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      Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A State-of-the-art Review

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          Abstract

          This narrative state-of-the-art review paper describes the progress in the understanding and treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Over the last four decades, the scientific landscape has matured, with many interdisciplinary contributions to understanding its diagnosis, etiology, and epidemiology. Advances in genetics, neurobiology, stress pathophysiology, and brain imaging have made it apparent that chronic PTSD is a systemic disorder with high allostatic load. The current state of PTSD treatment includes a wide variety of pharmacological and psychotherapeutic approaches, of which many are evidence-based. However, the myriad challenges inherent in the disorder, such as individual and systemic barriers to good treatment outcome, comorbidity, emotional dysregulation, suicidality, dissociation, substance use, and trauma-related guilt and shame, often render treatment response suboptimal. These challenges are discussed as drivers for emerging novel treatment approaches, including early interventions in the Golden Hours, pharmacological and psychotherapeutic interventions, medication augmentation interventions, the use of psychedelics, as well as interventions targeting the brain and nervous system. All of this aims to improve symptom relief and clinical outcomes. Finally, a phase orientation to treatment is recognized as a tool to strategize treatment of the disorder, and position interventions in step with the progression of the pathophysiology. Revisions to guidelines and systems of care will be needed to incorporate innovative treatments as evidence emerges and they become mainstream. This generation is well-positioned to address the devastating and often chronic disabling impact of traumatic stress events through holistic, cutting-edge clinical efforts and interdisciplinary research.

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          The effect of multiple adverse childhood experiences on health: a systematic review and meta-analysis

          A growing body of research identifies the harmful effects that adverse childhood experiences (ACEs; occurring during childhood or adolescence; eg, child maltreatment or exposure to domestic violence) have on health throughout life. Studies have quantified such effects for individual ACEs. However, ACEs frequently co-occur and no synthesis of findings from studies measuring the effect of multiple ACE types has been done.
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            The brain's default mode network.

            The brain's default mode network consists of discrete, bilateral and symmetrical cortical areas, in the medial and lateral parietal, medial prefrontal, and medial and lateral temporal cortices of the human, nonhuman primate, cat, and rodent brains. Its discovery was an unexpected consequence of brain-imaging studies first performed with positron emission tomography in which various novel, attention-demanding, and non-self-referential tasks were compared with quiet repose either with eyes closed or with simple visual fixation. The default mode network consistently decreases its activity when compared with activity during these relaxed nontask states. The discovery of the default mode network reignited a longstanding interest in the significance of the brain's ongoing or intrinsic activity. Presently, studies of the brain's intrinsic activity, popularly referred to as resting-state studies, have come to play a major role in studies of the human brain in health and disease. The brain's default mode network plays a central role in this work.
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              Large-scale brain networks and psychopathology: a unifying triple network model.

              The science of large-scale brain networks offers a powerful paradigm for investigating cognitive and affective dysfunction in psychiatric and neurological disorders. This review examines recent conceptual and methodological developments which are contributing to a paradigm shift in the study of psychopathology. I summarize methods for characterizing aberrant brain networks and demonstrate how network analysis provides novel insights into dysfunctional brain architecture. Deficits in access, engagement and disengagement of large-scale neurocognitive networks are shown to play a prominent role in several disorders including schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, dementia and autism. Synthesizing recent research, I propose a triple network model of aberrant saliency mapping and cognitive dysfunction in psychopathology, emphasizing the surprising parallels that are beginning to emerge across psychiatric and neurological disorders. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                CN
                Curr Neuropharmacol
                Current Neuropharmacology
                Curr. Neuropharmacol.
                Bentham Science Publishers
                1570-159X
                1875-6190
                2024
                : 22
                : 4
                : 557-635
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychiatry, University of Alberta , Edmonton, , Canada;
                [2 ]Department of Occupational Therapy, University of Alberta , Edmonton, , Canada;
                [3 ]ARQ National Psychotrauma Center, Diemen, The Netherlands;
                [4 ]Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam University Medical Centers , Amsterdam, , The Netherlands;
                [5 ]School of Medicine, The University of Adelaide , Adelaide, , Australia;
                [6 ]Department of Psychiatry, Leiden University Medical Center , Leiden, , The Netherlands;
                [7 ]Department of Psychiatry, New York University Grossman School of Medicine , New York, , USA
                Author notes
                [* ]Address correspondence to this author at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada; Tel: 780-342-5635; Fax: 780-342-5230; E-mail: burback@ 123456ualberta.ca
                Article
                CN-22-4-557
                10.2174/1570159X21666230428091433
                10845104
                37132142
                8f7b4aef-3d72-4868-a52d-a4732f26a37f
                Copyright @ 2024

                © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Bentham Science Publisher. This is an open access article published under CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

                History
                : 02 November 2022
                : 19 February 2023
                : 23 February 2023
                Categories
                Medicine, Neurology, Pharmacology, Neuroscience

                Medicine,Chemistry,Life sciences
                psychotherapy,psychedelic,moral injury,ketamine,Posttraumatic stress disorder,psychotropic drugs,neuromodulation,intervention

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