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What
are the symptoms of PTSD?
The Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) outlines the following possible symptoms
of post traumatic stress disorder and classifies them into three categories:
re-experiencing, avoidance, and arousal. These are symptoms that last
for longer than one month, cause significant psychological distress
and hinder one’s ability to function.
There is no set
time frame for those who have PTSD to begin showing symptoms after a
traumatic event occurs, because it’s possible to suffer trauma
and not experience symptoms until months or years later when something
– a sight, sound, word, or similar experience – brings back
a traumatic memory. Stress can also accumulate over time until one “final
straw” brings all the symptoms to the surface1.
Recognizing the
symptoms of PTSD is integral in getting professional help, and The Ghost
Rider Foundation aims to be a useful resource in helping veterans understand
PTSD and get appropriate treatment as soon as possible. The symptoms
associated with PTSD lead one to feel alone and helpless. Hopefully,
by identifying with the following symptoms, veterans will see that they
are not alone in their feelings, they aren’t crazy, and there
is treatment available to recover from their trauma.
1. Re-experiencing
Someone with PTSD
will persistently re-experience the traumatic event, and the act of
re-experiencing can manifest itself in a variety of ways. One might
have continual and disturbing recollections of the traumatic event,
which could include thoughts or images relating to the event that occurred.
Having recurrent
dreams about the traumatic event is also a form of re-experiencing.
Another form is feeling as though the traumatic event is happening again,
which could take the form of flashbacks, illusions, or hallucinations2.
The National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder explains that
these episodes of re-experiencing can be triggered by a sights, sounds,
smells or even words that can be reminders of the traumatic event. For
instance, hearing a motor vehicle backfire can remind a veteran of the
sound of gunfire. Seeing a news report on an event similar to the traumatic
event experienced could also cause one to relive the traumatic event3.
If being exposed
to these sights and sounds or internal thoughts or dreams causes intense
psychological distress, then that is a sign that person is re-experiencing
the event and could have PTSD. Another symptom is to physically react
to these cues2. For example, one veteran can’t attend July 4 celebrations
because he says the sound of the fireworks is an auditory trigger –
a sound that is similar to that of combat – that would make him
begin to cry, shake, and sweat4.
2.
Avoidance
Avoidance and numbing
are also key signs of post traumatic stress disorder. A person will
experience avoidance by making an effort to prevent thoughts and feelings
associated with the trauma from taking shape. This leads to avoiding
conversations associated with the trauma, including not wanting to talk
about the trauma at all in order to keep those feelings suppressed.
Avoiding activities,
places, and people that would bring about recollections of the event
also is a symptom. For example, a veteran might avoid other veterans
because it reminds him or her of the traumatic event. One also might
not be able to recollect an important aspect of the trauma. This is
the brain’s way of avoiding the intense psychological distress
associated with the event.
Numbing is also
an integral symptom when diagnosing post traumatic stress disorder.
Signs of numbing involve behavior that was not present before the traumatic
event occurred, which includes a significantly decreased interest in
activities that would be routine or normal to participate in. One might
feel detached or estranged from other people, and also might have a
smaller range of emotions, leaving him or her unable to, for instance,
feel love.
An inability to
see a future also is a symptom of numbing. One predicts a short future
for him or herself, and does not expect to have a normal life span,
get married, have children, or have a career2.
3.
Arousal
Continual symptoms
of increased arousal which were not present before the traumatic event
occurred also are a sign of post traumatic stress disorder. An inability
to fall asleep or stay asleep, irritability or outbursts of anger, and
difficulty concentrating are some of the possible symptoms of PTSD2.
One might have nightmares related to the traumatic event, making sleep
undesirable for someone trying to avoid flashbacks of the experience.
A heightened state of arousal can come about from any feelings of fear
or anxiety, so recollections of a traumatic event and all the feelings
associated with it can surface simply from a situation where someone
with PTSD feels anxious or afraid and not necessarily from an obvious
trigger such as a sight or sound1.
There also could
have been biological responses to the trauma that, when occur again,
serve as a trigger for the traumatic event. For instance, when the traumatic
event occurred, the person most likely had an elevated heart rate if
they felt intense fear. Activities associated with an elevated heart
rate, such as exercising, could serve as a trigger for recollections
of the trauma1.
Hypervigilance is
another symptom of PTSD, which means one has a heightened sense of awareness
of his or her environment5.
This is where the next symptom, an exaggerated startle response3, stems
from, because one is much more aware of the sights, sounds, and people
around him or her. One constantly feels as though he or she is in a
state of danger. For some, the backfire of a motor vehicle blends into
background noise. But if that is a trigger for a traumatic event for
a veteran because of its resemblance to gunfire, he or she will have
a much more profound response and feel threatened.
The National Center
for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder refers to this symptom as hyperarousal,
whereby one is always on alert and anticipates danger. Because the initial
event often involves feelings of fear and helplessness, one constantly
fears for his or her own safety and always feels on guard3.
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