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Post-traumatic stress disorder

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a term for certain psychological consequences of exposure to, or confrontation with, stressful experiences that the person experiences as highly traumatic. These experiences can involve actual or threatened death, serious physical injury, or a threat to physical and/or psychological integrity. It is occasionally called post-traumatic stress reaction to emphasize that it is a routine result of traumatic experience rather than a manifestation of a pre-existing psychological weakness on the part of the patient. more...

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Symptoms can include the following: Nightmares, flashbacks, emotional detachment or numbing of feelings (emotional self-mortification or dissociation), insomnia, avoidance of reminders and extreme distress when exposed to the reminders ("triggers"), irritability, hypervigilance, and and excesive startle response.

Experiences likely to induce the condition include:

  • childhood physical/emotional or sexual abuse
  • adult experiences of rape, war and combat exposure
  • violent attacks
  • natural catastrophes
  • life-threatening childbirth complications

For most people, the emotional effects of traumatic events will tend to subside after several months. If they last longer, then diagnosing a psychiatric disorder is generally advised. Most people who experience traumatic events will not develop PTSD. PTSD is thought to be primarily an anxiety disorder, and should not be confused with normal grief and adjustment after traumatic events. There is also the possibility of simultaneous suffering of other psychiatric disorders (i.e. comorbidity). These disorders often include major depression or general anxiety disorder


PTSD may have a "delayed onset" of years, or even decades, and may even be triggered by a specific body movement if the trauma was stored in the procedural memory, by another stressful event, such as the death of a family member or someone else close, or by the diagnosis of a life-threatening medical condition.

Also, doctors have conducted clinical studies indicating traumatized children with PTSD are more likely to later engage in criminal activities than those who do not have PTSD.

Background

Psychological distress after trauma was reported in 1900 BC by an Egyptian physician who described hysterical reactions to trauma (Veith 1965). Hysteria was also related to "traumatic reminiscences" a century ago (Janet 1901). At that time, Sigmund Freud's pupil, Kardiner, was the first to describe what later became post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms (Lamprecht & Sack 2002).

Hippocrates utilized a homeostasis theory to explain illness, and stress is often defined as the reaction to a situation that threatens the balance or homeostasis of a system (Antonovsky 1981). The situation causing the stress reaction is defined as the "stressor", but the stress reaction, and not the stressor is what jeopardizes the homeostasis (Aardal-Eriksson 2002). Post-traumatic stress can thus be seen as a chemical imbalance of neurotransmitters, according to stress theory.

However, PTSD per se is a relatively recent diagnosis in psychiatric nosology, first appearing in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) in 1980. It is said development of the PTSD concept partly has socio-economic and political implications (Mezey & Robbins 2001). War veterans were to a great deal incapacitated by psychiatric illness, including post-traumatic stress in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. However, they had difficulties receiving economic compensation since there was no psychiatric diagnosis available by which veterans could claim indemnity. This situation has changed, and PTSD is now one of several psychiatric diagnoses for which a veteran can receive compensation, such as a war veteran indemnity pension, in the US (Mezey & Robbins 2001). While PTSD-like symptoms were recognized in combat veterans following many historical conflicts, the modern understanding of the condition dates to the 1980s.

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Therapy options for post-traumatic stress disorder
From American Family Physician, 5/1/04 by Karl E. Miller

The type of psychologic help that should be provided after a major traumatic event (e.g., physical assault, severe accident, natural disaster) remains a matter of uncertainty. Debriefing after the event is advocated, but randomized controlled trials have shown that single-session individualized debriefing after the event does not reduce the incidence of chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Debriefing has been shown to provide some benefit over time, but these patients tend to improve to a lesser extent than those who do not receive debriefing. Group debriefing also has been suggested as an intervention in traumatized patients, but no randomized controlled trials have determined if this method actually is beneficial. Another obstacle to determining the appropriate intervention is that no methods have been established to identify patients who are unlikely to recover from a stressful event without early intervention. The objective of a study by Ehlers and colleagues was to determine if cognitive therapy or a self-help booklet provided in the initial months after a traumatic event would be more effective in preventing chronic PTSD than repeated assessment.

The participants in the study had been involved in a motor vehicle wreck and developed PTSD in the first three months after the crash. These persons had to meet the criteria for PTSD published in the Structured Clinical Interview in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition. In addition, they had to have moderate to severe symptoms as established by a validated scale.

Participants completed a three-week self-monitoring phase before randomization. If they were considered at risk for chronic PTSD at the end of these three weeks, they were randomly assigned to receive cognitive therapy, a self-help booklet on principles of cognitive-behavior therapy, or repeated assessments with no other interventions. The patients were reassessed at three and nine months. The main outcome measures were changes in the severity of PTSD symptoms, disability caused by the symptoms, and changes in associated symptoms.

There were 85 persons who met the inclusion criteria for the study. Those who participated in cognitive therapy had fewer symptoms of PTSD, depression, anxiety, and disability than those who received the self-help booklet or repeated assessments. In addition, fewer patients who had cognitive therapy met the criteria for PTSD at follow-up than those who received the other interventions. The patients who received the self-help booklet had no better outcomes than those who received repeated assessment. With regard to two measurements--high end-state functioning at follow-up and request for treatment--the self-help group had worse outcomes than the repeated assessment group.

The authors conclude that cognitive therapy is an effective intervention in patients with recent-onset PTSD. They note that the combination of an elevated initial symptom score and failure to improve with self-monitoring was useful in identifying patients with early PTSD symptoms who were not likely to improve without intervention.

Ehlers A, et al. A randomized controlled trial of cognitive therapy, a self-help booklet, and repeated assessments as early interventions for posttraumatic stress disorder. Arch Gen Psychiatry October 2003;60:1024-32.

COPYRIGHT 2004 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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