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Study finds PTSD effects may linger in body chemistry of next generation

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    59 year old Karen Sonneberg
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    grew up on the north shore
    of Long Island,
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    just an hour's drive
    from New York City.
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    Her parents survived
    the Holocaust,
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    but rarely mentioned it.
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    All I knew was that
    we were different,
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    that I was different.
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    I didn't exactly know why.
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    Her parents were Jewish,
    born in Germany.
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    After Hitler came to power,
    their families fled.
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    Sonneberg's parents
    were just children,
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    but carried the traumas
    of Nazi oppression
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    throughout their lives.
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    My mother,
    from the time she was 3, on.
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    My father,
    from the time he was 5 or 6.
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    He was...
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    subjected to...
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    a painful existence
    in Germany.
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    Despite her own
    comfortable upbringing
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    here in the U. S.,
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    Sonneberg privately
    struggled for years
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    with anxiety and stress.
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    While she couldn't prove it,
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    she believed it was
    somehow linked
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    to her parents'
    traumatic childhoods.
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    Having discussed this
    with many of my friends,
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    who come from
    similar backgrounds,
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    it seems to be
    consistent in most of us.
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    There were definitely
    challenges, that
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    "American kids"
    didn't seem to have experienced.
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    Even though you weren't there.
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    Exactly.
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    That's the amazing
    part of it.
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    Now, in a new study
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    published this month
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    in the scientific journal
    "Biological Psychiatry"
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    bolsters Sonneberg's belief
    that she experienced
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    the after-effects
    of her parents' trauma.
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    Dr. Rachel Yehuda,
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    director of Mt. Sinai's
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    Traumatic Stress
    Studies division,
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    led the study.
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    Her team interviewed,
    and drew blood,
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    from 32 sets of survivors
    and their children,
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    focusing on a gene
    called FKBP5.
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    We already know
    that this is a gene
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    that contributes to risk
    for depression
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    and Post Traumatic
    Stress Disorder.
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    Yehuda noticed a pattern
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    among the Holocaust survivors
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    called an "epigenetic change."
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    Not a change in the gene itself,
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    but rather, a change
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    in the chemical marker
    attached to it.
Title:
Study finds PTSD effects may linger in body chemistry of next generation
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Video Language:
English
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Duration:
06:17

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