A temporal network analysis of complex post-traumatic stress disorder and psychosis symptoms

Panayi, Peter and Contreras, Alba and Peters, Emmanuelle and Bentall, Richard and Hardy, Amy and Berry, Katherine and Sellwood, William and Dudley, Robert and Longden, Eleanor and Underwood, Raphael and Steel, Craig and Jafari, Hassan and Mason, Liam and Varese, Filippo (2025) A temporal network analysis of complex post-traumatic stress disorder and psychosis symptoms. Psychological Medicine, 55: e43. ISSN 0033-2917

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Abstract

Symptoms of complex post-traumatic stress disorder (cPTSD) may play a role in the maintenance of psychotic symptoms. Network analyses have shown interrelationships between post-traumatic sequelae and psychosis, but the temporal dynamics of these relationships in people with psychosis and a history of trauma remain unclear. We aimed to explore, using network analysis, the temporal order of relationships between symptoms of cPTSD (i.e. core PTSD and disturbances of self-organization [DSOs]) and psychosis in the flow of daily life. Participants with psychosis and comorbid PTSD ( = 153) completed an experience-sampling study involving multiple daily assessments of psychosis (paranoia, voices, and visions), core PTSD (trauma-related intrusions, avoidance, hyperarousal), and DSOs (emotional dysregulation, interpersonal difficulties, negative self-concept) over six consecutive days. Multilevel vector autoregressive modeling was used to estimate three complementary networks representing different timescales. Our between-subjects network suggested that, on average over the testing period, most cPTSD symptoms related to at least one positive psychotic symptom. Many average relationships persist in the contemporaneous network, indicating symptoms of cPTSD and psychosis co-occur, especially paranoia with hyperarousal and negative self-concept. The temporal network suggested that paranoia reciprocally predicted, and was predicted by, hyperarousal, negative self-concept, and emotional dysregulation from moment to moment. cPTSD did not directly relate to voices in the temporal network. cPTSD and positive psychosis symptoms mutually maintain each other in trauma-exposed people with psychosis via the maintenance of current threat, consistent with cognitive models of PTSD. Current threat, therefore, represents a valuable treatment target in phased-based trauma-focused psychosis interventions.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Psychological Medicine
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2700/2738
Subjects:
?? young adultmiddle agedexperience sampling methodologymaledisturbances of self-organizationhallucinationsfemaleadultpsychotic disorders - physiopathologycomorbidityparanoiavisionsecological momentary assessmentself concepttraumastress disorders, post-traum ??
ID Code:
227999
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
06 Mar 2025 14:50
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
07 Mar 2025 03:45