Thursday, April 17, 2025

Research Shows that Trauma Remains in the Body

It is a couple of days until the 30th anniversary of the OKC bombing. It's hard to believe it's been that long; in some ways it feels like just a few years ago, as I was only 60 miles from where it happened and impacted people I knew.

If you have read "The Body Keeps the Score" by Bessel van der Kolk, this research done at OU with some of the bombing survivors displays that very well.  They found that even though these people were healthy and had no mental health issues, the trauma from the bombing still was present physiologically in their bodies.

https://neurosciencenews.com/body-trauma-inflammation-28620/

The Body Remembers: Trauma Leaves Lasting Biological Imprints


Summary: Survivors of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing continue to carry hidden biological imprints of trauma, even decades after the event and in the absence of visible mental health issues. A new study reveals subtle yet significant changes in stress biomarkers, including cortisol levels, heart rate, blood pressure, and inflammatory interleukins.

While survivors report resilience and low PTSD or depression scores, their physiological responses show heightened alertness and immune system changes. These findings underscore the lasting physical impact of trauma, even when emotional recovery appears complete.

Key Facts:

  • Biological Residue of Trauma: Survivors had lower cortisol, higher blood pressure, and altered heart rate—indicating lasting stress system changes.
  • Inflammatory Markers: Elevated interleukin 1B and reduced interleukin 2R suggest ongoing immune system imbalance in trauma survivors.
  • Disconnect Between Mind and Body: Psychological symptoms did not correlate with the altered biological stress responses.

Source: University of Oklahoma

Recent research from the University of Oklahoma suggests that survivors of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing carry physiological traces of the trauma, even though study participants have gone on to lead healthy and resilient lives.

Essentially, their bodies “remember” the trauma even if they don’t have physical or mental health problems.


Survivors had higher blood pressure but a lower heart rate in response to trauma cues, suggesting their response may have become blunted over time. Credit: Neuroscience News

Previous studies have examined biological stress and psychological symptoms in terrorism survivors, but the recently published research is thought to be the first of its kind to study three different biological systems in medically healthy people who survived the same traumatic event: cortisol, which plays a crucial role in the body’s stress response; heart rate and blood pressure; and interleukins, which are inflammatory substances that play a role in the body’s immune system.

Research participants included 60 heavily impacted direct survivors of the Oklahoma City bombing, compared to a control group of local people who were not affected by the bombing. People in both groups were healthy.

The study found that, counterintuitively, cortisol levels were lower in people who survived the bombing. Survivors had higher blood pressure but a lower heart rate in response to trauma cues, suggesting their response may have become blunted over time.

Two interleukins were measured. Interleukin 1B, which is linked with inflammation, was significantly higher in survivors, and interleukin 2R, which plays a protective role, was lower.

“The main takeaway from the study is that the mind may be resilient and be able to put things behind it, but the body doesn’t forget. It may remain on alert, waiting for the next thing to happen,” said Phebe Tucker, M.D., lead author of the study and professor emeritus of psychiatry at the OU College of Medicine.

“We thought there would be a correlation between these biomarkers and the research participants’ psychological symptoms, but their PTSD and depression scores were not elevated and did not correlate with stress biomarkers,” she added.

“That tells us there is a stress response in the body that is not present in the emotions they express. In addition, the elevated interleukin 1B is typically seen in people with illnesses and inflammation, but this group was pretty healthy. However, it raises concerns about potential long-term health problems.”

Tucker and her colleagues have regularly conducted studies involving bombing survivors beginning soon after the event occurred. In this new paper, they are using data obtained seven years after the bombing. At the time, they did not study the same biomarkers, making this new study unique.

“Basically, what this paper shows is that after you’ve experienced severe trauma, your biological systems may not be at a typical baseline any longer; things have changed,” said study co-author Rachel Zettl, M.D., clinical assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, OU College of Medicine.

“It’s not just our minds that remember trauma; our biological processes do, too. It changes your actual physical being.”

Other authors of this paper were Betty Pfefferbaum, M.D., professor emeritus in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, OU College of Medicine; Carol North, M.D., adjunct professor, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Yan Daniel Zhao, Ph.D., professor, OU Hudson College of Public Health; Pascal Nitiema, Ph.D., Arizona State University; and Haekyung Jeon-Slaughter, Ph.D., University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.

About this PTSD and neuroscience research news

Author: April Wilkerson
Source: University of Oklahoma
Contact: April Wilkerson – University of Oklahoma
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Closed access.
Learning from Hindsight: Examining Autonomic, Inflammatory, and Endocrine Stress Biomarkers and Mental Health in Healthy Terrorism Survivors Many Years Later” by Phebe Tucker et al. Prehospital and Disaster Medicine

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