
PTSD Guide for Veterans, Active Duty, Family and Civilians
Fighting Back Against PTSD
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- In the United States about 3.5% of adults have PTSD in a given year, and 9% of people develop it at some point in their life.
- In much of the rest of the world, rates during a given year are between 0.5% and 1%.
- Higher rates may occur in regions of armed conflict. It is more common in women than men.
- Symptoms of trauma-related mental disorders have been documented since at least the time of the ancient Greeks.
During the World Wars the condition was known under various terms including “shell shock” and “combat neurosis”.
The term “post-traumatic stress disorder” came into use in the 1970s in large part due to the diagnoses of U.S. military veterans of the Vietnam War. It was officially recognized by the American Psychiatric Association in 1980 in the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
PTSD Definition
PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) is a mental health problem that some people – soldiers and civilians – develop after experiencing or witnessing a life-threatening event, like combat, a natural disaster, a car accident, or sexual assault.
It’s normal to have upsetting memories, feel on edge, or have trouble sleeping after this type of event. At first, it may be hard to do normal daily activities, like go to work, go to school, or spend time with people you care about, but most people start to feel better after a few weeks or months. If it’s been longer than a few months and you’re still having symptoms, you may have PTSD.
PTSD Prevention
There is little evidence to suggest that prevention is possible, so all claims from any source should be met with skepticism and caution. Once a Soldier likes the idea and term “resilience”, but recognizes that prevention is not possible at this time.
Modest benefits have been seen from early access to cognitive behavioral therapy. Critical incident stress management has been suggested as a means of preventing PTSD, but subsequent studies suggest the likelihood of its producing negative outcomes. A review “…did not find any evidence to support the use of an intervention offered to everyone”, and that “…multiple session interventions may result in worse outcome than no intervention for some individuals.”
Resilience can be strengthened through:
Realistic, duty-related stress training (e.g., live-fire exercises, survival and captivity training)
Coping skills training (e.g., relaxation, cognitive reframing and problem-solving skills training)
Supportive work environment (e.g., open team communication and peer support)
Adaptive beliefs about the work role and traumatic experiences (e.g., confidence in
leadership and realistic expectancies about work environment)
Workplace-specific traumatic stress management programs (e.g., chaplains and mental
health professionals)
PTSD Causes
Anyone can get PTSD at any age. The list of triggers for this anxiety disorder is quite long and includes natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes and tsunamis, a serious accident and witnessing a death, especially a violent one.
War veterans and survivors of physical and sexual assault, abuse, accidents, disasters and many other traumatic events. Not everyone with PTSD has been through a dangerous event. Some people get PTSD after a friend or family member experiences danger or harm. The sudden, unexpected death of a loved one can also cause PTSD.
Causes in the Brain
PTSD symptoms develop due to dysfunction in two key regions of the brain:
The Amygdala
This is a small almond-shaped structure located deep in the middle of the temporal lobe. The amygdala is designed to:
- Detect threats in the environment and activate the “fight or flight” response
- Activate the sympathetic nervous system to help you deal with the threat
- Help you store new emotional or threat-related memories
The Prefrontal Cortex (PFC)
The Prefrontal Cortex is located in the frontal lobe just behind your forehead. The PFC is designed to:
- Regulate attention and awareness
- Make decisions about the best response to a situation
- Initiate conscious, voluntary behavior
- Determine the meaning and emotional significance of events
- Regulate emotions
- Inhibit or correct dysfunctional reactions
When your brain detects a threat, the amygdala initiates a quick, automatic defensive (“fight or flight”) response involving the release of adrenaline, and glucose to rev up your brain and body. Should the threat continue, the amygdala communicates with the hypothalamus and pituitary gland to release cortisol. Meanwhile, the medial part of the prefrontal cortex consciously assesses the threat and either accentuates or calms down the “fight or flight” response.
Studies of response to threat in people with PTSD show:
- A hyper reactive amygdala
- A less activated medial PFC
In other words, the amygdala reacts too strongly to a potential threat while the medial PFC is impaired in its ability to regulate the threat response.
Consequences of Brain Dysfunctions in PTSD
Hyperarousal
Because the amygdala is overactive, more (medicine name removed) is released in response to threat and its release is not well-regulated by the PFC.
Effects of excess (medicine name removed) include:
- Hyperarousal.
- Hypervigilance
- Increased wakefulness and sleep disruption
As a result of hyperarousal, people with PTSD can get emotionally triggered by anything that resembles the original trauma (e.g., a sexual assault survivor telling her story on TV, a loud noise, or passing somebody who looks like their assailant). Symptoms of hypervigilance means they are frequently keyed up and on edge, while increased wakefulness means they may have difficulty sleeping or wake up in the middle of the night.
Reactive Anger and Impulsivity
A reactive amygdala keeps people with PTSD on the alert and ready for quick action when they face a threat, leading them to be more impulsive. The orbital PFC is a part of the PFC that can inhibit motor behavior (physical action) when it is not appropriate or necessary. In people with PTSD, the orbital PFC has lower volume and is less activated. This means that people with PTSD have less control over reactive anger and impulsive behaviors when they are emotionally triggered. Reactive anger can cause damage to career success and interfere with relationship functioning.
Increased Fear and Anger and Decreased Positive Emotionality
People with PTSD often report feeling an excess of negative emotion and little positive emotion. They may have difficulty enjoying their day-to-day activities and interactions. This could be the result of a hyperactive amygdala communicating with the insula, an area of the brain associated with introspection and emotional awareness. The amygdala-insula circuit also impacts the medial PFC, an area associated with assigning meaning to events and regulating emotions. Research shows overactivity of the amygdala-amygdala-insult circuit can suppress the medial PFC, thereby interfering with the ability to regulate negative emotions and assign more positive meaning to events.
PTSD Symptoms
Symptoms may include disturbing thoughts, feelings, or dreams related to the events, mental or physical distress to trauma-related cues, attempts to avoid trauma-related cues, alterations in how a person thinks and feels, and an increase in the fight-or-flight response. These symptoms last for more than a month after the event. Young children are less likely to show distress but instead may express their memories through play.
Symptoms of PTSD generally begin within the first 3 months after the inciting traumatic event, but may not begin until years later. In the typical case, the individual with PTSD persistently avoids trauma-related thoughts and emotions, and discussion of the traumatic event, and may even have amnesia of the event. However, the event is commonly re-lived by the individual through intrusive, recurrent recollections, dissociative episodes of reliving the trauma (“flashbacks”), and nightmares.
While it is common to have symptoms after any traumatic event, these must persist to a sufficient degree (i.e., causing dysfunction in life or clinical levels of distress) for longer than one month after the trauma to be classified as PTSD (clinically significant dysfunction or distress for less than one month after the trauma may be acute stress disorder).
According to the VA, there are 4 types of PTSD symptoms, but they may not be exactly the same for everyone. Each person experiences symptoms in their own way.
Reliving the Event
Unwelcome memories about the trauma can come up at any time. They can feel very real and scary, as if the event is happening again. This is called a flashback. You may also have nightmares.
Memories of the trauma can happen because of a trigger — something that reminds you of the event. For example, seeing a news report about a disaster may trigger someone who lived through a hurricane. Or hearing a car backfire might bring back memories of gunfire for a combat Veteran.
Avoiding things that remind you of the event
You may try to avoid certain people or situations that remind you of the event.
For example, someone who was assaulted on the bus might avoid taking public transportation. Or a combat Veteran may avoid crowded places like shopping malls because it feels dangerous to be around so many people. You may also try to stay busy all the time so you don’t have to talk or think
about the event.
More Negative Thoughts and Feelings
You may feel more negative than you did before the trauma. You might be sad or numb — and lose interest in things you used to enjoy, like spending time with friends. You may feel that the world is dangerous and you can’t trust anyone. It may be hard for you to feel or express happiness, or other positive
Feeling on Edge
It’s common to feel jittery or “keyed up” — like it’s hard to relax. This is called hyperarousal. You might have trouble sleeping or concentrating, or feel like you’re always on the lookout for danger. You may suddenly get angry and irritable — and if someone surprises you, you might startle easily.
PTSD Screening
Sometimes things happen to people that are unusually or especially frightening, horrible, or traumatic. For example, a serious accident or fire, a physical or sexual assault or abuse, an earthquake or flood, a war, seeing someone be killed or seriously injured, or having a loved one die through homicide or suicide.
Have you ever experienced a serious accident or fire, a physical or sexual assault or abuse, an earthquake or flood, a war, seeing someone be killed or seriously injured, or having a loved one die through homicide or suicide?
If yes, please answer the questions below. In the past month, have you:
Had nightmares about the event(s) or thought about the event(s)
when you didn’t want to?
Tried hard not to think about the event(s) or went out of your way to
avoid situations that reminded you of the event(s)?
Been constantly on guard, watchful, or easily startled?
Felt numb or detached from people, activities, or your surroundings?
Felt guilty or unable to stop blaming yourself or others for the event(s)
or any problems the event(s) may have caused?
If you answered “yes” to 3 or more of these questions, talk to a mental
health care provider to learn more about PTSD and PTSD treatment.
Answering “yes” to 3 or more questions does not mean you have PTSD.
Only a mental health care provider can tell you for sure. You may still want to talk to a mental health care provider. If thoughts and feelings from the trauma are bothering you, treatment can help — whether or not you have PTSD.
PTSD Management/Treatment/Recovery
Once a Soldier takes an unusual position for a nonprofit advocating for all kinds of drug and drug-free therapies. The “fight or flight” instinct that fuels most PTSD is a powerful agent. We feel our to fight PTSD we need all the tools in the kit to win.
Find all the FDA-approved treatments here
Find medical marijuana info here
Find free and drug-free Tapping technique info here
Find Transcendental Meditation technique info here
Find psycho-therapy treatments here
Marijuana
Medical marijuana may be available in your state and the most recent studies have shown that there marijuana is not addictive and offers some relief. The effects vary from person to person, so there is no clear-cut recommendation except to try it and see if it works for you.
Medications can treat PTSD symptoms alone or with therapy — but only therapy treats
the underlying cause of your symptoms. If you treat your PTSD symptoms only with
medication, you’ll need to keep taking it for it to keep working.
Therapy
Once a Soldier does not have an opinion on whether therapy works or not, but here are the types of treatment available from the VA. Plus we’d included some information from a Virginia treatment facility that gives you a bit of a view of what you can expect should you go for treatment.
Trauma-focused Psychotherapies
Trauma-focused psychotherapies are the most highly recommended treatment for PTSD.
“Trauma-focused” means that the treatment focuses on the memory of the traumatic event or its meaning. In this booklet, we’ll tell you about 3 of the most effective traumafocuse psychotherapies for PTSD. In each of these psychotherapies, you’ll meet with a therapist once or twice a week, for 50 to 90 minutes. You and your therapist will have specific goals and topics to cover during each session. Treatment usually lasts for 3 to 4 months. Then, if you still have symptoms, you and your therapist can talk about other ways to manage them.
Prolonged Exposure Therapy (PE)
People with PTSD often try to avoid things that remind them of the trauma. This can help you feel better in the moment, but in the long term it can keep you from recovering
from PTSD.
In PE, you expose yourself to the thoughts, feelings, and situations that you’ve been
avoiding. It sounds scary, but facing things you’re afraid of in a safe way can help you
learn that you don’t need to avoid reminders of the trauma.
What happens during PE?
Your therapist will ask you to talk about your trauma over and over. This will help you get more control of your thoughts and feelings about the trauma so you don’t need to be afraid of your memories. She will also help you work up to doing the things you’ve been avoiding.
For example,let’s say you avoid driving because it reminds you of an accident. At first, you might just sit in the car and practice staying calm with breathing exercises. Gradually, you’ll work towards driving without being upset by memories of your trauma.
The following is from a Virginia-based program:
The purpose of the treatment program you are entering is to help you recover from PTSD (Posttraumatic Stress Disorder). No one can say your symptoms will be completely removed from your life forever, but we can help you learn skills to regain control of your life, manage your reactions and responses, and live a meaningful life. To do this, we will provide you with information and teach you skills and strategies that you can use to improve your life and reduce your PTSD symptoms. Your part will be to learn this information, practice these skills, and implement these new approaches so that you can experience the recovery that you deserve. This manual will act as a written guide to help you through this process, so please bring it with you to each session.
Goals: to help you recover from PTSD and live a meaningful life.
This program is designed to help you:
1.Develop a full and accurate understanding of the physical and emotional responses
that are characteristic of PTSD.
2.Develop a mindset that helps you maintain control of yourself at all times and know the skills and tools to do so.
3.Learn, practice, and instill coping skills as a necessary part of your recovery.
4.Learn how to fully integrate back into the family, community, and civilian life.
Strategies: These are some of the ways we will facilitate your recovery.
1.We will use a group format to help you learn information and skills. This will help you
discover you are not the only one experiencing these symptoms and to learn from
others how they have successfully overcome problems and learned to cope.
2.These groups will be very structured. Each will have a purpose and goal. It will be
important for you to attend all groups and learn the entire sequence of skill
development.
3.We will give you homework to complete between sessions. Doing your homework is
what helps your recovery.
4.You will learn several skills that will help you deal with expected and unexpected
difficulties, interpersonal conflicts, and avoidant behavior.
Source for this guide include:
- Wikipedia
- VA: Understanding PTSD and PTSD Treatment
- VA: Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Pocket Guide: To Accompany the 2010 VA/DoD Clinical
- Practice Guideline for the Management of Post-traumatic Stress
- From Hunter Holmes McGuire VAMC’s PTSD Recovery Program Treatment Manual
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