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Kristine Burkman, Ph.D. Staff Psychologist San Francisco VA Medical Center. TBI, PTSD, and Addiction Treating Veterans with Complex Needs. ASAM Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships Content of Activity: ASAM Medical –Scientific Conference 2013. Presentation Outline.
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Kristine Burkman, Ph.D. Staff Psychologist San Francisco VA Medical Center TBI, PTSD, and Addiction Treating Veterans with Complex Needs
ASAM Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships Content of Activity: ASAM Medical –Scientific Conference 2013
Presentation Outline • Definitions • Assessment • Prevalence • Overlapping Symptoms • Treatment Considerations • Suggested Strategies
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) a traumatically induced physiologic disruption of brain function, as manifested by one of the following: • Loss of consciousness • Loss of memory for events immediately before or after the accident • Alteration of mental state at the time of the accident (e.g., feeling dazed, disoriented, or confused) • Focal neurological deficit(s) that may or may not be transient American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (ACRM) KEEP IN MIND: TBI refers to original injury or etiology, there are no symptoms for this diagnosis
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Specifiers: Mild, Moderate, Severe Refers to 24-48 hours following injury. Severity of initial injury ≠ impairment in functioning Prognosis often related to: • Length of loss of consciousness • Length of post traumatic amnesia
TBI Assessment : Glasgow Coma Scale • Verbal response • Oriented to person, place & date = 5 • Converses but is disoriented = 4 • Says inappropriate words = 3 • Says incomprehensible sounds = 2 • No response = 1 SCORING Specifier is based on score within 48 hrs of injury: Severe = 1 - 8 Moderate = 9 - 12 Mild = 13 - 15 • Eye opening • Spontaneous = 4 • To speech = 3 • To painful stimulation = 2 • No response = 1 • Motor response • Follows commands = 6 • Makes localizing movements to pain = 5 • Makes withdrawal movements to pain = 4 • Flexor (decorticate) posturing to pain = 3 • Extensor (decerebrate) posturing to pain = 2 • No response = 1
TBI Assessment • Not routinely assessed in combat situations • VA assesses via self-report months, even years after the event • Screen (4 items, sensitive not specific) • Second level eval (22 items) • Often not documented and military culture may encourage minimization
Prevalence of TBI • 91% of OEF/OIF casualties survive1 • Compared to 84% of Vietnam, 80% WWII • Estimated 22% of returning servicemembers have reported experiencing TBIs and concussions2 • Of those injured, approximately 31% diagnosed w/ TBI3 • 77% of all head injuries are mild TBI4 1Holcomb et al., 2006, 2Terrio et al., 2005, 3Hayward, 2008, 4Fischer, 2010
Risks Associated with TBI • Persons w/ TBI more likely to have 2nd and 3rd TBI1 • Repeat TBIs increase severity and chronicity of symptoms1 • Twice as likely to screen positive for PTSD or depression2 • Increased risk for suicide3 1Center for Disease Control (CDC); 2Maguen, Lau, Madden & Seal, 2012; 3Brenner, Ignacio & Blow, 2011
TBI and Substance Abuse • Complicated literature • Bi-directional relationship between TBI and SUD • Pre-injury pattern of substance use predicts post-injury pattern of use • Substance use impairs rehabilitation and exacerbates symptoms • Increased risk of additional injury
Chronic Stress and Relapse • Co-Occurring Disorders • SUD + Depression, 3-5 time more likely to relapse1 • SUD + PTSD relapse more quickly 2,3 • Co-occurring patterns of relapse 2, 4 • Exposure to Trauma • Probability of relapse increases as the # of traumas types increase5 1Curran et al., 2000; 2Brown et al., 1996; 3Ouimette et al., 1997; 4Curran & Booth, 1999; 5Fraley et al., 1998
Symptoms associated w/ TBI • Loss/increase in appetite • Difficulty concentrating • Forgetfulness • Difficulty making decisions • Slowed thinking, disorganized • Fatigue, loss of energy • Feeling depressed or sad • Difficulty falling or staying asleep • Feeling anxious or tense • Irritability, easily annoyed • Poor frustration tolerance, easily • overwhelmed • Feeling dizzy • Loss of balance • Poor coordination, clumsy • Headaches • Vision Problems • Sensitivity to Light • Nausea • Hearing difficulties • Sensitivity to noise • Numbness • Change in taste and/or smell
Symptoms of PTSD • Re-experiencing • Intrusive images, memories, thoughts • Nightmares • Flashbacks • Emotional distress at reminders • Physical reaction to reminders • Avoidant • Avoiding thinking/talking about trauma • Avoiding situations • Trouble remembering aspects of trauma • Loss of interest in activities used to enjoy • Feeling distant/ cut-off from others • Emotionally numb • Foreshortened sense of future • Hyperarousal • Insomnia • Irritability • Difficulty concentrating • Hypervigilence • Startle response
Common Challenges Frontal Lobe Inhibited Impulse Control Planning Abstraction Judgment Limbic System Activated Emotion Memory
Overlapping and Distinct Symptoms • Sleep problems • Dizziness • Headaches • Memory problems • Light sensitivity • Loss of interest • Feeling down, hopeless • Irritability • Emotional numbing • Avoidance • Nightmares • Hypervigilence Maguen, Lau, Madden, Seal, 2012
Barriers to Engagement • Missed appointments • Avoidance, memory problems, difficulty w/ initiation, inability to organize effectively, relapse • Difficulty tracking or recalling skills • Frustrated w/ pace, embarrassment in session • Crisis-prone • Relationships, work/school, legal, psychiatric crises • Distorted expectations and beliefs
Trauma Treatment w/ TBI Phase Based Model of Recovery • Titrate level of emotional content re: trauma material • Assess level impairment re: memory and emotion regulation to inform when and how to approach trauma processing Stabilization Processing Integration • -Psychoeducation • Coping skills • Psychopharmacology -Construction of narrative -Cognitive restructuring -Exposure • Interpersonal work • Insight/existential • Symptom maintenance Establish “safety” Improve self-regulation Consolidation of memory Habituation of fear response Reconnect with others/life Meaning of experience
Concerns re: Trauma Processing • Fear of symptoms exacerbation • Drop out rates • Insufficient training for protocol among clinicians • “Fragile” patients • Chaotic/ high risk situations KEEP IN MIND: Mild TBI should resolve fully within 6 months, debate over cause of ongoing symptoms Integrated treatment of TBI, PTSD and SUD is recommended!
Strategies: Therapeutic Stance • Flexibility • Persistent outreach • Validate, reassure, challenge • Acknowledge problems as real to veteran • Education re: relapse, heterogeneity of injuries, expectation of recovery from mTBI • Goal of recovery not adjustment to permanent disability • Multidisciplinary team • Harm reduction
Strategies: Problem Solving Memory & Learning Processing Speed Frontal Lobe Damage • Write it down • Organize • Visualize Info • Attach emotion • Repetition • Plan Ahead • Allow extra time • Accuracy over speed • Avoid multitasking • Flexible deadlines • Include support members • Emotional awareness & management • Routine • Encourage persistence
Strategies: Communication • Keep it simple • Go slow • Write it down • Encourage veteran to communicate back what he/she understands • Repeat
Thank you for serving our Veterans! Questions? Kristine.Burkman2@va.gov