Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 3 | Page 23

VIOLENCE TRAUMATIC Stress Eric Lydon, MD Edvard Munch, Aften på Karl Johan, 1892. © Munch-museet / Munch-Ellingsen gruppen / BONO “I have never been in the Army or seen combat, how can I have PTSD?” I have had patients ask me this ques- tion on numerous occasions after discussing their diagnosis at the conclusion of an initial interview. There is a perception among people that Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a diagnosis reserved only for those who have lived through the terrors of war, but that is not at all the case. The trauma could be any event in which the individual witnessed death, or was threatened with death, severe injury, or violence in a whole host of ways. In my practice, the most common trauma that results in a diagnosis of PTSD is sexual abuse and molestation. The stress of living through such horrific events, or the fear of experiencing bodily injury or harm after such an exposure will increase ongoing anxiety. This can lead to a wide range of very unpleasant symptoms. The act does not always have to be experi- enced or witnessed by the individual for them to have symptoms of anxiety, depression, PTSD or another psychiatric disorder. The repeated stories of violence or knowing someone who suffered from a horrific event awakens our senses to the possibility of the same thing happening to us. Even going to a concert or ballgame where we are subjected to searches of handbags, our pockets, and having to pass through metal detectors make us all too aware that there is the possibility of some pending act that raises our arousal and puts us on edge. Violence has become part of everyday life. The TV brings horrific images of school shootings, murders, and threats in the form of racist marches in our cities. We watch families being forcibly separated and victims being gunned down by police, on a far too frequent basis these days. These images of violence can have a profound effect on the psyche of our citizens. After a recent school shooting, a news report featured a middle school child who expressed that she knew this was going to happen at her school one day. When people begin to fear daily that their very lives are in jeopardy, increased anxiety, depression, insecurity and panic can ensue. The effects of the trauma are profound and long-lasting. Treat- ment, for those who seek it, is usually very lengthy and requires a combination of medication and therapy. The therapy work can be extremely difficult because people get uncomfortable discussing their symptoms and reliving the experiences. Diagnostically, the criteria of PTSD include avoiding things or places that remind the victim of the trauma. Flashbacks are a common and troubling occurrence for victims of trauma, and therapy may trigger these flashbacks or bring to mind memories of events that are wished (continued on page 22) AUGUST 2018 21