Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (April)

Date of Issue: 04/01/2004 | Volume: 2 | Number: 4

Issue Links: | Editorial Information

Strangely enough, there are only two medications FDA-approved for PTSD--Zoloft (sertraline) and Paxil (paroxetine). This is despite the fact that PTSD is a common problem, with a lifetime prevalence of between 5 and 10%, and can be extremely debilitating.

In This Issue

Article

SSRIs for PTSD: Just How Effective Are They?

Topics: PTSD

Strangely enough, there are only two medications FDA-approved for PTSD--Zoloft (sertraline) and Paxil (paroxetine). This is despite the fact that PTSD is a common problem, with a lifetime prevalence of between 5 and 10%, and can be extremely debilitating.

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Article

Therapy for PTSD: What You Should Know

Topics: PTSD

As you can see from this issue's lead article, SSRIs help alleviate core PTSD symptoms, but hardly roar by the placebo response rate in clinical trials. And anytime the placebo effect is this robust, you can predict that psychotherapy will be very effective. This is certainly true in the world of PTSD.

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Article

Off-Label Nostrums for PTSD

Topics: PTSD

Let's face it, when our patients are in distress, we use whatever meds we think might be helpful, whether the FDA has given its blessing or not. Not a single one of the nostrums discussed in this article is FDA-approved for PTSD, but they are all commonly used when nothing else works.

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Expert Q&A

Edna Foa, Ph.D., On Therapy for PTSD

Topics: PTSD

TCR: Dr. Foa, how common is PTSD? Dr. Foa: The epidemiological studies tell us that 60% of men in the United States and over 50% of women have been traumatized at least once in their lifetime.

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Anecdotes From The Field

Using SSRIs For PTSD

Topics: PTSD

Laura Wolfe, M.D., is an adult psychiatrist who works for Kaiser Permanente in Santa Clara, California. Her experience treating a man with PTSD is helpful in understanding the role of SSRIs.

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