Title: William P. Nash, M.D.
1Combat Stress Injuries
William P. Nash, M.D. Captain, Medical Corps,
United States Navy Combat/Operational Stress
Control Coordinator Headquarters, Marine Corps
2Operational Deployment Affects Everyone
- Everyone deployed to a combat zone is affected by
that experience, mentally and physically - Some are affected in positive, growth-enhancing
ways - Some find new meaning in their lives and a
stronger spiritual connection - But others are injured by their operational
experiences, superficially or deeply - Most heal from their operational stress injuries,
just as most physical injuries also heal in time - But a few stress injuries persist long after
deployments have ended
3The Challenge of Operational Stress Management in
the Military and VA
- Discriminating between normal, adaptive responses
to combat or operational stress, and those that
are pathological - Identifying pathological stress reactions early,
but without adding the insult of stigma to the
injury of stress and trauma - Treating stress problems early and effectively,
but without promoting disability
4Most Operational Stress Symptoms Are Transient
60
50.0
50
40
30
20.0
20
9.8
10
7.8
1.6
0
Marines in Iraq
Marines in Iraq
Marines Who
Marines Treated
Marine OIF
with Stress
with Stress
Received Psych
in Garrison
Veterans
Symptoms
Disorders
Tx in Iraq
Treated at VA
In two heavily-engaged infantry companies in an
urban area During OIF-II, Feb 2004 through
March 2005 Mental Health diagnoses only,
FY-02 through FY-05
5Combat/Operational Stress Trajectories Over Time
SYMPTOM BURDEN
Diagram courtesy of Bret Litz, PhD, NCPTSD, Boston
6Stigma Prevents Some Service Members From Getting
Needed Help
- Walter Reed Army Institute of Research study
1709 soldiers and Marines surveyed 3-4 months
after OIF-I - 17 had symptoms of PTSD, depression, or anxiety
- 86 of those with symptoms realized they had a
problem - 45 said they wanted help
- 29 had received mental health help in the past
year - Biggest reasons for not asking for help
- 65 I would be seen as weak.
- 63 My leaders might treat me differently.
- 59 My unit might have less confidence in me.
- 55 I couldnt get time off of work to get
treatment. - 51 My leaders would blame me for the problem.
- 50 It would harm my career.
7Greek Warrior Ideal Arete
- Ancient Greek ideal of the aristocrat warrior
- Features of arete
- Strength
- Valor
- Courage
- Fortitude
- Has continued unchanged in the militaries of the
world - The foundation of all military core values and
identity - For a warrior to develop stress symptoms of any
kind is to fail to live up to the warrior ideal!
Brad Pitt as Achilles in Troy
8The Warrior Ideal and Identity Must Always Be
Respected
- Warriors and veterans with stress symptoms must
be helped to preserve their honor, not be
encouraged to abandon it - Health and pastoral care personnel must be
mindful of military cultures - Use language that minimizes shame without
trivializing potentially disabling problems - U.S. Marine Corps solution stress reactions are
either - Normal, reversible adaptations, or
- Irreversible (but usually self-limiting) stress
injuries - Like physical injuries, stress injuries are never
the sole fault of the individual
9Some of the Manageable Hardships of Operational
Deployment
PHYSICAL Heat Dehydration Illness Cold Sleep deprivation Injury
COGNITIVE Boredom Being hyper-focused Lack of information Information overload
EMOTIONAL Fear of death/injury Fear of failure Feeling devalued Loyalty conflicts
SOCIAL Being away from loved ones and friends Loss of personal space Isolation
SPIRITUAL Loss of clarity about lifes purpose Loss of innocence Loss of trust
10Some of the Manageable Hardships of Homecoming
PHYSICAL Traffic Crowds Being unarmed Access to alcohol and drugs
COGNITIVE Not knowing how much to tell family, friends Loyalty conflicts Boredom
EMOTIONAL Withdrawal from the rush of battle Feeling unsafe Helplessness
SOCIAL Being separated from buddies and leaders Being overwhelmed/misunderstood by family
SPIRITUAL Difficulty making sense of what happened Guilt Conflicting values
11Three Tactics for Normal, Reversible Adaptation
to Stress
ACCOMMODATE NEUTRALIZE DISENGAGE
- Change yourself to better suit the stressor
- This makes you more tolerant to that particular
stressor - This is the goal of all training and education
- Eliminate or reduce the stressor
- This lessens the force and impact of that
particular stressor - A fast way to adapt, but often not possible
- Detach mentally from the environment, yourself,
or both - Examples denial, withdrawal, numbness
- Stores up stress for later processing
12Three Phases of Normal Adaptation
Fatigue, Rebound
Dread, Alarm
Stress Level
Time ?
In the Groove
- This time scale could be mere seconds (e.g., an
all-out sprint), minutes (a single fire-fight),
or months (an entire deployment)
13Common Rebound Changes in Service Members After
Deployment
- Aggressiveness
- De-sensitized to aggression
- Angry, irritable, agitated because of stress
- May even crave violence as excitement
- Relative numbness
- Numb to their own and others suffering
- Numb to their own and others joy
- Becoming easily frustrated or overwhelmed
- Feeling alienated from family and friends at
home - Having a hard time getting back into
home/garrison routines
14Stress Injuries Occur When Stress Is Too Intense
or Lasts Too Long
- Injury
- May be more abrupt
- A derailment, change in self
- Individual loses control
- Irreversible (though can heal)
- Adaptation
- A gradual process
- Can be traced over time
- Individual remains in control
- Reversible
15Three Mechanisms of Stress Injury
16Operational Stress Injuries Correlate with DSM-IV
Diagnoses
17Traumatic Stress Injuries
- Abrupt injuries to the brain and mind
- Due to specific event(s) that provoke
- Terror, horror, or helplessness
- Physiological hyper-arousal
- Dissociation (abrupt and transient loss of mental
integrity) - Damage to necessary or deeply-held beliefs
- Shame or guilt
18Traumatic Events in OIF
- Multi-casualty incidents (SVBIEDs, ambushes)
- Friendly fire
- Death or maiming of children and women
- Seeing gruesome scenes of carnage
- Handling dead bodies and body parts
- Avoidable casualties and losses
- Witnessed or committed atrocities
- Witnessed death/injury of a close friend or
leader - Killing unarmed or defenseless enemy
- Being helpless to defend or counterattack
- Injuries or near misses
- Killing someone up close
19The Greater the Exposure to Combat, the Higher
the Risk for PTSD
Hoge et al. (2004)
20Peri-Traumatic Dissociation
- Definition A stress-induced, abrupt and
transient loss of ability to integrate - Perceptions (external and internal)
- Thoughts, emotions, and behavior
- Conceptions of the self and the world
- Three types or aspects
- Going blank, like in a trance
- Loss of control of ones body (paralysis,
deafness, stuttering, shaking, blindness) - Change in personality (e.g., becoming cruel,
fearless, or childlike) - Always involves a loss of control mentally,
emotionally, and physically
21Beliefs That Can Be Damaged By Traumatic Stress
- Belief in ones basic safety
- Belief in being the master of oneself and ones
environment - Belief in whats right moral order
- Belief that they deserved to die, and we
deserve to live - Belief that our cause is honorable
- Belief that every Marine and Soldier is valued
- Belief in the basic goodness of people
(especially oneself)
22Causes of Shame or Guilt In Traumatic Stress
Injuries
- Failing to act
- Surviving when others did not
- Failing to save or protect others
- Killing or injuring others
- Helplessness
- Loss of control
- Even just having stress symptoms of any kind
23What is Damaged in the Brain in Combat Stress
Injuries?
- Allostatic shifts in set points in brain
neurotransmitter systems due to stress - ? NE activity, and down-regulation of alpha-2
autoreceptors - ? CRF (corticotropin releasing factor) activity
- ? serotonin activity, and up-regulation of
serotonin receptors - ? NPY (neuropeptide-Y) activity
- Hippocampal dysfunction and possible neuronal
damage - Cortisol toxicity to glutamate neurons
- ? BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor)
- Excitotoxicity mediated by glutamate NMDA
receptors
24Summary
- Most warfighters are resilient, and recover
quickly from combat/operational and homecoming
stress - Aiding those with persistent stress problems
requires sensitivity to military cultures
identity - Common normal post-deployment stress problems
include (1) aggression, (2) substance abuse, and
(3) emotional numbness - Stress injuries occur when stress is too
intense or lasts too long - The three mechanisms of stress injury are (1)
trauma, (2) fatigue, and (3) grief - Traumatic stress injuries are comprised of both
biological damage to brain systems and
psychosocial damage to beliefs and self-esteem