
Reading Room
The Spectrum of Dissociative
Disorders:
An Overview of Diagnosis and Treatment
by Joan A. Turkus, M.D.
As society has become increasingly
aware of the prevalence of child abuse and its serious
consequences, there has been an explosion of information on posttraumatic and
dissociative disorders resulting from abuse in childhood. Since most clinicians
learned little about childhood trauma and its aftereffects in their training,
many are struggling to build their knowledge base and clinical skills to
effectively treat survivors and their families.
Understanding dissociation and its relationship to trauma is basic to
understanding the posttraumatic and dissociative disorders. Dissociation is the
disconnection from full awareness of self, time, and/or external
circumstances. It is a complex neuropsychological process. Dissociation exists
along a continuum from normal everyday experiences to disorders that interfere
with everyday functioning. Common examples of normal dissociation are highway
hypnosis (a trance-like feeling that develops as the miles go by),
"getting lost" in a book or a movie so that one loses a sense of
passing time and surroundings, and daydreaming.
Researchers and clinicians believe that dissociation is a common, naturally
occurring defense against childhood trauma. Children tend to dissociate more
readily than adults. Faced with overwhelming abuse, it is not surprising that
children would psychologically flee (dissociate) from full awareness of their
experience. Dissociation may become a defensive pattern that persists into
adulthood and can result in a full-fledged dissociative disorder.
The essential feature of dissociative disorders is a disturbance or
alteration in the normally integrative functions of identity, memory, or
consciousness. If the disturbance occurs primarily in memory, Dissociative
Amnesia or Fugue (APA, 1994) results; important personal events cannot be
recalled. Dissociative Amnesia with acute loss of memory may result from
wartime trauma, a severe accident, or rape. Dissociative Fugue is indicated by
not only loss of memory, but also travel to a new location and the assumption
of a new identity. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), although not
officially a dissociative disorder (it is classified as an anxiety disorder),
can be thought of as part of the dissociative spectrum. In PTSD,
recall/re-experiencing of the trauma (flashbacks) alternates with numbing
(detachment or dissociation), and avoidance. Atypical dissociative disorders
are classified as Dissociative Disorders Not Otherwise Specified (DDNOS). If
the disturbance occurs primarily in identity with parts of the self assuming
separate identities, the resulting disorder is Dissociative Identity Disorder
(DID), formerly called Multiple Personality Disorder.
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