Complex PTSD: Response to Prolonged Trauma

Posttraumatic stress (PTSD) can severely interfere with functioning, resulting in intrusive memories, depression, disrupted sleep, anxiety, and avoidance of situations that bring back memories of the trauma. But the symptoms of some trauma survivors, particularly those who have experienced prolonged abuse or captivity, don’t neatly match traditional symptoms of PTSD. In the 1980s, some therapists and researchers began to advocate for recognition of a new variety of PTSD called complex posttraumatic stress disorder or C-PTSD. Although C-PTSD is not listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, therapists are increasingly recognizing the issue, which requires different treatment and produces different symptoms.

What Is Complex PTSD?

PTSD is a reaction to a threatening event, and the event is usually a single event that occurred for a brief duration. Traumatic events that might cause PTSD include watching a loved one die, witnessing a violent act, rape, assault, and military combat. C-PTSD, by contrast, is more likely to occur when a person experiences multiple or ongoing traumas or when a single trauma lasts for a long time and leads to feelings of captivity. Survivors of concentration camps, people who were regularly abused as children, domestic violence survivors, military personnel who are exposed to ongoing violence, people who have experienced repeated sexual assaults, and kidnapping victims may experience C-PTSD.

While PTSD typically causes disturbances—such as flashbacks, avoidance of locations or situations that remind a person of the event, or chronic fear and depression—to the traumatic event, C-PTSD is more likely to cause identity and personality disturbances in addition to the symptoms of traditional PTSD. This is because people exposed to prolonged trauma may begin to view the trauma as a core part of their identity or as something they caused, and sometimes they might question their own memories—believing, for example, that perhaps the trauma didn’t really happen.

Symptoms of Complex PTSD

C-PTSD has many of the same symptoms as PTSD, including intrusive memories or flashbacks, depression, anxiety, avoidance, and changes in personality. However, people with C-PTSD also experience symptoms that people with PTSD don’t normally have. These include:

  • Chronic fear of abandonment. Many people with C-PTSD are diagnosed with an attachment disorder, and neediness, fear of abandonment, and even regression during times of stress are common in C-PTSD.
  • Difficulty controlling emotions or changes in personality.
  • Disturbances in self-perception and persistent feelings of shame.
  • Obsession with the perpetrator and frequently changing perceptions of the perpetrator. A sexual abuse survivor, for example, might go back and forth between viewing the abuser as evil and loving, and might continue an unhealthy entanglement with that person.
  • Emotional flashbacks: Rather than intrusively remembering the traumatic event, a person with C-PTSD might instead simply get emotionally overwhelmed and re-experience the emotions he or she felt during the traumatic event without ever actually recalling or thinking about the traumatic event. This is particularly common during periods of stress. A person might, for example, begin sobbing or feel terrified during a minor disagreement with his or her partner.

Treatment for Complex PTSD

Because C-PTSD is a relatively newly recognized condition, there’s still some debate about how it should be treated. Exposure therapy, which is highly effective with PTSD, is still being studied for its effectiveness in treating C-PTSD. As C-PTSD may mean dozens of traumatic memories or years of trauma, some clinicians have argued exposure therapy is impractical. C-PTSD researchers have generally recommended a stage-based treatment approach that includes the following phases:

  1. Establishing safety and helping the client find ways to feel safe in his or her environment or eliminate dangers in the environment.
  2. Teaching basic self-regulation skills.
  3. Encouraging information processing that builds introspection.
  4. Helping the client to integrate his or her traumatic experiences.
  5. Encouraging healthy relationships and engagement.
  6. Strategies designed to reduce distress and increase positive affect.

References:

  1. Complex PTSD. (n.d.). National Center for PTSD. Retrieved from http://www.ptsd.va.gov/professional/pages/complex-ptsd.asp
  2. ISTSS complex PTSD treatment guidelines. (n.d.). International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. Retrieved from http://www.istss.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=ISTSS_Complex_PTSD_Treatment_Guidelines
  3. Walker, P. (n.d.). Emotional flashback management in the treatment of complex PTSD.Psychotherapy.net. Retrieved from http://www.psychotherapy.net/article/complex-ptsd

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  • Kris

    June 5th, 2013 at 11:08 AM

    I didn’t know that there are differences in diagnosis when it comes to PTSD. I just thought that maybe some people would experience it differently than others but not that there was an actual diagnosis or name for those who were more affected by it. Complex PTSD sounds just terrible. Not only are you constantly haunted by the event that triggered this but you also experience all of these other things too that understandably could completely destroy you and your quality of life. I can only hope that there are more people, when it is identified in them, who are receiving treatment than those who are not because that would be a terrible way to have to live your life. How could you ever find a way to move forward if you are constantly haunted by your past?

  • Laura Frizelle

    June 10th, 2013 at 8:00 PM

    I would say that I have C-PTSD. before reading this article I felt like PTSD did not really apply to me. That emotional neglect was more the root of my issues. Thankfully I am moving forward. When another way of living was revealed to me, I felt free…like everything was new and wide open. Immediately and naturally I struggled in relationships…Like a like someone without a compass in the woods. I knew as a young adult that i was starting from scratch because my upbringing was so dysfunctional. I cut myself a lot of slack. I made a lot of mistakes. Ever since I have been learning along the way. I have found that it is impossible to do this alone though without getting off kilter. Spirituality helps me to have a compass. Community helps. Having Truth helps….and Love…of course Love! Love is real…love is our hope and our goal! It is worth everything!

  • mel

    August 6th, 2018 at 8:21 AM

    This isn’t a diagnosis you make up on your own. Only a therapist can diagnose this disorder that is not the same as simple PTSD; and it usually takes a consensus of therapists to determine someone has C-PTSD.

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