F43.1
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (ICD-10)
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F43.1 Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder
This arises as a delayed and/or protracted response
to a stressful event or situation (either short- or long-lasting) of an
exceptionally threatening or catastrophic nature, which is likely to cause
pervasive distress in almost anyone (e.g. natural or man-made disaster,
combat, serious accident, witnessing the violent death of others, or being
the victim of torture, terrorism, rape, or other crime).
Predisposing factors such as personality traits
(e.g. compulsive, asthenic) or previous history of neurotic illness may
lower the threshold for the development of the syndrome or aggravate its
course, but they are neither necessary nor sufficient to explain its occurrence.
Typical symptoms include episodes of repeated
reliving of the trauma in intrusive memories ("flashbacks") or dreams,
occurring against the persisting background of a sense of "numbness" and
emotional blunting, detachment from other people, unresponsiveness to surroundings,
anhedonia, and avoidance of activities and situations reminiscent of the
trauma. Commonly there is fear and avoidance of cues that remind the sufferer
of the original trauma. Rarely, there may be dramatic, acute bursts of
fear, panic or aggression, triggered by stimuli arousing a sudden recollection
and/or re-enactment of the trauma or of the original reaction to it.
There is usually a state of autonomic hyperarousal
with hypervigilance, an enhanced startle reaction, and insomnia. Anxiety
and depression are commonly associated with the above symptoms and signs,
and suicidal ideation is not infrequent. Excessive use of alcohol or drugs
may be a complicating factor.
The onset follows the trauma with a latency
period which may range from a few weeks to months (but rarely exceeds 6
months). The course is fluctuating but recovery can be expected in the
majority of cases. In a small proportion of patients the condition may
show a chronic course over many years and a transition to an enduring personality
change.
Diagnostic Guidelines
This disorder should not generally be diagnosed
unless there is evidence that it arose within 6 months of a traumatic event
of exceptional severity. A "probable" diagnosis might still be possible
if the delay between the event and the onset was longer than 6 months,
provided that the clinical manifestations are typical and no alternative
identification of the disorder (e.g. as an anxiety or obsessive-compulsive
disorder or depressive episode) is plausible. In addition to evidence of
trauma, there must be a repetitive, intrusive recollection or re-enactment
of the event in memories, daytime imagery, or dreams. Conspicuous emotional
detachment, numbing of feeling, and avoidance of stimuli that might arouse
recollection of the trauma are often present but are not essential for
the diagnosis. The autonomic disturbances, mood disorder, and behavioral
abnormalities all contribute to the diagnosis but are not of prime importance.
The late chronic sequelae of devastating stress,
i.e. those manifest decades after the stressful experience, should be classified
under F62.0.
Includes:
Source: The ICD-10 Classification
of Mental and Behavioural Disorders
World Health Organization, Geneva,
1992
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