后见之明:多年后检查健康恐怖主义幸存者的自主神经、炎症和内分泌应激生物标志物和心理健康。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Phebe Tucker, Betty Pfefferbaum, Carol S North, Yan Daniel Zhao, Pascal Nitiema, Rachel Zettl, Haekyung Jeon-Slaughter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导语:恐怖主义和创伤幸存者经常经历在不同时间评估的自主神经、炎症和下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)轴生物标志物的变化。研究表明这些系统在慢性压力中相互作用。研究目的:这项前所未有的回顾性研究探讨了恐怖主义幸存者三个系统中的长期压力生物标志物。方法:将60名健康的直接恐怖主义幸存者与未暴露于恐怖主义的社区成员进行比较,比较他们对创伤药物、早晨唾液皮质醇、白细胞介素1-β (IL-1β)和白细胞介素2-R (IL-2R)的心血管反应性。幸存者的生物标志物与俄克拉荷马城(OKC)爆炸案七年后的精神症状和诊断以及报告的功能和健康相关。主要结果测量指标为精神障碍诊断与统计手册灾难补充诊断访谈表(DIS)第四版、文本修订(DSM-IV-TR)诊断、事件影响量表修订(ees - r)、贝克抑郁量表ii (BDI-II)、痛苦与功能量表(DAF)和一般身体健康量表。结果:与对照组相比,幸存者具有较高的炎症性IL-1β,较低的抗炎性IL-2R,较低的皮质醇,较高的静息舒张压(BP),以及较低的心血管创伤反应性。幸存者的平均创伤后应激(PTS)症状水平与对照组没有差异,但幸存者报告的幸福感较差。没有幸存者的生物标志物与PTS或抑郁症状、诊断或报告的功能相关。结论:心血管、炎症和皮质醇系统的生物应激测量的改变作为对恐怖主义的明显的普遍长期反应共存,而不是与心理健康的特定测量相关。结合相关研究,讨论创伤暴露后生物标志物的潜在相互作用。长期随访可以确定生物标志物是否继续存在差异或与主观测量相关,或者它们是否随着时间的推移伴随着健康问题。鉴于最近的国际恐怖主义,了解直接幸存者的长期后遗症越来越重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Learning from Hindsight: Examining Autonomic, Inflammatory, and Endocrine Stress Biomarkers and Mental Health in Healthy Terrorism Survivors Many Years Later.

Introduction: Terrorism and trauma survivors often experience changes in biomarkers of autonomic, inflammatory and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis assessed at various times. Research suggests interactions of these systems in chronic stress.

Study objective: This unprecedented retrospective study explores long-term stress biomarkers in three systems in terrorism survivors.

Methods: Sixty healthy, direct terrorism survivors were compared to non-exposed community members for cardiovascular reactivity to a trauma script, morning salivary cortisol, interleukin 1-β (IL-1β), and interleukin 2-R (IL-2R). Survivors' biomarkers were correlated with psychiatric symptoms and diagnoses and reported functioning and well-being seven years after the Oklahoma City (OKC) bombing.Main outcome measures were the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) Disaster Supplement for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) diagnoses, Impact of Events Scale-Revised (IES-R), Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), Distress and Functioning Scale (DAF), and General Physical Well-Being Scale.

Results: Survivors had higher inflammatory IL-1β, lower anti-inflammatory IL-2R, lower cortisol, higher resting diastolic blood pressure (BP), and less cardiovascular reactivity to a trauma script than comparisons. Survivors' mean posttraumatic stress (PTS) symptom levels did not differ from comparisons, but survivors reported worse well-being. None of survivors' biomarkers correlated with PTS or depressive symptoms or diagnoses or reported functioning.

Conclusions: Alterations of biological stress measures in cardiovascular, inflammatory, and cortisol systems coexisted as an apparent generalized long-term response to terrorism rather than related to specific gauges of mental health. Potential interactions of biomarkers long after trauma exposure is discussed considering relevant research. Longer-term follow-up could determine whether biomarkers continue to differ or correlate with subjective measures, or if they accompany health problems over time. Given recent international terrorism, understanding long-term sequelae among direct survivors is increasingly relevant.

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来源期刊
Prehospital and Disaster Medicine
Prehospital and Disaster Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
13.60%
发文量
279
期刊介绍: Prehospital and Disaster Medicine (PDM) is an official publication of the World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine. Currently in its 25th volume, Prehospital and Disaster Medicine is one of the leading scientific journals focusing on prehospital and disaster health. It is the only peer-reviewed international journal in its field, published bi-monthly, providing a readable, usable worldwide source of research and analysis. PDM is currently distributed in more than 55 countries. Its readership includes physicians, professors, EMTs and paramedics, nurses, emergency managers, disaster planners, hospital administrators, sociologists, and psychologists.
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