1 / 26

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Acute Stress Disorder Dr. A. Hadjebi. History. U. S. civil war : Soldier's heart syndrome 1900 s : Traumatic neurosis due to the influence of psychoanalysis World war I : shell shock World war II : combat neurosis or operational fatigue

dawn-austin
Télécharger la présentation

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Acute Stress Disorder Dr. A. Hadjebi

  2. History • U. S. civil war : Soldier's heart syndrome • 1900 s : Traumatic neurosis due to the influence of psychoanalysis • World war I : shell shock • World war II : combat neurosis or operational fatigue • Vietnam war : post traumatic stress disorder

  3. History • PTSD: DSM-III (1980) • ASD; DSM-IV (1994) • PTSD in DSM-III: reexperience(1),psychic numbing(2), other items(1), no duration criteria • PTSD in DSM-III-R is similar to DSM-IV-TR • In ICD-10 PTSD & ASD are stress related disoders

  4. Epidemiology • Life time prevalence (8%) • 30% of Vietnam veterans • 25 % subclinical form of disorder • In women : life time prevalence 10- 12% • In men : life time prevalence 5- 6% • PTSD is most prevalent in young adults • Men's trauma : combat experience • Women's trauma : assault or rape

  5. Epidemiology • PTSD most likely to occur in single , divorced , widowed , socially withdrawn , low socioeconomic level • First degree biological relatives of persons with a history of depression have an increased risk for developing PTSD following a traumatic event

  6. Comorbidity • About 2/3 having at least tow other disorders • Common comorbid conditions include : depressive disorders , substance related disorders , other anxiety disorders and bipolar disorders

  7. Etiology • Stressor • Risk factors • Psychodynamic factors • Cognitive – behavioral factors • Biological factors Noradrenergic system Opioid system Corticotropin – releasing factor and the HPA axis

  8. Psychological aspects of PTSD • Emotional response to trauma reminder • Base line physiological activity • Exaggerated startle reflex.

  9. Diagnostic criteria for PTSD • Exposure to a traumatic event • The traumatic event is persistently reexperienced • Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma • Persistent symptoms of increased arousal • Duration of the disturbance is more than 1 month

  10. Diagnostic criteria for PTSD • Significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or … • Specify if : acute : < 3 months chronic : > or = 3 months • With delayed onset

  11. Diagnostic criteria for ASD The disturbance last for a min. of 2 days and a max. of 4 weeks and occurs within 4 weeks of the traumatic events

  12. PTSD in children and adolescents • Child risk factors include : - demographic factors ( age, socioeconomic status ) - life events - psychiatric comorbidity - parental psychopathology - parental marital status

  13. Gulf war syndrome • Health problems • Irritability • Chronic fatigue • Shortness of breath • Muscle and joint pain • Migraine headaches • Digestive disturbances • Rash • Hair loss • Forgetfulness • Difficulty concentrating

  14. Differential diagnosisorganic; head trauma, epilepsy, alcohol use disorder • Pain disorder • Substance abuse • Other anxiety disorders • Mood disorders • Borderline disorders • Dissociative disorders • malingering

  15. Course and prognosis 30 % recover completely 40 % mild symptoms 20 % moderate symptoms 10 % remain unchanged • Good prognosis is predicted by : - rapid onset of the symptoms - short duration of the symptoms - good premorbi functioning - strong social supports - absence of other psychiatric, medical or substance – related disorders

  16. Course and prognosis • The very young and very old have more difficulty with traumatic events than do these in midlife • PTSD that is comorbid with other disorders is often more severe and perhaps more chronic and difficult to treat • Social support influence the development, severity and duration of PTSD

  17. Treatment • Psychotherapy • Pharmacotherapy

  18. Psychotherapy • Psychodynamic psychotherapy • Cognitive – behavior therapy • Group therapy • Family therapy

  19. pharmacotherapy • SSRIs : Sertraline and Paroxetine • Buspirone • TCA: Impramine, Amitriptyline • Some studies indicate that pharmacotherapy is more effective in treating the depression, anxiety and hyperarousal than in treating the avoidance and emotional numbing • Other drugs ; MAOIs ( Phenelzine ), Trazodone, Anticonvalsants, (carbamazapine, valpoarate ), clonidine, propranolol

  20. Recommendation • Strongly recommend selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) as first line agents for the treatment of PTSD. • Recommend tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) as second-line treatments for PTSD. • Consider an antidepressant therapeutic trial of at least 12 weeks before changing therapeutic regimen.

  21. Recommendation • Consider prazosin to augment the management of nightmares and other symptoms of PTSD. • Recommend medication compliance assessment at each visit. • Since PTSD is a chronic disorder, responders to pharmacotherapy may need to continue medication indefinitely; however it is recommended that maintenance treatment should be periodically reassessed

  22. Special considerations on sep. 11. 2001 • 3500 deaths and injuries • 45% of adults reported symptoms of stress , such as distressing recollections of the event, insomnia, nightmare,… • 90% reported minor degrees of symptoms • Susceptibility to symptoms was associated with : female, nonwhite, having previous psychological illness, being close to disaster site

  23. Special considerations on sep. 11. 2001 • Over 80 % of parents reported that their children had one or more symptoms • Survey of Manhattan residents conducted 5 to 8 weeks after the world trade center collapsed: - 9.8% (90000 ) people had PTSD or clinical depression - 3.7% ( 34000 ) people met the criteria for both diagnosis

More Related