Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-ckgrl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-15T22:52:24.008Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Post-traumatic stress disorder: supportive evidence from an eighteenth century natural disaster

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Brenda Parry-Jones*
Affiliation:
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Glasgow
William Ll. Parry-Jones
Affiliation:
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Glasgow
*
1Address for correspondence: Mrs Brenda Parry-Jones, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Yorkhill, Glasgow G3 8SJ.

Synopsis

Post-traumatic stress disorder was first recognized as a diagnostic category embracing reactions in response to overwhelming environmental stress ‘outside the range of usual human experience’ in DSM-III (APA, 1980). Such abnormal stressors are by no means a product of the twentieth century but have featured, sporadically, in all societies from the earliest civilizations. Longitudinal investigations of traumatic stress have rarely gone further back than the nineteenth century, and have been concerned, almost exclusively, with adverse effects following railway accidents and military combat. The present study, utilizing a mid-eighteenth century medical source, presents an analysis of the impact of a natural disaster on members of a peasant family trapped in an avalanche in the Italian Alps in 1755.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

American Psychiatric Association (1952). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I). APA: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (1968). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-II). APA: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (1980). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III). APA: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (1987). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R). APA: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Annotation (1891). Traumatic Neurosis. Lancet i, 160.Google Scholar
Baker, H. (1756). An account of what happened at Bergemoletto, by the tumbling down of vast heaps of snow from the mountains there, on March 19, 1755: As taken by the Intendant of the town and province of Cuneo. Philosophical Transactions XLIX, 796803.Google Scholar
Blancard, S. (1702). The Physical Dictionary. S. Crouch & J. Sprint: London.Google Scholar
Boehnlein, J. K. & Kinzie, J. D. (1992). Commentary. DSM diagnosis of post traumatic stress disorder and cultural sensitivity: a response. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 180, 597599.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bray, W. (ed.) (1871). The Diary of John Evelyn Esq. F.R.S. from 1641 to 1705–6. With Memoir. F. Warne & Co.: London.Google Scholar
Brett, E. A., Spitzer, R. L. & Williams, J. B. W. (1988). DSM-III-R Criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry 145, 12321235.Google Scholar
Bruni, J. (1758). A wonderful and affecting account of the preservation of three persons buried about five weeks in snow sixty feet deep. Annual Register I, 297300.Google Scholar
Clevenger, S. V. (1889). Spinal Concussion. F. A. Davis: Philadelphia and London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collie, J. (1913). Malingering and Feigned Sickness. E. Arnold: London.Google Scholar
Cowell, A. & McFarlane, M. B. (1988). The phenomenology of post-traumatic stress disorders following natural disaster. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 176, 2229.Google Scholar
Da Costa, J. M. (1871). On irritable heart; a clinical study of a form of functional cardiac disorder and its consequences. American Journal of the Medical Sciences 61, 1752.Google Scholar
Damlouji, N. F. & Ferguson, J. M. (1985). Three cases of post-traumatic anorexia nervosa. American Journal of Psychiatry 142, 362363.Google Scholar
Eder, D. M. (1917). War Shock. Heinemann: London.Google Scholar
Editorial (1883). Railway spine. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal CIX, 400.Google Scholar
Erichsen, J. E. (1866). On Railway and Other Injuries of the Nervous System. Walton & Maberly: London.Google Scholar
Figley, C. R. (1993). Foreword. In International Handbook of Traumatic Stress Syndromes (ed. Wilson, J. P. and Raphael, B.), pp. XVIIXIX. Plenum Press: New York.Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1894). On the grounds for detaching a particular syndrome from neurasthenia under the description ‘Anxiety Neurosis’. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Vol. 3. Hogarth Press: London.Google Scholar
Gamgee, A. (1878). An account of the phenomena of hysteroepilepsy. British Medical Journal ii, 545546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gersons, P. R. & Carlier, I. V. E. (1992). Post-traumatic stress disorder: the history of a recent concept. British Journal of Psychiatry 161, 742748.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gordon, R. & Wraith, R. (1993). Responses of children and adolescent to disaster. In International Handbook of Traumatic Stress Syndromes (ed. Wilson, J. P. and Raphael, B.), pp. 561575. Plenum Press: New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, G. M. & Pyle, W. L. (1898). Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine. Rebman Publishing Co. Ltd.: London.Google Scholar
Harris, W. (1915). Nerve Injuries and Shock. Oxford War Primers. H. Frowde, Hodder & Stoughton: London.Google Scholar
Haubrich, W. (1984). Medical Meanings A Glossary of Word Origins. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: New York.Google Scholar
Hood, P. (1875). On cardiac weakness as a remote consequence of injuries by railway collisions and other accidents. Lancet i, 299301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horowitz, M. J. (1973). Phase oriented treatment of stress response syndromes. American Journal of Psychotherapy 27, 506515.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Horowitz, M. J., Wilner, N., Kaltreider, N. & Alvarez, W. (1980). Signs and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Archives of General Psychiatry 37, 8592.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horowitz, M. J. (1993). Stress response syndromes a review of post-traumatic stress and adjustment disorders. In International Handbook of Traumatic Stress Studies (ed Wilson, J. P. and Raphael, B.), pp. 4960. Plenum Press: New York.Google Scholar
Kardiner, A. & Spiegel, H. (1947). War Stress and Neurotic Illness. P. B. Hoeber: New York.Google Scholar
Levy, D. M. (1945). Psychic trauma of operations in children and a note on combat neurosis. American Journal of Diseases of Children 69, 725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, T. (1918). The tolerance of physical exertion, as shown by soldiers suffering from so called ‘irritable heart’. British Medical Journal i, 363365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKenzie, J. (1916). The soldier's heart. British Medical Journal i 117119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKenzie, J. (1916). The soldier's heart and war neurosis: a study in symptomatology. British Medical Journal i, 491495, 530–534.Google Scholar
MacLean, W. C. (1867). Diseases of the heart in the British Army the cause and the remedy. British Medical Journal i, 161164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCarthy, L. (1940). Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the Hair. H. Kimpton: London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McFarlane, A. C. (1986). Long-term psychiatric morbidity after a natural disaster. Implications for disaster planners and emergency services. Medical Journal of Australia 145, 561563.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Madakasira, S. & O'Brien, K. (1987). Acute post traumatic stress disorder in victims of a natural disaster. Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases 175, 286290.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mott, F. W. (1918). War psychoneurosis. (1) Neurasthenia: the disorders and disabilities of fear. Lancet i, 127129.Google Scholar
Mottram, V. H. & Graham, G. (1945). Hutchison's Food and the Principles of Dietetics. E. Arnold & Co.: London.Google Scholar
Myers, A. B. R. (1870). On the Aetiology and Prevalence of Disease of the Heart Among Soldiers. J. Churchill: London.Google Scholar
Neale, R. (1882). The Medical Digest, or Busy Practitioner's Vade Mecum. Ledger, Smith & Co.: London.Google Scholar
Newman, J. (1976). Children of disaster: clinical observations a Buffalo Creek. American Journal of Psychiatry 133, 306312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Donohue, W. & Elliot, A. (1992). The current status of post traumatic stress disorder as a diagnostic category: Problems and proposals. Journal of Traumatic Stress 5, 421439.Google Scholar
Oppenheim, H. (1911). Textbook of Nervous Diseases for Physicians and Students, (transl. Bruce, A.), Vol. II. O. Schulze & Co. Edinburgh and G. E. Stechert & Co.: New York.Google Scholar
Oppenheim, N. (1895). Why children lie. Popular Science Monthly 07, 382387.Google Scholar
Oppenheimer, B. S. & Rothschild, M. A. (1918). The psychoneurotie factor in the ‘Irritable heart of soldiers’. British Medical Journal ii, 2931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Page, H. W. (1885). Injuries of the Spinal Cord Without Apparent Mechanical Lesion and Nervous Shock, in their Surgical and Medico-Legal Aspects, (2nd ed.). J. & A. Churchill: London.Google Scholar
Philotheus (1748). A True and Particular History of Earthquakes. For the Author: London.Google Scholar
Putnam, J. J. (1883). Recent investigations into the pathology of so called concussion of the spine. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal CIX, 217220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pynoos, R. S., Frederick, C., Nader, K., Arroyo, W., Steinberg, A, Eth, S., Nunez, F. & Fairbank, L. (1987). Life threat and post-traumatic stress in school-age children. Archives of General Psychiatry 44, 10571063.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raphael, B. (1986). When Disaster Strikes. Hutchison: London.Google Scholar
Rook, A., Wilkinson, D. S. & Ebling, F. J. G. (eds.) (1968). Textbook of Dermatology. Blackwell Scientific Publications: Oxford.Google Scholar
Roxburgh, A. C. (1955). Common Skin Diseases. H. K. Lewis & Co. Ltd: London.Google Scholar
Skerritt, P. W. (1983). Anxiety and the heart – a historical review. Psychological Medicine 13, 1725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Somis, I. (1764). An Historical Narrative of a Most Extraordinary Event which Happened at the Village of Bergemoletto in Italy: Where Three Women were Saved out of the Ruins of a Stable, in which they had been Buried thirty-seven days by a Heavy Fall of Snow, (transl. from Italian). Printed for T. Osborne: London.Google Scholar
Somis, I. (1765). An Historical Narrative of a Most Extraordinary Event which Happened at the Village of Bergemoletto in Italy: Where Three Women were Saved out of the Ruins of a Stable, in which they had been buried thirty-seven days by a Heavy Fall of Snow, (transl. from Italian). Printed for H. Serjeant: London.Google Scholar
Somis, I. (1768). A True and Particular Account of the most Surprising Preservation and Happy Deliverance of Three Women who were Buried thirty-seven days, in the Ruins of a Stable…at the Village of Bergemoletto in Italy. With Curious Remarks (transl. from Italian). Printed for H. Serjeant: London.Google Scholar
Southward, E. E. (1919). Shell Shock. W. M. Leonard: Boston.Google Scholar
Stone, A. (1993). Post-traumatic stress disorder and the law: critical review of the new frontier. Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law 21, 2336.Google ScholarPubMed
Sugar, M. (1989). Children in a disaster: an overview. Child Psychiatry and Human Development 19, 163179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sully, J. (1895). Studies of Childhood. IX. Fear. Popular Science Monthly 07, 341353.Google Scholar
Trimble, M. R. (1981). Post-traumatic Neurosis: from Railway Spine to the Whiplash. John Wiley & Sons: Chichester.Google Scholar
Trimble, M. R. (1985). Post-traumatic stress disorder: history of a concept. In Trauma and its Wake. (ed. Figley, C. R.), pp. 514. Brunner Mazel: New York.Google Scholar
Turner, S. W. (1991). Post-traumatic stress disorder. Hospital Update (August), 646649.Google Scholar
Walton, G. L. (1883 a). Possible cerebral origin of the symptoms usually classed under ‘railway spine’. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal CIX, 337340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walton, G. L. (1883 b). Spinal irritation, probable cerebral origin of the symptoms sometimes classed under this head. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal CIX. 601603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, R., Joseph, S. & Yule, W. (1993). Disaster and mental health. In Principles of Social Psychiatry (ed. Bhugrad, D. and Leff, J.), pp. 450469. Blackwell Scientific Publications: Oxford.Google Scholar
Willius, F. A. (1937). Cardiac neurosis. Mayo Clinic Proceedings 12, 683687.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. McN. (1916). The irritable heart of soldiers. British Medical Journal i, 119120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winslow, L. S. F. (1880). Fasting and feeding. Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology n.s. VI, 253299.Google Scholar
Wood, P. W. (1941). Da Costa's syndrome (or effort syndrome). British Medical Journal i, 767772; 805–811; and 845–851.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Health Organization (1948). Manual of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Sixth Revision (ICD-6). WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (1955/1957). International Classification of Diseases, Seventh Revision (ICD-7). WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (1978). International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9). WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (1992). International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10). WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar