For those who experience it, post-traumatic stress disorder can be an incredibly debilitating disease that can prevent you from living a full life. This disorder can bring back moments of severe stress so clearly that it is almost as though you are reliving
moment all over again.First diagnosed in war veterans, post-traumatic stress disorder was initially named "shell shock" then "battle fatigue". However, by
time of
conflict in Vietnam, it was given
name "post-traumatic stress disorder" (PTSD) in order to give a clearer idea of what exactly is at work. As well, it is not only found in war veterans. In fact, it can be seen in people who were abused as children, rape victims, people who have to clean up after disaster, or anyone else who has undergone severe stress at any point in their lives.
Unfortunately,
treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder is still in its infancy. Psychologists, psychiatrists, and neurologists are still coming to grips with
disease and its causes and effects, but they are learning new things constantly.
In a strictly biochemical sense, PTSD has its root causes at
moment of stress itself. It seems that at moments of extreme stress,
biochemical system in charge of adjusting to stress is reset, like a computer. It is as though
system is so overloaded that it has to shut itself down and restart. Unfortunately, this also causes
mind to quickly return to that moment when it had to start and stop, which can cause flashbacks to
moments when
shock occurred.
The other results of post-traumatic stress disorder include anger, depression, anxiety, substance abuse, memory problems including amnesia, or any of a host of other mental disorders. Unfortunately, many of these disorders are treated individually without concern for
root cause. This is particularly worrisome because approximately 3.6% of adults between
ages of 18 and 54 are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and
vast majority of them go undiagnosed and untreated. As well, women are twice as likely as men to experience PTSD after a sudden shock.
For those who have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, there are some ways to treat it. The most common form of treatment is through psychotherapy. A therapist has several tools at his or her disposal and can work with
sufferer to root out
causes of
disorder and help cure it. As well, a psychiatrist is
best person to talk to in order to actually diagnose PTSD in
first place, helping
sufferer to at least understand what is happening. Knowing what is wrong is
first step to curing it, after all.