Hitting the Rewind Button: Imagining Analogue Trauma Memories in Reverse Reduces Distressing Intrusions.

Cognit Ther Res

Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychopathology, Department of Psychology, Paris Lodron University Salzburg, Hellbrunner Straße 34, 5020 Salzburg, Austria.

Published: May 2024

Background: Intrusive re-experiencing of trauma is a core symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder. Intrusive re-experiencing could potentially be reduced by 'rewinding', a new treatment approach assumed to take advantage of reconsolidation-updating by mentally replaying trauma fast-backward.

Methods: The present analogue study was the first to investigate 'rewinding' in a controlled laboratory setting. First, 115 healthy women watched a highly aversive film and were instructed to report film-related intrusions during the following week. Twenty-four hours after film-viewing, participants reporting at least one intrusion (N = 81) were randomly allocated to an intervention (fast-backward, or fast-forward as active control condition) or a passive control condition. Intervention groups reactivated their trauma memory, followed by mentally replaying the aversive film either fast-backward or fast-forward repeatedly.

Results: Results indicate that replaying trauma fast-backward reduced intrusion load (intrusion frequency weighted for intrusion distress) compared to the passive group, whereas replaying fast-forward did not. No above-threshold differences between fast-backward and fast-forward emerged.

Conclusion: Present findings strengthen the view that 'rewinding' could be a promising intervention to reduce intrusions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11422422PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10608-024-10488-8DOI Listing

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