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Twin-Diagnosis - Eating Disorder, Substance Abuse and PTSD With Depression and Anxiety



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By : Doris Hill    19 or more times read
Submitted 2010-11-24 00:25:31
The numbers of twin-diagnosis patients, that means that they have more than one serious diagnosis, are increasing dramatically. Will these patients really be referred to as twin-diagnosis when they have more than two co-occurring conditions? Should we see them as having multi-diagnoses? It's not uncommon for a patients to admit with not only substance abuse, an eating disorder, but additionally post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and accompanying anxiety.

Previously the conventional way of thinking was to treat the substance abuse first, then address the eating disorder. It's been long believed that each one co-occurring conditions need to be treated at the same time. If all the conditions are not treated at the identical time, treatment outcomes are usually poor, and what would ordinarily be considered a tiny slip will flip into a cascading event, almost sort of a house of cards, with one slip triggering another one rapidly.

A robust affiliation between eating disorders and substance abuse has been long evident with a majority of girls reporting binge eating and/or bulimia nervosa together with the substance abuse. Some forty-fifty% of all women who have an eating disorder will have a problem with alcohol and medicine either currently or at it slow in their lives. The eating disorder and substance abuse are frequently accompanied with PTSD.

In a very recent piece of analysis by L. R. Cohen, S. F. Greenfield, S. Gordon, T. Killeen, Y. Jiang, and D. Hien, Survey of Eating Disorder Symptoms among Women in Treatment for Substance Abuse, the investigation found that in women with co-occurring substance abuse disorders and PTSD, a very little more than one-third of the ladies were binge eaters as well. The girls who were binge eaters had higher eating disorder, PTSD, and depressive symptomology than those girls in the non- eating disordered group. Researchers also found that progress in the binge-eating group was abundant slower. It stands to reason that the relapse rate would also be higher with the binge eaters.

The researchers said that the ladies with an eating disorder responded differently to cluster treatment than did the PTSD and substance abuse group. They counseled highly individualized treatment plans.

I am forever reading journal articles that report new research in eating disorders, substance abuse, and PTSD, and I found that the greater the severity of childhood trauma and PTSD or Disorder of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified (DESNOS), the sooner the onset of alcoholism and connected problems. When any patient admits to a treatment program with twin-or multiple diagnoses, testing for PTSD and trauma ought to always be within the initial battery of tests (Dom, G., De Wilde, B., Hulstijn, W., Sabbe, B. Traumatic experiences and posttraumatic stress disorders: variations between treatment-seeking early- and late-onset alcoholic patients.)

Complex trauma is that the sort of trauma that is associated with childhood trauma that's usually ongoing. There's another type of trauma that may be traced to a single event, like a war experience, automobile accident, etc. When a shopper has PTSD with an eating disorder, the trauma is mostly advanced trauma. Specific protocols are available for complicated trauma.

Here is one in all the most effective short overviews that I've seen defining advanced trauma. It's from Dr. Felicia Mueller in Seattle. She says that:

"Complex trauma or Disorder of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified (DESNOS)refers to a condition resulting from exposure to multiple traumas or from exposure to high levels of chronic stress. Whereas Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) may be a condition that develops from exposure to a single traumatic event, complex trauma results from multiple exposures to one or additional traumas.

When the human organism is repeatedly exposed to traumatic stress, disruptions will occur in brain functions and structures, endocrinological perform, immunological operate, and central and autonomic nervous system arousal. These biological disruptions interact with psychological, emotional, non secular, and cognitive processes and a selection of disturbances can result that go beyond the re-experiencing, avoidance/numbing, and arousal symptoms that characterize PTSD."
Author Resource:- Dorish Hill has been writing articles online for nearly 2 years now. Not only does this author specialize in Eating Disorders, you can also check out her latest website about:
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