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Glossary›Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Glossary

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

A psychiatric condition triggered by experiencing or witnessing traumatic events, characterized by intrusive memories, avoidance behaviors, negative mood changes, and heightened stress responses.

What is Post Traumatic Stress Disorder?

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric condition that develops in some individuals following exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence. The disorder manifests through four primary symptom clusters: intrusive re-experiencing of the traumatic event through flashbacks, nightmares, or distressing memories; persistent avoidance of trauma-related stimuli; negative alterations in cognition and mood; and marked changes in arousal and reactivity including hypervigilance, exaggerated startle response, and sleep disturbance. PTSD differs from normal stress reactions by its duration—symptoms must persist for more than one month—and its functional impairment, significantly disrupting work, relationships, or daily activities.

The condition affects an estimated 6-7% of the general population at some point in their lives, though rates vary considerably based on trauma type and demographic factors. Combat veterans, sexual assault survivors, and individuals exposed to life-threatening accidents represent populations with elevated risk. Not everyone exposed to trauma develops PTSD; factors including prior trauma history, genetic predisposition, neurobiological stress response patterns, and availability of social support influence vulnerability.

Origins & Lineage

While traumatic stress reactions have been documented throughout human history, formal recognition as a distinct medical condition emerged gradually. Greek historian Herodotus described an Athenian soldier in the Battle of Marathon (490 BCE) who became permanently blind after witnessing a comrade’s death, despite sustaining no physical injury. Military physicians during the American Civil War (1861-1865) documented “soldier’s heart” or “Da Costa’s syndrome,” characterized by anxiety, palpitations, and exhaustion among combatants.

World War I introduced the term “shell shock,” initially attributed to concussive brain damage from artillery explosions. British physician Charles Myers published observations in The Lancet in 1915 describing psychological collapse in soldiers with no physical wounds. By 1918, recognition grew that psychological trauma, not merely physical concussion, drove these reactions. World War II and the Korean War produced diagnoses of “combat fatigue” or “war neurosis.”

The Vietnam War era catalyzed modern PTSD recognition. Unlike previous conflicts, returning veterans experienced delayed symptom onset and chronic difficulties that existing diagnostic categories failed to capture. Advocacy by veterans’ groups and psychiatrists including Chaim Shatan and Robert Jay Lifton led to PTSD’s formal inclusion in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition (DSM-III) in 1980. This landmark classification acknowledged that trauma exposure—not individual weakness—caused the condition, and recognized that civilians experiencing rape, natural disasters, and accidents exhibited similar patterns.

How It’s Practiced

PTSD is not a practice but a medical diagnosis requiring clinical assessment by qualified mental health professionals. Diagnosis follows criteria established in the DSM-5 (2013) or the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11), requiring documentation of trauma exposure, specific symptom patterns across the four clusters, duration exceeding one month, and functional impairment.

What practitioners and individuals do engage with are evidence-based treatments. Trauma-focused psychotherapies represent first-line interventions. Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) guides individuals through examining and reframing trauma-related beliefs. Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy involves systematic, repeated recounting of traumatic memories and gradual confrontation of avoided situations to reduce fear conditioning. Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) combines trauma memory recall with bilateral sensory stimulation—typically guided eye movements—to facilitate memory processing.

Pharmacological interventions include selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as sertraline and paroxetine, the only FDA-approved medications for PTSD. Complementary approaches increasingly incorporate somatic and mindfulness-based practices: trauma-sensitive yoga, developed specifically for PTSD populations, emphasizes interoceptive awareness and choice in movement. Somatic Experiencing, developed by Peter Levine, focuses on releasing trauma stored in bodily tension patterns. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) teaches present-moment awareness to reduce rumination and hypervigilance.

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Today

Contemporary seekers encounter PTSD awareness and support through multiple channels. Veterans Affairs medical centers operate specialized PTSD clinical teams and residential treatment programs throughout the United States. The National Center for PTSD, established in 1989, provides evidence-based resources, clinician training, and public education.

Civilian trauma treatment increasingly integrates contemplative and somatic practices alongside conventional psychotherapy. Trauma-sensitive yoga classes, offered through organizations including the Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute, adapt traditional yoga forms with specific attention to choice, empowerment, and present-moment awareness. EMDR training certifies thousands of therapists internationally. Mindfulness-based interventions appear in both clinical settings and community wellness centers.

Research institutions investigate emerging treatments: MDMA-assisted psychotherapy has shown promising results in Phase 3 clinical trials, with the FDA granting breakthrough therapy designation in 2017. Psychedelic-assisted therapies using psilocybin and ketamine are under investigation at institutions including Johns Hopkins University and Yale University. Neurofeedback, virtual reality exposure therapy, and stellate ganglion block procedures represent additional experimental approaches.

Advocacy organizations including the PTSD Alliance, Sidran Institute, and International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies provide education, treatment directories, and support networks. Online communities and peer support groups connect individuals navigating recovery.

Common Misconceptions

PTSD is not synonymous with general stress or difficult experiences. Clinical diagnosis requires exposure to specific trauma types and a constellation of persistent symptoms causing functional impairment. Brief adjustment difficulties following stressful life events, while distressing, do not constitute PTSD.

PTSD does not indicate personal weakness or character deficiency. Neurobiological research demonstrates measurable changes in brain structure and function following trauma, particularly in the amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex regions involved in threat detection and emotion regulation. The condition reflects normal human neurobiology responding to abnormal circumstances.

Not all trauma survivors develop PTSD. Epidemiological studies indicate that while approximately 60-70% of adults experience at least one traumatic event during their lifetime, only 6-7% develop PTSD. The disorder represents one possible outcome along a spectrum of post-trauma responses.

PTSD is not untreatable. Evidence-based psychotherapies produce significant symptom reduction in approximately 50-60% of patients completing treatment. Recovery trajectories vary; some individuals achieve full remission while others experience substantial improvement with residual symptoms.

The condition is not exclusively associated with combat. While military trauma receives significant attention, the majority of PTSD cases result from other traumas including sexual assault, childhood abuse, serious accidents, and natural disasters. Women show approximately twice the lifetime prevalence of men, primarily due to higher rates of sexual violence exposure.

How to Begin

Individuals suspecting PTSD should pursue formal assessment by a licensed mental health professional—psychiatrist, psychologist, or clinical social worker—trained in trauma treatment. The PTSD Alliance website (www.ptsdalliance.org) and the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (www.istss.org) maintain searchable treatment provider directories.

For initial education, The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk provides accessible, comprehensive exploration of trauma’s psychological and physiological impacts and evidence-based treatment approaches. Waking the Tiger by Peter Levine introduces somatic perspectives on trauma healing. The National Center for PTSD website (www.ptsd.va.gov) offers free educational materials, screening tools, and mobile applications including PTSD Coach.

Veterans can access services through their local VA medical center PTSD clinic or by calling the Veterans Crisis Line. The Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN) operates a national sexual assault hotline (800-656-4673) with trauma-informed crisis support and treatment referrals.

Those exploring complementary practices should seek trauma-specific adaptations: trauma-sensitive yoga rather than general yoga classes, therapists certified in EMDR or Somatic Experiencing rather than general talk therapy. The Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute maintains a directory of certified trauma-sensitive yoga facilitators.

Recovery typically requires professional guidance. Self-help resources complement but do not replace evidence-based treatment for clinically significant PTSD.

Related terms

somatic experiencingemdr therapytrauma sensitive yogamindfulness based stress reductionshadow workinner child healing
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