Background
: Research suggests trauma-related nightmares (TRNs) during the acute aftermath of trauma may contribute to posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, it is unknown who is most vulnerable to TRNs, which is critical to identify at-risk patients toward whom early nightmare-focused treatments can be targeted to prevent PTSD.
Objective
: We tested trauma type (interpersonal violence [e.g. assault] vs non-interpersonal trauma [e.g. motor vehicle collision]) as a risk factor for TRNs in a predominantly low-income, Black, urban sample in Detroit, MI, USA.
Method
: We recruited patients from the intensive care unit following traumatic injury (
N
= 88;
M
age
= 39.53 ± SD 14.31 years, 67.0% male, 67.0% Black, 47.7% annual income ≤ $20,000) and administered surveys at three post trauma timepoints: one week (T1), one month (T2;
n
= 61), and two months (T3;
n
= 59). Trauma type was assessed at T1 via electronic medical records. Participants reported the extent to which their dreams’ content was similar to the trauma for which they were hospitalized across T1-T3. Participants then completed the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 at T3.
Results
: TRNs were more prevalent over time among patients exposed to interpersonal violence (80%) vs non-interpersonal trauma (48.7%,
p
= .005). Patients hospitalized for interpersonal violence faced greater odds for TRNs across timepoints relative to non-interpersonal trauma patients (Odds Ratio = 4.95,
p
= .021). TRNs, in turn, prospectively predicted PTSD symptoms such that TRNs at T2 presaged more severe PTSD at T3 (
p
= .040,
η
p
2
= .31), above and beyond T1 PTSD status.
Conclusions
: This prospective study provides first evidence that interpersonal violence exposure is a robust risk factor for TRNs, which prospectively contribute to PTSD symptom development. Early intervention on TRNs after interpersonal violence exposure may decrease PTSD risk. Future studies are encouraged to use ambulatory methods to capture nightmares sooner after they occur.