Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Morphine May Help Traumatic Stress
By BENEDICT CAREY Doctors have long hoped to discover a “morning-after pill” to blunt the often disabling emotional fallout from traumatic experiences. Now it appears that they have had one on hand all along: morphine. In a large study of combat casualties in Iraq, Navy researchers reported Wednesday that prompt treatment with morphine cut in half the chances that troops would develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress later on. Other opiates are likely to have similar effects, experts said. In previous work, researchers had found that larger doses of morphine given to children with severe burns also reduced post-traumatic symptoms, like flashbacks, depression and jumpiness. These symptoms have become lasting in about one in eight service members returning from Iraq. The new study, appearing in The New England Journal of Medicine, supports the standard practice in settings like the battlefield and emergency rooms, where morphine is often used readily. But experts say it may have implications for the timing of treatment and for a wider variety of traumas, like those resulting from rape or muggings. “This idea that medicine can be used in the wake of a trauma to diminish the risk of developing a significant psychiatric disorder is incredibly important,” said an expert who was not connected with the study, Dr. Glenn Saxe, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School and director of the Center for Refugee Trauma and Resilience at Children’s Hospital Boston who conducted the studies on burn patients. “If the findings hold up,” he said, “the implications are huge and go well beyond the military” — for example, to civilian hospitals, where victims of rape and other terrifying ordeals may benefit. Dr. Saxe and other experts cautioned that any benefit must be stacked up against the drugs’ risks: they are habit-forming with repeated use, and can blur memories of events that can be life-changing. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Keith wrote:
In a large study of combat casualties in Iraq, Navy researchers reported Wednesday that prompt treatment with morphine cut in half the chances that troops would develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress later on. Other opiates are likely to have similar effects, experts said. Works for me... |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
then why does CAP support it occicers lying on behalf of the Army and libeling n US Army vet | Policy | |||
then why does CAP support it occicers lying on behalf of the Army and libeling n US Army vet | Policy | |||
Can you solve this 2? | Antenna | |||
Why you can't solve this 2(bad) | Antenna |