(Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia

A cardinal feature of Post-traumatic stress-related disorder (PTSD) is a paradoxical memory alteration including both intrusive emotional hypermnesia and declarative/contextual amnesia. Most preclinical, but also numerous clinical, studies focus almost exclusively on the emotional hypermnesia aiming...

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Main Author: Aline Desmedt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-05-01
Series:Chronic Stress
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/24705470211021073
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spelling doaj-f1940be4a5d841b7b1084a09239036f62021-05-26T21:33:20ZengSAGE PublishingChronic Stress2470-54702021-05-01510.1177/24705470211021073(Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related HypermnesiaAline DesmedtA cardinal feature of Post-traumatic stress-related disorder (PTSD) is a paradoxical memory alteration including both intrusive emotional hypermnesia and declarative/contextual amnesia. Most preclinical, but also numerous clinical, studies focus almost exclusively on the emotional hypermnesia aiming at suppressing this recurrent and highly debilitating symptom either by reducing fear and anxiety or with the ethically questionable idea of a rather radical erasure of traumatic memory. Of very mixed efficacy, often associated with a resurgence of symptoms after a while, these approaches focus on PTSD-related symptom while neglecting the potential cause of this symptom: traumatic amnesia. Two of our preclinical studies have recently demonstrated that treating contextual amnesia durably prevents, and even treats, PTSD-related hypermnesia. Specifically, promoting the contextual memory of the trauma, either by a cognitivo-behavioral, optogenetic or pharmacological approach enhancing a hippocampus-dependent memory processing of the trauma normalizes the fear memory by inducing a long-lasting suppression of the erratic traumatic hypermnesia.https://doi.org/10.1177/24705470211021073
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aline Desmedt
spellingShingle Aline Desmedt
(Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
Chronic Stress
author_facet Aline Desmedt
author_sort Aline Desmedt
title (Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
title_short (Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
title_full (Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
title_fullStr (Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
title_full_unstemmed (Re)contextualizing the Trauma to Prevent or Treat PTSD-Related Hypermnesia
title_sort (re)contextualizing the trauma to prevent or treat ptsd-related hypermnesia
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Chronic Stress
issn 2470-5470
publishDate 2021-05-01
description A cardinal feature of Post-traumatic stress-related disorder (PTSD) is a paradoxical memory alteration including both intrusive emotional hypermnesia and declarative/contextual amnesia. Most preclinical, but also numerous clinical, studies focus almost exclusively on the emotional hypermnesia aiming at suppressing this recurrent and highly debilitating symptom either by reducing fear and anxiety or with the ethically questionable idea of a rather radical erasure of traumatic memory. Of very mixed efficacy, often associated with a resurgence of symptoms after a while, these approaches focus on PTSD-related symptom while neglecting the potential cause of this symptom: traumatic amnesia. Two of our preclinical studies have recently demonstrated that treating contextual amnesia durably prevents, and even treats, PTSD-related hypermnesia. Specifically, promoting the contextual memory of the trauma, either by a cognitivo-behavioral, optogenetic or pharmacological approach enhancing a hippocampus-dependent memory processing of the trauma normalizes the fear memory by inducing a long-lasting suppression of the erratic traumatic hypermnesia.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/24705470211021073
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