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DX and RX of TBI and PTSD in OIF

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DX and RX of TBI and PTSD in OIF

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    1. DX and RX of TBI and PTSD in OIF/OEF Veterans Chrisanne Gordon, M.D. Jeremy D. Kaufman, Psy.D. Director of Psychological Health, Ohio National Guard

    2. Map of Ohio Deployment

    3. Health concerns of War and re-entry home Every War has its own: 1. Injuries 2. Illnesses 3. Drugs 4. Technologies 5. Personalities

    4. Vietnam SCI establishment of SCI research Agent Orange Cancer, DM, Neuropathy, TBI? Drugs of choice Downers: Heroin; Marijuana; ETOH

    5. Gulf War ALS - 1. Incidence 1.6 X general population. 2. Etiology Sarin? Pesticides? Pyridostigmine BR?

    6. OIF/OEF TBI/multiple amputations 1. ARMOR more survive, but multiple amputations; severe burns TBI/PTSD/MUSH syndrome. Drugs of choice Uppers: methamphetamine, caffeine, cocaine

    7. National Council on Disability: March 2009 Established the HALLMARK pathologies of OIF/OEF: Operation Iraqi Freedom Operation Enduring Freedom

    8. 20%- 25% TBI 1. BLAST INJURY IED; RPG; Motar 2. VEHICULAR ACCIDENTS -MRAP 3. FALLS- Terrain 4. OTHER- Hits on head during night drills TBI incidence supported by HOGE NEJM July 2004 TBI Incidence Disputed by HOGE NEJM January 2008

    9. 25% - Women Report Sexual Abuse TRIAD: TBI, PTSD, PAIN Suicide: current rates highest in 2 decades Note: National Guard; Reserves omitted Every Day 18 6500/yr. GSW; MVA;

    10. Discussion of BRAIN SYNDROME- TBI vs. Concussion - TBI insult to the brain from external mechanical force. - Concussion injury due to shaking, spinning, or blow. - Playing field injury is NOT a battlefield injury.

    11. HALLMARKS of TBI midbrain/frontal injuries 1. Sensory processing alterations a. Photophobia b. Hyperacusis c. Sensory overload ie., Meijer Syndrome 2. Loss of Mapping skills. Pituitary Dysfunction. Chronic Headaches.

    12. CAFFEINE CONTENT of DRINKS Adding to Brain Insults Coffee - 100 mg. Cola - 35-45 mg. Mt. Dew - 120 mg. Rockstar - 160 mg. RAGE/WYD - 200 mg. Caffeine impairs Brain glucose utilization up to 20 drinks/day ingested in Iraq

    13. BONUS Drink Include: RED BULL - 80 mg/Phenylalanine Red BULL - Germany Cocaine Long term increased ingestion of caffeine may deplete cortisol/adrenalin

    14. Diagnosis of TBI Listen to the Patient: He is telling you the diagnosis. Sir William Osler TBI Diagnosed by HISTORY.

    15. Radiologic Studies: Timing/Technique CT/MRI Notoriously Negative VA standard 2. Diffusion Tensor Imaging Gold Standard Lipton et al. Radiology Aug. 2009 (DAI) 3. PET- SPECT - Hovda UCLA -2007 4. fMRI brain mapping Most veterans tested 1-4 yrs. after last TBI

    16. Blood work pituitary profile- GH; TSH; LH; ACTH ESR, Tox screen. Do NOT miss Dx. Of hypopituitarism which mimics depression.

    17. Neuropsychological Testing May not find unequivocal results Most with mild TBI wont show memory deficits Lack of baseline Helpful in more significant injuries ImPACT, COGSTAT, ANAM, Headminder may be useful

    18. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

    19. Formerly Called Traumatic War Neurosis Shell Shock Railway Spine Stress Syndrome Battle Fatigue Soldiers Heart Traumataphobia

    20. What is a trauma? Experienced, witnessed, or been confronted with an event that involves actual or threatened death or injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of oneself or others Response involved intense fear, horror, or helplessness (DSM-IV)

    21. Statistics of Trauma About 60 percent of men and 50 percent of women have at least one traumatic event in their lives 8 percent of men and 20 percent of women eventually develop PTSD Common to have trauma and subsequent adjustment difficulties, but most do not develop PTSD (Kessler, 1995 from CDP)

    22. Military Statistics on PTSD On assessments after OIF/OEF deployment 6 to 9 percent of active-duty and 6 to 14 percent of NG/Reserve endorse PTSD symptoms on questionnaires (Milliken, Aucherlonie, & Hoge, 2007, per CDP) 15 percent according to RAND study (2008, per CDP) Large number of women with PTSD related to military sexual assault

    23. Flight or Fight Response Evolutionary instinct or response Very adaptive in unsafe environments Not adaptive at home in an everyday, safe environment Two routesfast and slow processing One cortical and one subcortical Engages sympathetic nervous system Blood to limbs Increase in breathing and heart rate Pupils dilate Reflexes sharpen

    24. Two routes for processing danger (Pinel, 2000)

    25. Advantages of subcortical method Quicker Leap, then think Ready for flight or fight Looking for the enemy

    26. Advantages of cortical method Slower Time to think and process information Not reactionary Decide that stimulus is not a risk More suited to common life situations

    27. Avoidance Efforts to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations associated with the trauma Efforts to avoid activities, places, or people that arouse recollections of the trauma Inability to recall an important aspect of the trauma Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities Feeling of detachment or estrangement from others Restricted range of affect (e.g., unable to have loving feelings) Sense of foreshortened future (e.g., does not expect to have a career, marriage, children, or a normal life span)

    28. Behavioral Model of PTSD Mowrers (1947) two-factor theory Both classical and operant conditioning Unconditioned stimulus (explosion) ? Unconditioned response (fear) Conditioned stimulus (sand, heat, people in uniform, guns) ? Conditioned response (fear) Attempt to avoid CS in order to avoid fear, which but actually increases fear response Negative reinforcement is avoidance of the aversive triggers (CS) which leads to increase in the behavior (fear)

    29. DSM-IV Symptoms of PTSD The person has been exposed to a traumatic event Can be conceptualized into three separate symptom categories: reexperiencing (one symptoms in this area needed), avoidance (three symptoms needed), and increased arousal (two symptoms needed) Symptoms last more than one month

    30. Reexperiencing Recurrent and intrusive distressing recollections of the event, including images, thoughts, or perceptions Recurrent distressing dreams of the event Acting or feeling as if the traumatic event were recurring (includes a sense of reliving the experience, illusions, hallucinations, and dissociative flashback episodes, including those that occur on awakening or when intoxicated Intense psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event Physiological reactivity on exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event

    31. Increased Arousal (Sympathetic Nervous Activation) Difficulty falling or staying asleep Irritability or outbursts of anger Difficulty concentrating Hypervigilance Exaggerated startle response

    32. DSM-IV Acute Stress Disorder Experienced a trauma Lasts less than one month In addition to three areas of PTSD, also includes dissociative symptoms (three required): A subjective sense of numbing, detachment, or absence of emotional responsiveness A reduction in awareness of his or her surroundings (e.g., being in a daze) Derealization Depersonalization Dissociative amnesia (i.e., inability to recall an important aspect of the trauma)

    33. Comorbidities (DSM-IV) Major Depressive Disorder Bipolar Disorder Substance-Related Disorders Panic Disorder Agoraphobia Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Generalized Anxiety Disorder Social Phobia Specific Phobia Suicidality TBI Dysfunction in relationships, marriage, work, school Suicidality Malingering/Secondary Gain

    34. Suicide 2nd leading cause of death in military Young, White, Unmarried Male Junior Enlisted Active Duty Drugs/alcohol Firearm No psychiatric history (Washington Post, 2008, per CDP) 1.2% Army Post-Deployment survey had suicidal ideation (Miliken et al., 2007 per CDP) Of completed suicides, most saw a healthcare provider within one month before suicide (USUHS, 2009) 19% of patients with PTSD will attempt suicide (CDP, 2009)

    35. Suicide Dr. Thomas Joiner Why People Die By Suicide 2005 1. Capability 2. Desirability 3. Feeling of burdensomeness.

    36. A.C.E. Ask Care Escort

    37. MUSH Syndrome Hard to differentiate mild TBI from PTSD Sometimes both present Holistic thinking Psychological factors may lead to maintenance of TBI symptoms and medical issues may lead to maintenance of psychological factors

    38. Symptoms more consistent with PTSD Flashbacks Nightmares Intrusive thoughts Avoidance behaviors Exaggerated startle response

    39. HALLMARKS of TBI midbrain/frontal injuries 1. Sensory processing alterations? a. Photophobia b. Hyperacusis c. Sensory overload ie., Meijer Syndrome? 2. Loss of Mapping skills. Pituitary Dysfunction. Chronic Headaches.

    40. PTSD Psychopharmacology

    41. PTSD Psychotherapy Psychotherapy, specifically Prolonged Exposure Therapy (PE) and Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), has been found to be successful and is the gold standard for PTSD treatmentnot medication Stress Inoculation Training, Cognitive Therapy, and Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing also effective although exposure likely mechanism (Foa, Hembree, & Rothbaum, 2007)

    42. Prolonged Exposure In vivo exposure Exposing oneself to fearful situations, people, places Imaginal exposure Telling the story of the trauma in session and listening to the session on tape Breathing retraining Remove avoidance and symptoms will not be maintained (Foa, Hembree, & Rothbaum, 2007).

    43. TREATMENT options for TBI: Amantadine, Ritalin, Dexedrine- for processing Inderal, Elavil for post concussive Electronic aides Bushnell GPS, PDA, iPHONE Setting modifications or organization Routine/schedule Memory strategies (chunking, acronyms, music) Pain management as needed

    44. Adjunctive Treatment Service Education (GI-Bill) Psychoeducation and support groups for self and family Exercise (use caution with TBI) and pleasurable activity scheduling De-toxification from caffeine, stimulants, and alcohol Solutions (action-oriented, specific goals) Family or marital treatments Advocate regarding employment or military problems Stress management Adequate, restful sleep Nutrition Relaxation/Rest

    45. TBI & PTSD Team Primary care physician/specialist Nurse/nurse practitioner Psychiatrist Psychologist/Neuropsychologist Counselor Social Worker Physiatrist Speech-Language Pathologist Occupational Therapist Physical Therapist

    46. We cant all be heroes, because somebody has to sit on the curb and applaud when they go by. Will Rogers

    47. Health care providers to get involved - 1. TRICARE 2. Sliding fee schedule $5 - $10 3. Volunteer for Yellow Ribbon events 4. Be vigilant in your community

    48. Resources Military One Source www.militaryonesource.com (800-342-9647) OHIOCARES (800-761-0868) www.ohiocares.ohio.gov National Suicide Hotline (800-273-TALK) Director of Psychological Health (614-336-7246) Chaplain (614-208-2325) Military Family Life Consultant (614-336-7479 and 614-336-1413)

    49. More resources Defense Centers of Excellence www.dcoe.health.mil Department of Veterans Affairs www.va.gov Center for Deployment Psychology www.deploymentpsych.org National Alliance on Mental Illness www.nami.org American Academy of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation www.aapmr.org Brain Injury Association of Ohio www.biaoh.org Ohio Psychological Association www.ohpsych.org Ohio Psychiatric Association www.ohiopsych.org Ohio Department of Mental Health www.odmh.ohio.gov Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services www.odadas.ohio.gov Ohio Department of Veteran Services www.dvs.ohio.gov

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