Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Characteristics and Symptoms
Post-traumatic stress disorder can be characterized by three main types of symptoms:
Re-experiencing the trauma through intrusive distressing flashbacks, nightmares and other recollections of the event.
Avoidance of places, people, and activities that are reminders of the trauma, promoting a feeling of emotional numbness.
Difficulty sleeping and concentrating, feeling jumpy, and being easily irritated and angered.
Frequently, they are forced to re-live the event through such things as flashbacks and nightmares. Because of this, relaxing, concentrating or sleeping may become difficult, and they often feel detached or estranged from others.
Who it affects
This is a serious and potentially debilitating condition that can occur in people who have witnessed or experienced:
A natural disaster
Serious accident
Sudden death of a loved one
Terrorist incident
Violent personal assault such as rape
War
Other life-threatening events
The good news is that most people who experience such events recover from them. However people suffering from PTSD continue to be severely depressed and anxious for months or even years following the event.
Sixty-seven percent of people exposed to mass violence have been shown to develop PTSD, a higher rate than those exposed to natural disasters or other types of traumatic events.
People who have experienced previous traumatic events run a higher risk of developing PTSD.
7.7 million Americans age 18 and older have PTSD.
Women are twice as likely to develop post-traumatic stress disorder as men, and children can also develop it. PTSD often occurs with depression, substance abuse or other anxiety disorders.
How it’s Treated
Generally, PTSD is diagnosed after a person has experienced symptoms for at least one month following a traumatic event. However, it should be noted that symptoms may not appear until months or even years later.
Like other anxiety disorder, PTSD is treatable. Cognitive-behavioural therapy is effective for many people, helping them to identify, understand, and modify faulty thinking and behaviour patterns.
Some with PTSD also take medication. Relaxation techniques, meditation, yoga, exercise and other alternative treatments may also become part of a treatment plan.
Other anxiety disorders, depression, or substance abuse can often accompany PTSD. These other conditions must also be treated with appropriate therapies.
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I myself have very very severe chronic complex post traumatic stress disorder.
I found that symptoms were clinical depression, nightmares, flashbacks, hallucinations, mood swings, aggression, paranoia and other “intrusive thoughts.”
I have found antipsychotic medications very useful – specifically 20mg a day olanzapine and 150 mg a day chlorpromazine. I was also on a mood stabiliser – sodium valproate 2250 mg a day. I found that SSRI antidepressants were completely USELESS and it is very dangerous to prescribe fluoxetine to a very vulnerable person so be very careful about that. I have had intensive EMDR and EFT therapy. I found the EMDR to be very useful but it does tend to stir things up a bit so you need to be strong enough to deal with all the difficult stuff that will come up. Think about this carefully before making a concrete decision. There are many treatments available for PTSD – rewind therapy, CBT, DBT, etc. I found that DBT was very useful in getting over my self harming behaviour and that CBT was no use whatsoever.