Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Difference between revisions
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== Definition/Description | == Definition/Description<sup>1,2,4</sup><sup></sup><sup></sup> == | ||
<span style="letter-spacing: 0.0px">Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disordered characterized by psychological symptoms that continue to be experienced long after a traumatic event. Any physical or psychological trauma can trigger PTSD, but there is most often an involvement of actual or threatened serious injury to the person or someone close to them. The most common traumatic events leading to PTSD are combat, natural disasters, and abuse and victimization, including sexual assault and terrorism. The psychological pattern, characterized by persistent and chronic symptoms that arise in certain individuals in response to such events define this disorder. The three primary symptoms of PTSD are frequent recollections of the event, which have become intrusive to daily life, avoidance of stimuli or situations triggering memories of the event, with a resulting emotional numbness or unresponsiveness, and increased physical arousal with anxiety, including extreme irritability or angry outbursts.</span> | |||
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== Prevalence == | == Prevalence == |
Revision as of 02:04, 4 April 2011
 :
Original Editors - Samantha Sowder from Bellarmine University's Pathophysiology of Complex Patient Problems project.
Lead Editors - Your name will be added here if you are a lead editor on this page. Read more.
Definition/Description1,2,4[edit | edit source]
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disordered characterized by psychological symptoms that continue to be experienced long after a traumatic event. Any physical or psychological trauma can trigger PTSD, but there is most often an involvement of actual or threatened serious injury to the person or someone close to them. The most common traumatic events leading to PTSD are combat, natural disasters, and abuse and victimization, including sexual assault and terrorism. The psychological pattern, characterized by persistent and chronic symptoms that arise in certain individuals in response to such events define this disorder. The three primary symptoms of PTSD are frequent recollections of the event, which have become intrusive to daily life, avoidance of stimuli or situations triggering memories of the event, with a resulting emotional numbness or unresponsiveness, and increased physical arousal with anxiety, including extreme irritability or angry outbursts.
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