When people think about trauma, they often picture emotional pain. Anxiety, fear, or distress tend to come to mind first. What is less talked about is how deeply trauma can affect the body. The connection between trauma and mental health is strong, but the link between trauma and physical health is just as important.
Untreated trauma does not simply fade with time. It can remain active in the body, shaping how a person feels, moves, sleeps, and even how their organs function. Understanding this connection is a powerful step towards recovery. It helps explain symptoms that often feel confusing or unrelated.
This blog explores how trauma affects the brain and body, what the nervous system's response to trauma looks like, and the physical symptoms of unresolved trauma that many people experience.
Trauma is not only about what happens to you. It is about how your body responds and adapts in the aftermath. When a person experiences a traumatic event, the body activates a survival response. This is often called fight, flight, or freeze. It is controlled by the nervous system and is designed to protect you in moments of danger.
In short bursts, this response is helpful. It sharpens focus, increases heart rate, and prepares the body to act quickly. The problem begins when the body does not return to a calm, regulated state.
In cases of untreated trauma, the nervous system can remain stuck in a heightened state of alert. For some, it stays in overdrive. For others, it shuts down into numbness or fatigue. Both patterns can affect long-term health, leading to PTSD and depression.
The nervous system's response to trauma is central to understanding why physical symptoms develop.
There are two key systems involved:
After trauma, the balance between these systems can be disrupted. Some people experience constant activation. They feel on edge, tense, or easily startled. Their heart rate may stay elevated. Sleep becomes difficult. Muscles remain tight for long periods.
Others experience a shutdown response. They may feel disconnected, exhausted, or flat. Motivation drops. The body conserves energy as if it were still under threat. Both patterns place strain on the body over time. When the nervous system does not regulate properly, it affects everything from digestion to immune function.
To understand how trauma affects the brain and body, it helps to look at a few key areas of the brain involved in stress and memory. The amygdala plays a role in detecting danger. After trauma, it can become overactive. This makes the body more sensitive to perceived threats, even in safe situations.
The hippocampus helps process memories and distinguish between past and present. Trauma can reduce its effectiveness, making memories feel as though they are happening again in real time. The prefrontal cortex is responsible for reasoning and decision-making. Chronic stress can reduce its activity, making it harder to regulate emotions or think clearly under pressure.
These changes are not permanent, but they can persist without treatment. They influence how the body reacts day to day, keeping the stress response active even when there is no immediate danger. Over time, this ongoing activation affects physical systems throughout the body.
Many people live with physical symptoms without realising they may be linked to trauma. These symptoms are often treated in isolation, which can lead to frustration when they do not fully resolve. Some of the most common physical symptoms of unresolved trauma include:
Muscle tension and chronic pain are common responses to stress. When the body remains tense for long periods, it can lead to ongoing pain in the neck, shoulders, back, and jaw. Some people also experience conditions like fibromyalgia, where pain is widespread and difficult to explain through standard tests.
The gut is highly sensitive to stress. Trauma can disrupt normal digestive processes, leading to symptoms such as:
Bloating
Irritable bowel symptoms
Nausea
Changes in appetite
The gut and brain communicate constantly, so when the brain is under stress, digestion often suffers.
Sleep is one of the first areas affected by untreated trauma. People may struggle to fall asleep, wake frequently, or experience vivid dreams or nightmares. Poor sleep then feeds back into the stress cycle, making it harder for the body to recover.
Chronic activation of the stress response can be exhausting. Even if someone is not physically active, their body is working hard in the background. This can lead to persistent fatigue that does not improve with rest.
Long-term stress can affect heart health. Increased heart rate and blood pressure over time can place extra strain on the cardiovascular system.
The immune system relies on balance. Chronic stress can weaken its ability to respond effectively, making people more vulnerable to illness.
Trauma can disrupt the body’s hormone systems, including cortisol levels. This can affect mood, energy, metabolism, and reproductive health. These symptoms are real. They are not imagined or exaggerated. They are the body’s way of expressing unresolved stress.
One of the reasons untreated trauma continues to affect physical health is that the body stores experiences differently than the mind. While the brain may try to move on, the body can hold onto patterns of tension, alertness, or shutdown. These patterns become automatic over time.
Triggers can reactivate the stress response without conscious awareness. A sound, smell, or situation may remind the body of past danger, even if the person does not consciously connect the dots. This is why some physical symptoms appear unpredictable. They are often linked to underlying nervous system responses rather than current events alone.
When trauma remains untreated, the long-term effects can build gradually. Research shows strong links between trauma and chronic health conditions. These include:
Heart disease
Autoimmune conditions
Chronic pain disorders
Gastrointestinal conditions
Sleep disorders
The body is not designed to stay in a constant state of stress. Over time, this strain affects multiple systems at once. This does not mean that trauma always leads to these conditions. It does mean that addressing trauma can play a key role in improving overall health outcomes.
The good news is that the brain and body are capable of change. With the right support, the nervous system can learn to regulate again. Treatment does not focus only on talking about past events. It often includes approaches that help the body feel safe and stable.
Effective care may involve:
Psychological therapies that process trauma safely
Techniques that regulate the nervous system
Structured support from mental health professionals
Medical reviews where needed
The goal is to reduce the constant stress response and help the body return to a more balanced state.
While professional support is important, there are also practical steps that can help regulate the body day to day.
Simple practices like noticing your breathing, posture, or muscle tension can help you reconnect with your body.
Creating a consistent sleep routine supports recovery. This includes regular bedtimes, reducing screen use before sleep, and creating a calm environment.
Activities such as walking, stretching, or yoga can help release built-up tension and improve circulation.
Spending time with supportive people can help the nervous system feel safer and more regulated.
If symptoms persist or feel overwhelming, it is important to get professional help. Trauma recovery is not something you have to navigate alone.
Understanding how trauma affects the brain and body can be a turning point. It shifts the focus from “what is wrong with me” to “what has my body been trying to cope with”.
At Monarch Mental Health Group, care is centred on this understanding. Their psychiatrist-led team works closely with psychologists and nurses to provide comprehensive assessments and tailored treatment plans. Services such as TMS therapy, psychological therapies, and medication support are designed to address both trauma and mental health in a structured, evidence-based way.
With clinics across Australia and a strong focus on holistic treatment and sustainable patient outcomes, Monarch Mental Health Group offers a clear path forward. Recovery is not about pushing symptoms aside. It is about helping the body and mind work together again in a healthier, more balanced way.
If you are experiencing physical symptoms that do not fully make sense, it may be worth exploring whether untreated trauma is part of the picture. With the right support, change and healing are possible.
Yes, trauma can contribute to long-term health problems when the body remains in a prolonged stress response. Over time, this may be linked with issues such as sleep disruption, chronic pain, digestive problems, fatigue, cardiovascular strain and changes in immune function.
Someone should consider seeking help when symptoms such as anxiety, low mood, fatigue, pain, poor sleep or physical tension begin affecting daily life. Support is especially important if symptoms persist, worsen over time or continue despite general medical treatment.
Unresolved trauma can sometimes show up physically as headaches, muscle tension, chronic pain, digestive issues, sleep problems, low energy or a heightened startle response. These symptoms can overlap with other medical conditions, so assessment can help clarify what may be contributing to them.