A new study has opposed the long-held view of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a fear-based disorder.
In a new study, 68% of trauma-exposed individuals reported that emotional pain (guilt, shame, sadness, loss of joy) impaired their daily functioning more than fear.
The findings from this research in Biological Psychiatry, published by Elsevier, highlights the need to broaden PTSD models beyond fear and re-evaluate treatment pathways accordingly.
PTSD affects approximately 8% of individuals and often co-occurs with depression and anxiety. The DSM-5 defines PTSD based on 20 symptoms spanning intrusion, avoidance, negative mood and cognition, and hyper-arousal.
In this study across two independent samples, researchers identified two distinct PTSD profiles - one centered on fear (flashbacks and hyper-arousal symptoms), and another on emotional pain (symptoms of guilt, shame, anhedonia).
“For some, trauma inflicts not just fear, but a moral or existential wound, shattering beliefs about oneself, others, or the world; For others, it deepens pre-existing negative schemas, reinforcing guilt, shame, or worthlessness. These internalized and meaning-laden responses often give rise to persistent emotional pain,” said Ziv Ben-Zion, PhD, first author, Yale School of Medicine, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, and University of Haifa.
While senior investigator Ilan Harpaz-Rotem, PhD, Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, and VA Connecticut Healthcare System, added, "Basic science, including the research done in our lab at Yale, has focused for years on fear learning and safety updating, with minimal attention to the toll of other negative emotions associated with PTSD. We started thinking that fear and emotional pain are potentially driven by two different biological systems that play a critical role in defining how to tailor pharmacological and psychological treatments for PTSD."
John Krystal, MD, Editor of Biological Psychiatry, commented, "One of the most challenging aspects of mental health care is simply and accurately characterizing the actual emotional symptoms associated with psychiatric disorders. People may use different words to describe the same experience, and they may apply the same descriptor to different experiences. Neuroimaging may provide a strategy to help to untangle this state of affairs."
Dr. Krystal continued, "This study identifies distinct emotional symptoms that are associated with PTSD: fear and emotional pain. These two experiences are represented by different circuits in the brain, and they are differentially associated with other PTSD symptoms. Fear was associated with increased arousal, nightmares, and intrusive trauma memories, while emotional pain was associated with depression-like symptoms and insomnia."
"Rather than proposing a new diagnostic category, our goal is to sharpen the clinical understanding of PTSD by identifying the emotional lens of fear or emotional pain through which trauma is most acutely experienced," Dr. Harpaz-Rotem explained.
"PTSD is not a single emotional experience. Our goal was to bring the patient's subjective emotional reality to the center of the scientific discussion. Recognizing which emotional system is driving a person's distress can open the door to more precise and compassionate treatment,” Dr. Ben-Zion concluded.