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From our extensive trauma-related research, we now recognize that unaddressed trauma is the hidden cause of most preventable illnesses, and is associated with eight of the 10 leading causes of death, including heart, lung and kidney disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, suicide, and accidental overdose.
These systems also control things like digestion and heart rate. So once they spring into action, your body works differently. This could explain why trauma is linked to everything from constipation to fainting. Trauma is associated with long-term physical health problems, too.
Trauma impairs the normal development of the brain and nervous system, the immune system, and the bodys stress response systems.
People with PTSD may also experience physical symptoms, such as increased blood pressure and heart rate, fatigue, muscle tension, nausea, joint pain, headaches, back pain or other types of pain. The person in pain may not realize the connection between their pain and a traumatic event.
In PTSD, it has been recognized that exposure to traumatic triggers leads to increased blood pressure, heart rate, and sympathetic activation of sweating in the hands 70. This abnormality has a docHub degree of specificity for PTSD 71.
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Adults with histories of trauma in childhood have been shown to have more chronic physical conditions and problems. They may engage in risky behaviors that compound these conditions (e.g., smoking, substance use, and diet and exercise habits that lead to obesity).
Such experiences have shown to lead to impairments in brain development and delayed social and emotional development. Unaddressed, the childs experience of trauma may eventually influence the way he or she behaves at home and in school, which will in turn affect the way he or she develops into an adult.

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