Abstract

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common complication of an ICU admission. Rarely is there a continuation of care, which is aimed at screening for and treating this debilitating disease. Current treatment options for PTSD are held back by inconsistent efficacy, poor evidence, and a lack of understanding of its psychopathology. Without ‘gold standard’ assessment techniques to diagnose PTSD after an ICU admission, the development of care pathways is hindered. This paper advocates for two interwoven advances in psychiatric care (specifically for PTSD) after ICU: (1) incorporate the monitoring and treating of psychiatric co-morbidities during extended patient follow-up, and (2) rapidly adopting the latest research to maximize its benefit. The discovery that memories were not fixed, but malleable to change, set off a sequence of experiments that have revolutionized the approach to treating PTSD. It is hoped that the phenomenon of reconsolidation can be exploited therapeutically. In the act of remembering and re-storing traumatic memories, propranolol can act to dissociate the state of sympathetic arousal from their recollection. Often, ICU patients have multiple physical co-morbidities that may be exacerbated, or their treatment disrupted, by such a pervasive psychological condition. The rapid uptake of new techniques, aimed at reducing PTSD after ICU admission, is necessary to maximize the quality of care given to patients. Increasingly, the realization that the role of intensive care specialists may extend beyond the ICU is changing clinical practice. As this field advances, intensivists and psychiatrists alike must collaborate by using the latest psychopharmacology to treat their patients and combat the psychological consequences of experiencing the extremes of physiological existence.

Highlights

  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is triggered after experiencing one or more traumatic events

  • With a prevalence of 5% to 64% among patients discharged from the ICU, this figure rivals the chances of developing PTSD after surviving cancer (1.9% to 39%) and a terrorist attack (30% to 40%) [1,2,3]

  • The link between the formation of memories, their maintenance, and how they relate to the symptomatology of PTSD has been studied

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Summary

Introduction

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is triggered after experiencing one or more traumatic events. The reconsolidation effect With the idea that memories must be reactivated before they can become liable to change, Brunet and colleagues [41] asked patients with chronic PTSD to describe their trauma in a script preparation session They were immediately given a single dose of ‘post-retrieval’ propranolol. Trauma-focused psychological (for example, cognitive behavioral therapy) and pharmacological (for example, paroxetine) therapies should be employed alongside the latest research endorsing propranolol-facilitated affective dissociation from traumatic memories As this field advances, intensivists and psychiatrists alike should collaborate in using the latest psychopharmacology to treat their patients, combating the psychological consequences of experiencing the extremes of physiological existence. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests

20. Reed SB
36. Nader K
42. Pitman RK
48. Loftus EF
Findings
71. Bell J

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