Posttraumatic stress disorder in daily life among World Trade Center responders: Temporal symptom cascades

J Psychiatr Res. 2021 Jun:138:240-245. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.04.002. Epub 2021 Apr 6.

Abstract

Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms are common in the immediate aftermath of a trauma, but it is their persistence over time that leads to a diagnosis. This pattern highlights the critical role of symptom maintenance to understanding and treating the disorder. Relatively few studies have explored whether PTSD symptoms may be interacting or triggering one another to worsen and maintain the disorder, a dynamic we refer to as "symptom cascades." Additionally, little work has tested in real-time how other maintenance factors, such as stress, contribute to such events in daily life.

Methods: The present study in a group (N = 202) of World Trade Center (WTC) responders oversampled for PTSD tested day-to-day temporal associations among PTSD symptom dimensions (i.e., intrusions, avoidance, numbing, and hyperarousal) and stress across one week.

Results: Longitudinal models found hyperarousal on a given day predicted increased PTSD symptoms the next day, with the effect sizes almost double compared to other symptom dimensions or daily stress. Intrusions, in contrast, showed little prospective predictive effects, but instead were most susceptible to the effects from other symptoms the day before. Avoidance and numbing showed weaker bidirectional effects.

Limitations: Findings are from a unique population and based on naturalistic observation.

Conclusions: Results are consistent with the idea of symptom cascades, they underscore hyperarousal's strong role in forecasting short-term increases in PTSD (even more than stress per se) and they raise the prospect of highly specific ecological momentary interventions to potentially disrupt PTSD maintenance in daily life.

Keywords: Ecological momentary assessment; PTSD; Trauma.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Emergency Responders*
  • Humans
  • Prospective Studies
  • September 11 Terrorist Attacks*
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic* / epidemiology