Trauma
Cross-source consensus on Trauma from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Trauma is defined neurologically: it has occurred when an experience produces identifiable, measurable changes in the brain — not simply when an event is painful or distressing. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience
- There are three types of trauma — acute, chronic, and vicarious — and all three produce the same neurological outcome: a brain that functions differently, with altered perception, elevated reactivity, and changed behavior. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience
- Many people with clear trauma symptomatology deny having experienced trauma because they have not experienced a single identifiable acute event, leading to chronic underdiagnosis. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience
- Trauma rewires self-concept such that the altered perception feels like objective reality rather than distortion, making it invisible to the person experiencing it. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience
- Chronic trauma is the most relevant type for understanding the psychological experience of perimenopause and menopause. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience
- Unprocessed trauma accelerates biological aging, measurably affecting DNA, telomeres, and cellular aging. — Emotional Health in Perimenopause: Trauma, Shame, and Resilience