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Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is a type of anxiety disorder that occurs after a traumatic event such as a natural disaster, war or assault.

263 Questions

What seems to be the most successful add medication?

Ritalin, boosting a higher success rate than all other methylphenidates, is the most successful ADD medication. Although, usually not preferred anymore due to many undesirable side-effects.

What does post-traumatic stress disorder feel like?

PTSD symptoms are distinct and prolonged stress reactions that naturally occur during a highly stressful event.

Did Achilles and Odysseus have PTSD in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey?

Some would say so. Check out Jonathan Shay's booksAchilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Characterand

Odysseus in America: Combat Trauma and the Trials of Homecoming.

Who is more likely to be diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder?

PTSD can affect anyone, of any background, it is not a discriminatory disorder. It could present itself more often in people who've grown up in abusive homes, but then again, there are a lot of abuse survivors who don't develop PTSD.

It may be more susceptible to people who naturally live in the past or future rather than the present, and people who daydream a lot or have vivid imaginations. Because of the way a PTSD flashback works, and how it takes you out of the present moment and makes you relive a traumatic event, someone who is naturally intuitive and imaginative may find themselves developing PTSD if they ever were exposed to trauma. But really, it can affect anyone.

What is MTBI?

Concussion, which is also called mild traumatic brain injury or MTBI, can result from even minor blows to the head.

Will post traumatic stress disorder go away on its own?

If it is true PTSD, it probably won't go away on it's own. A simplified explanation of PTSD is that the event was so traumatic that your mind does not want to process it. However, events need to be processed in order to be put in long term memory instead of being kept in the present. When the event comes to surface in your mind, your mind doesn't allow it to be processed, and the event is avoided. This allows temporary relief, but ultimately ensures that the event will resurface again.

So, the event needs to be processed in order to "get rid of" PTSD.

Is desperate a trait?

Desperate describes an emotional state of being, which is typically temporary, but some people have circumstances involving either their health (physical, mental, or both) or their life circumstances (such as being under intense persecution by others as in totalitarian countries), which can cause their desperation to become chronic, almost qualifying as a trait. There is a mental illness called Borderline Personality Disorder which causes its sufferers to feel desperate much of the time, making their desperation a trait unless treated effectively through therapy.

To be desperate is to be in an intense, powerful state of need and distress, tinged with encroaching despair, that arises from the certain knowledge that an absolute requirement for one's sanity, well-being, or even life, is highly unlikelyto be met. A desperate person may take aggressive or self-endangering actions driven by this state. People in this state tend to be wild-eyed, disheveled, and unable to calm down or think/talk rationally.

Depending upon the cause of a desperate person's state, he/she may need counseling. But, if one is desperate for a definite physical thing, for example, if a person who has Type I Diabetes is all out of Insulin, or if one is lost in the woods at nightfall and is rapidly developing hypothermia, then the person must find a way to satisfy that need as soon as possible, particularly if the end result of not doing so is likely to be death! All other concerns must be placed on hold.

The instinct for desperation (which itself is a trait of human beings) has helped the human race to avoid becoming extinct, by driving humans to focus intently upon the satisfaction of a dire need to the exclusion of all other, distracting things, during a true life-or-death emergency.

How do you know if you have PTSD?

There is only one way to know for sure, and that is to be tested by a professional doctor/psychologist. However, some signs of PTSD include: unusual irritability/anger, feelings of guilt and hopelessness, losing interest in previously enjoyed hobbies, unusual nervousness, self-harming, clinical depression, feelings of fear, flashbacks, hallucinations, panic attacks, severe anxiousness, trust issues, inability to sleep normally (insomnia), frequent night terrors/nightmares, thoughts of suicide (please get help right away), stressful feelings, blackouts, unusual headaches, isolation, and lack of emotional response. Like I said, there is only one way to find out for sure. And, if you or someone you know is having suicidal thoughts, please call 1-800-273-8255 (U.S.)

Are post traumatic stress disorder and schizophrenia related?

ANSWER 1 :Not directly. Flashbacks and similar episodes are not the same things, nor caused by the same influences, as schizophrenia.

However trauma, especially to the head, can cause or trigger schizophrenia and similar problems, while at the same time creating PTS. Thus, the two sometimes occur together. Also, since schizophrenia usually manifests at about the same age as young soldiers tend to be injured, and young civilians to be involved in accidents, etc., there are doubtless some cases that would have developed anyway, without trauma.

There is a lot left to learn.

ANSWER 2 : Just to expand on above answer, NO they are not related apart from both being mental health issues affecting humans. But schizophrenia is essentially a general term for a group of psychotic illnesses in which inheritance has been found to play a role in its development, and its onset usually occurs between the age of 15 and 30 being on average 5 years later with women than with men. It is the commonest of all psychotic illnesses affecting about 1% of the total human population in all nations.

Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on the other hand is a specific form of anxiety/depression that can affect men and women but only comes on as a consequence of somebody having suffered a very stressful or frightening experience in their life which may happen to them at any age. Common causes of PTSD include natural disasters such as being in an earthquake, violence, torture, rape and suffering serious personal injury such as from a serious road accident. PTSD can also result from military combat, where it may be termed shell shock.

For a clinical diagnosis of schizophrenia to be made on you, you must have continuous signs of a profound break with reality as well as evidence of fragmentation of your personality for at least 6 months during some period in your life, and this one or more six month periods must include at least one phase of hallucinations (such as hearing voices or seeing faces that are not real), delusions or marked thought disorders.

Whereas a clinical diagnosis of PTSF may be made if in your own life you have recurring memories or nightmares of the event, a sense of personal isolation, disturbed sleep and inability to concentrate but without losing contact with reality. With PTSF you may also experience deadening of your feelings or irritability and sometimes painful feelings of guilt in you believing you are personally to blame for some terrible situation affecting others as well as yourself. This can sometimes build up in you to form a true clinical depressive illness. With PTSF these symptoms may begin immediately after the trauma or may develop after a few months or later.

Can ptsd kill you?

It can, some people go really crazy that they just kill them selves.

Why would someone experience symptoms of PTSD?

Post traumatic stress disorder occurs in people who have seen traumatizing events. This is common in soldier who have returned from the battlefields of war. They have seen dead people or really injured people and have anxiety a lot.

If you have PTSD depression anxiety and on daily meds that work does it mean you have to take it the rest of your life?

No. PTSD some cases may be cured and/or controlled with therapy. Not all cases of PTSD, just as not all people are the same. Some Dr's like to just put you on a medication and that's that. Most will put you on a medication and monitor your therapy progress. As you make progress with therapy they may and should ease you off of your meds. Good luck and God bless.

What should a leader do if a soldier is suspect of have PTSD?

a leader should allow this shouldier to have sufficient rest.And again have for about 3 months vacation ,if people wonder who wrote this note , it is i,susan badmus from arica I AM JUST 12.

What phobia is the fear of people?

The correct term is Anthropophobia (fear of people or society), or Sociophobia (fear of social situations).