We are increasingly learning the effects of traumatic experiences on the brain, and now, newer research shows these effects can be passed on to children’s genes. Research of Holocaust survivors showed that compared to control groups, their children exhibited genetic changes that increased the likelihood of stress disorders.
Plus, most trauma survivors are coping with
the neurological effects of PTSD as they raise their children, which greatly
shape a child's environment and responses to stress.
In functional neurology, we
frequently work with the neurological fallout of PTSD, which can include not
only being triggered to re-experience the trauma, but also heightened stress
response, sensitivity to light, sound, and crowds, emotional instability,
depression and suicidality, anxiety and insomnia, disassociation and numbness, and
addiction.
How PTSD manifests depends on the person,
and women’s symptoms differ from men’s. Men are more prone to anger and
addiction whereas women
struggle more with depression, anxiety, and health ailments.
Trauma
turns on and off genes in offspring
In the Holocaust study, researchers
discovered genetic differences in offspring of survivors. This finding upended
traditionally held notions that environment and experience don’t affect DNA in
sperm and eggs of parents.
Although it has long been believed conception
delivers a genetic “clean slate,” newer science on
epigenetics shows that our environment and experiences constantly modify genes,
even in egg and sperm.
They found chemical tags on the DNA that
regulates stress hormones in Holocaust parents and their children that were not
found in the control group. However, they are not sure how those tags get
passed on.
Is PTSD
inherited?
Studies on whether PTSD is genetically
inherited are not yet conclusive, although one study found genetic links in
almost 30 percent of European-American women with PTSD.
Understanding how big a role genetics plays
in trauma would further understanding of why some people get PTSD when others
don’t, and how best to treat it.
Also, researchers point to the fallout for
children raised by adults with PTSD, which can perpetuate the disorder.
Functional
neurology and PTSD
PTSD causes structural changes to the
brain. The disorder shrinks some areas of the brain while enlarging others,
keeping a person trapped in a neurological prison of hyper arousal, stress, and
fear.
For instance, the ventromedial prefrontal
cortex shrinks, predisposing one to extreme fear and anxiety. PTSD also shrinks
the hippocampus, the area responsible for learning and memory. On the other
hand, the amygdala, the area that governs the fear response, enlarges.
Compromises in these and other areas of the
brain result in an easily triggered and over exaggerated fear response that can
be exhausting and debilitating to the sufferer.
Fortunately, the brain is very responsive
to rehabilitation and PTSD sufferers can find considerable relief without
drugs.
In functional neurology, we use specific
exercises and activities to dampen areas of the brain that are over responsive
to stress and stimulate those areas that can help control the fear response. Visit
Southwest Brain Performance Centers for
more information.
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