric disorders are also explored. The article concludes with an examination of neuroimaging findings in conversion disorder and the psychobiology of dissociation.

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THE ROOTS OF TRAUMA

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  1. NEW THEORIES OF DISSOCIATION:APPLICATIONS TO THERAPYAND HEALINGROBERT SCAER, M.D.scaermdpc@msn.comwww.traumasoma.com

  2. THE ROOTS OF TRAUMA A THREAT TO LIFE IN THE FACE OF HELPLESSNESS THE FIGHT /FLIGHT / FREEZE RESPONSE

  3. THE FREEZE RESPONSE • NUMBING THROUGH ENDORPHINS • VAGAL (PARASYMPATHETIC) TONE • BIMODAL SYMPATHETIC / PARASYMPATHETIC CYCLING (ACCELERATOR / BRAKE ANALOGY)

  4. HYPNOSIS -FREUD:“…a paralysis produced by the influence of an omnipotent person on a defenseless, impotent subject” - PAVLOV: ANIMAL HYPNOSIS - “…a self-protecting reflex of an inhibitory nature” - PERSISTANCE OF REFLEX MOTOR POSTURES IMITATING THE LAST POSITION OF THE LIMBS BEFORE HYPNOSIS ENSUED

  5. LESSONS FROM THE WILD:THE CRITICAL IMPORTANCEOF DISCHARGINGTHE FREEZE RESPONSE

  6. FREEZE/IMMOBILIZATIONAND SURVIVAL BABY CHICKS NOT IMMOBILIZED IMMOBILIZED IMMOBILIZED SPONTANEOUS FORCED RECOVERY RECOVERY BEST INTERMEDIATE WORST DROWNING DROWNING DROWNING SURVIVAL SURVIVAL SURVIVAL

  7. ANIMALS THAT DO NOT DISCHARGE THE FREEZE • ZOO ANIMALS • LABORATORY ANIMALS • DOMESTIC ANIMALS • HUMAN ANIMALS Q: WHAT DO THESE ANIMALS HAVE IN COMMON? A: THEY ALL LIVE IN A CAGE!

  8. MEMORY IN TRAUMA • TRAUMATIC STRESS: A LIFE THREAT WHILE IN A STATE OF HELPLESSNESS • THIS LEADS TO THE FREEZE RESPONSE • DISCHARGE OF THE FREEZE RESPONSE ALLOWS “COMPLETION” OF ESCAPE OR DEFENSE IN PROCEDURAL MEMORY, EXTINGUISHES CONDITIONED SOMATIC CUES

  9. CONDITIONING IN TRAUMA • LACK OF “COMPLETION” IMPRINTS THE CONDITIONED ASSOCIATION OF: - THE THREAT - ITS SENSORIMOTOR EXPERIENCE (OR TRAUMATIC CUES) - AND THE STATE OF AROUSAL WITHIN PROCEDURAL MEMORY! THIS ASSOCIATION LEADS TO FEAR CONDITIONING, OR TRAUMATIZATION

  10. DISSOCIATION:?THE PERCEPTUAL COMPONENT OF THE FREEZE RESPONSE?

  11. THE HISTORYOF TRAUMA AND DISSOCIATIONINPSYCHIATRY

  12. CHARCOT AND THE SALPÊTRIÈRE THE STUDY OF HYSTERIA AS A NEUROLOGICAL SYNDROME

  13. JANET AND DISSOCIATION • “FIXED IDEAS”: THE SPECTRUM OF SYMPTOMS IN HYSTERIA • SOMATIC, EMOTIONAL, PERCEPTUAL SYMPTOMS TRIGGERED BY TRAUMA • “ABSENT MINDEDNESS” AND ABULIA- THE INABILITY TO INITIATE ACTION • TRIGGERING OF HYSTERIA BY CUES IN THE ENVIRONMENT

  14. THE AGE OF HYSTERIA • BREUER, THE “TALKING CURE”, AND “REMINISCENCES” • FREUD, INCEST AND “THE AETIOLOGY OF HYSTERIA” • FREUD AND BREUER: RECANTATION • JANET: PROFESSIONAL OSTRACISM

  15. LESSONS FROM WW I • THE HELPLESSNESS OF TRENCH WARFARE AND THE PREDOMINANCE OF DISSOCIATIVE SYNDROMES (SHELL SHOCK) • FERENCZI (1919): “..TIC..AN OVERSTRONG MEMORY FIXATION ON THE ATTITUDE OF THE BODY AT THE MOMENT OF...TRAUMA” • HYSTERIA AND MALINGERING • LOW PTSD INCIDENCE IN PILOTS AND OFFICERS

  16. NEUROIMAGING IN CONVERSION DISORDER • fMRI STUDIES IN HYSTERICAL MOTOR PARALYSIS AND ANESTHESIA, WITH CHRONIC PAIN REVEAL: - REDUCED SUPRASPINAL RESPONSES IN HYSTERICAL PARALYSIS - REDUCED ACTIVATION OF BRAIN SENSORY PATHWAYS WITH STIMULATION OF THE HYSTERICALLY NUMB LIMB i.e.: IMPAIRED BRAIN MESSAGE TRANSFER IN CONVERSION DISORDER

  17. NEUROIMAGING IN CONVERSION DISORDER HYSTERICAL PARALYSIS AND SENSORY LOSS (CONVERSON DISORDER) IS ASSOCIATED WITH OBJECTIVE, LONG-STANDING DYNAMIC CHANGES IN REGIONS OF THE BRAIN THAT PROCESS SENSORIMOTOR INFORMATION i.e.: CONVERSION “HYSTERIA” IS PHYSIOLOGICAL, NOT “PSYCHOLOGICAL”

  18. MANIFESTATIONS OF DISSOCIATION • DEREALIZATION • DEPERSONALIZATION • DISTORTED TIME PERCEPTION • DISTORTED SENSORY PERCEPTION • AMNESIA • FUGUE STATES • CONVERSION REACTION • DISSOCIATIVE IDENTY DISORDER

  19. DISSOCIATION PSYCHOBIOLOGY • SCHORE (2005):…”vagal outflow from the dorsal vagal nucleus …is the psychobiological engine of …dissociation” • …”early trauma expressed as emotional neglect and abuse…predict…dissociation.” i.e.: IMPAIRED ATTACHMENT AND RIGHT O.F.C. DEVELOMENT LEADS TO AUTONOMIC DYSREGULATION, AND THE EMERGENCE OF DORSAL VAGAL FREEZE / DISSOCIATIVE STATES

  20. THE DORSAL VAGUS NERVE • THE DORSAL VAGAL COMPLEX (DVC) - THE DORSAL VAGAL NUCLEUS - PRIMITIVE, REPTILIAN - LOW O2 UTILIZATION - THE DIVE REFLEX (APNEA, BRADYCARDIA) - THE FREEZE RESPONSE, THE RISK IN MAMMALS, AND “VOODOO DEATH”

  21. BUT! THE DORSAL VAGUS / FREEZE THEORY DOES NOT EXPLAIN THE OCCURRENCE OF HIGH SYMPATHETIC-DOMINANT DISSOCIATVE STATES: • HOMICIDAL DISSOCIATION • “BERSERKER” BEHAVIOR IN COMBAT

  22. DISSOCIATION STRUCTURE A CAPSULE, COMPARTMENT OR STATE OFPERCEPTION COMPOSED OF THE VARIED PROCEDURAL MEMORIES OF THE EXPERIENCES OF A PAST TRAUMATIC EVENT WHERE A FREEZE RESPONSE OCCURRED WITHOUT A FREEZE DISCHARGE

  23. THE DISSOCIATION CAPSULE IS COMPOSED OF: • SOMATOSENSORY MESSAGES AND MOTOR ACTIONS • AUTONOMIC STATES • EMOTIONS • ENDORPHINERGIC ALTERATION OF PERCEPTION • EMOTION-LINKED DECLARATIVE MEMORY ALL SPECIFIC TO THE TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE

  24. FEATURES OF THE DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULE CAPSULES CONSIST OF PROCEDURAL MEMORIES FOR THE PAST TRAUMA, BUT ARE PERCEIVED AS BEING PRESENT, AND ARE THEREFORE DISSOCIATIVE

  25. EXAMPLES OF CAPSULE PROCEDRAL MEMORIES • PAIN, NUMBNESS, DIZZINESS, • TREMOR, TICS, PARALYSIS • NAUSEA, CRAMPS, PALPITATIONS • ANXIETY, TERROR, SHAME, RAGE • FLASHBACKS, NIGHTMARES OR INTRUSIVE THOUGHTS

  26. THE DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULE IS BROUGHT INTO CONSCIOUS AWARENESS(THE PRESENT MOMENT) BY EXTERNAL REPRESENTATIVE CUES OR INTERNAL KINDLEDMEMORIES

  27. THE SIZE, SPECIFICITY AND STRENGTH OF A DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULE DEPENDS ON THE INTENSITY OR REPETITIVE EXPERIENCE OF THE TRAUMA THAT CAUSED IT

  28. THE NUMBER OF ONE’S DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULES IS DETERMINED BY THE SUM TOTAL OF ONE’S CUMULATIVE LIFE TRAUMAS

  29. THE MORE THE NUMBER OF DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULES, THE LESS TIME ONE IS ABLE TO SPEND IN CONSCIOUSNESS (THE PRESENT MOMENT)

  30. THE PRESENT MOMENT • 1-10 SECOND PERIOD OF AWARENESS OF “NOW” • A “LIVED STORY” • BACKGROUND FEELINGS FROM THE BODY • AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY • CHANGING INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL PERCEPTIONS • CONCEPTS OF TIME, INTENTIONALITY, SHIFTING EMOTIONAL TONE • A MEASURE OF CONSCIOUSNESS • OUR CHANGING SENSE OF SELF

  31. THE SELF ANTONIO DAMASIO: “THE EMBODIED MIND” SOMATIC SENSATIONS (FEELINGS) OF THE PRESENT MOMENT SUPERIMPOSED ON OUR AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY

  32. PROCEDURAL MEMORY CUES - SOMATOSENSORY - LIMBIC/EMOTIONAL - AU TONOMIC - EMOTION-LINKED DECLARATIVE MEMORY THE STRUCTURE AND RELATIONSHIPS OF DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULES • PROCEDURAL • MEMORY CUES • SOMATOSENSORY • LIMBIC/EMOTIONAL • -AUTONOMIC • - EMOTION-LINKED DECLARATIVE MEMORY AUTONOMIC CUES SOMATOSENSORY CUES INJURY MVA LIMBIC CUES THE PRESENTMOMENT • PROCEDURAL • MEMORY CUES • AUTONOMIC • LIMBIC/EMOTIONAL • EMOTIONA-LINKED • DECLARATIVE MEMORY • PROCEDURAL MEMORY • CUES • - SOMATOSENSORY • LIMBIC/EMOTIONAL • AUTONOMIC • - EMOTION-LINKED • DECLARATIVE MEMORY DEATH OF PARENT PROCEDURAL MEMORY CUES - AUTONOMIC - LIMBIC/EMOTIONAL - EMOTION - LINKED DECLARATIVE MEMORY INCEST SHAMING, GRIEF

  33. WHAT IMPLICATIONS DOES THE DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULE HAVE FOR HEALING TRAUMA? TO HEAL TRAUMA WE MUST EXTINGUISH POSTTRAUMATIC PROCEDURAL MEMORY CUES

  34. AND YOU CAN’T DO THAT WITH WORDS ALONE!

  35. CEREBRAL CORTEX HYPOTHALAMUS HPA AXIS ORBITOFRONTAL CORTEX ORGANIZES RESPONSE TO THREAT SENSORY INPUT – HEAD AND NECK ANTERIOR CINGULATE GYRUS MODULATES AMYGDALA HIPPOCAMPUS DECLARATIVE MEMORY COGNITIVE MEANING AMYGDALA EMOTIONAL CONTENT LOCUS CERULEUS EARLY WARNING

  36. THE KEY INGREDIENT IN HEALING TRAUMA EXTINGUISHING THE DISSOCIATIVE CAPSULE CONTENTS BY DOWNREGULATING/ INHIBITING THE AMYGDALA DURING IMAGINAL EXPOSURE TO ITS CONTENTS

  37. TRAUMA THERAPY:THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS • EXTINCTION OF CONDITIONED CUES: IMAGERY WHILE INHIBITING THE AMYGDALA - THE POWER OF RITUAL - INTEGRATING THE CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES - EMPOWERMENT THROUGH AFFIRMATION • RECONSOLIDATION OF MEMORY • “COMPLETION” OF DEFENSE/ESCAPE: THE “DISCHARGE” • RESTORING HOMEOSTASIS • TRANSFORMATION AND WISDOM THROUGH MEANING

  38. THE DILEMMA OFPHARMACOTHERAPY • SRI’s, ANTICONVULSANTS, BENZODIAZEPINES, ANTIPSYCHOTICS, BETA BLOCKERS • TREATING A BIPOLAR SYNDROME • RECIPROCAL SIDE EFFECTS • SIDE EFFECTS AS TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCES DUE TO NEUROSENSITIZATION • NARCOTICS IN CHRONIC PAIN

  39. TRAUMA THERAPY • PSYCHOTHERAPY - COGNITIVE/BEHAVIORAL THERAPY: MOST THOROUGHLY EVALUATED - EXPOSURE THERAPIES: - IMAGINAL EXPOSURE - IN-VIVO EXPOSURE - SYSTEMATIC DESENSITIZATION BEST FOR AROUSAL AND ANXIETY, LESS EFFECTIVE FOR AVOIDANCE AND DISSOCIATION; ? LONG-TERM EFFICACY

  40. TRAUMA THERAPY • RECONNECTING WITH THE BODY - SOMATIC DISSOCIATION AND THE FELT SENSE - THE USE OF MOVEMENT THERAPY: YOGA, DANCE, BALANCE, EQUESTRIAN THERAPY - THE USE OF THERAPEUTIC BODY WORK AND EXERCISE - THE USE OF ARTISTIC MEDIA - BIOFEEDBACK

  41. GUIDED IMAGERY • USED IN ALMOST ALL TECHNIQUES • DERIVING THE SUD’s SCALE • ACCESSING THE MEMORY TO BE EXTINGUISHED • MANIPULATING THE MEMORY THROUGH IMAGINAL REVERSAL • FACILITATING THE FELT SENSE

  42. SOMATIC EXPERIENCING • ACCESSING THE FELT SENSE • TRACKING AND TITRATION THROUGH “PENDULATION” • ELICITATION OF SOMATIC SENSORIMOTOR RESPONSES: THE FREEZE DISCHARGE • AUTONOMIC RESPONSES • CONCEPTS OF COMPLETION, UNCOUPLING, EXTINCTION

  43. ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY • THOUGHT FIELD THERAPY (T.F.T.), EMOTIONAL FREEDOM THERAPY (E.F.T.), HEALING TOUCH * USE OF SUD’s SCALE * AFFIRMATIVE STATEMENTS, MERIDIAN TAPPING, SINGING, VOCALIZATION, EYE MOVEMENTS AND IMAGERY * EMPOWERMENT, HOMEOSTASIS, INTEGRATING THE HEMISPHERES, RITUAL, EXTINCTION

  44. EMDR • USE OF SUD’s SCALE • ALTERNATING EYE MOVEMENTS, AUDITORY OR TOUCH STIMULI LINKED TO IMAGERY OF THE TRAUMA • POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE COGNITIONS • THE REM CONNECTION: - PROCESSING AROUSAL MEMORY - MEMORY RECONSOLIDATION - CEREBELLAR – CINGULATE CONNECTION • AFFIRMATION, RITUAL

  45. NEUROFEEDBACK • DRIVING THE BRAIN INTO THE PRESENT MOMENT • ALPHA/HIGH THETA ENHANCEMENT • COMPARISON TO DEEP MEDITATION • APPLICABLE CONDITIONS: - ADD/ADHD, OCD - ADDICTIONS - CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR - FIBROMYAGIA/CFS - MOOD DISORDER, PTSD, ANXIETY - SOMATIZATION - MTBI

  46. RESTORATIONOF THETRIUNE BRAIN

  47. THE ROLE OF COGNITIVE MEANING AND THE ACQUISITION OF WISDOM

  48. TRANSFORMATION ANDWISDOM • 1. THE RECOGNITION AND MANAGEMENT OF UNCERTAINTIES • 2. THE INTEGRATION OF AFFECT AND COGNITION • 3. THE RECOGNITION AND ACCEPTANCE OF HUMAN LIMITATIONS, INCLUDING THE FINITUDE OF LIFE i.e.: LIFE IN THE PRESENT MOMENT

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