Research Catalog

Does stress damage the brain? : understanding trauma-related disorders from a mind-body perspective / J. Douglas Bremner.

Title
Does stress damage the brain? : understanding trauma-related disorders from a mind-body perspective / J. Douglas Bremner.
Author
Bremner, J. Douglas, 1961-
Publication
New York : W.W. Norton, c2002.

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TextRequest in advance RC552.P67 B735 2002Off-site

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Description
xii, 311 p. : ill.; 22 cm.
Summary
"Why is it that we can remember exactly where we were when John Kennedy was shot, or when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded, or on September 11, 2001? Does what we see, hear, feel, and in other ways experience, especially during times of stress, result in permanent changes to our brains? Is this one of the reasons stressful events become seared in our memories? These provocative questions, and many others, are answered here by J. Douglas Bremner, a leading scientist whose discoveries, and that of his colleagues, showed that extreme stress may result in lasting damage to the brain, especially a part of the brain involved in memory." "Readers will join Bremner as he recounts the harrowing stories of people under stress - from WWI soldiers to Vietnam combat veterans to survivors of the September 11 terrorist attacks - and gathers evidence for his intriguing proposition that stress actually damages the brain. As this book will explain, scientists now believe that stress-related brain damage may cause certain psychological disorders, such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). There are in fact a range of psychological disorders related to stress, what we are now calling the "trauma spectrum disorders," that may be manifestations of stress-induced changes in the brain." "This new understanding of trauma-related problems as essentially neurological disorders has many important implications. What a difference it would make if someone who experiences anxiety or depression realized that they were not at fault for these experiences, but rather these experiences were the result of brain-based changes as a result of stress? In certain cases, thinking about the effects of stress on the brain may help understand puzzling phenomena, like delayed recall of childhood abuse."--Jacket.
Subject
  • Post-traumatic stress disorder
  • Traumatism
  • Stress (Psychology)
  • Stress (Physiology)
  • Neuropsychiatry
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
  • Psychophysiology
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 277-299) and index.
Contents
PART I. MIND AND RAIN FROM A TRAUMA-CENTRIC PERSPECTIVE -- Lasting effects of stress on mind and brain -- Working mind: what it does and why -- Evolving concepts for the biology of stress -- Effects of stress on memory and the brain -- PART II. THE WIDENING INFLUENCE OF TRAUMA IN THE WORLD TODAY -- Scope and breadth of traumatic stress in society today -- Brief history of the classification of stress-induced psychiatric illness -- PTSD and other stress-related psychiatric disorders as diseases of the brain caused by stress -- Treatments for PTSD and other stress-related disorders may act through the brain -- Whole-body approach to understanding traumatic stress.
ISBN
0393703452
LCCN
^^2002070265
OCLC
49736459
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library