Friday, August 10, 2012

Wounded Times 5th Year of tracking PTSD

August 10, 2007 had the first news report I put up on Wounded Times.
Vets center healing invisible wounds from different wars
East Valley Tribune
August 10, 2007
New Mesa Vets center healing invisible wounds
Mary K. Reinhart, Tribune

For Mike Saye and Daryl Cox, it was the Iraq War that unearthed the horrors of combat. The Vietnam veterans struggled for nearly 30 years with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, but never sought help until young Americans started fighting, and dying, in the Middle East.

They were gathered Thursday at a new Veterans Readjustment Center near Fiesta Mall in Mesa, getting help for their own demons and hoping to give younger veterans the benefit of their experience.

“It triggered everything in me. I started dreaming about it again,” Saye, of Mesa, said of the Iraq War.

“I was a candidate for PTSD for years and years, but I thought I could handle it,” he said, even as he struggled through four marriages and some 30 jobs.

“But I can’t, and they can’t either. I don’t want them to wait as long as I did to get help.”

Though a trickle of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are finding their way to the new center, team leader Patrick Ryan knows many more are out there.

“We’re certainly trying to do outreach, but we’d like to see more of them,” Ryan said.

“The stigma is not what it used to be, but it’s still there.”


Five years later, there are 15,873 posts to go with it. 1,983 posts have the label Combat and PTSD. 4,051 have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. These remind me of how many veterans are suffering more after combat when almost everyone assumed the danger to their lives ended when they came home. 607 posts have the label military suicides. These are the ones that break my heart the most. Had the DOD and the VA managed to use the research available in the last 40 years, there would be very few reports of military suicides and a lot less attempting it. There would be many more reports on veterans healing and less reports on their suffering.

Wounded Times has managed to be viewed almost 700,000 times and I want to thank my readers for trusting this work.

I am not perfect and most of my followers and subscribers keep me on my toes. You make sure I know the latest news coming out so that I don't miss much. Being a "one woman" operation, it has been rough to do this and I couldn't do it without you.

I promise to keep this blog going for as long as it is needed to provide veterans with a one source place to find out what is happening to other veterans. I promise to keep politics out of this only posting on politicians either doing something for you or against you. You deserve the truth no matter what party they belong to.

I am asking for your help in return. Please pass on the news you find here so that others know what is going on. If you can afford a couple of dollars to donate, that would be great since I don't make much money off the advertising on this site and don't have a clue how to find financial support. I lose a couple of thousand dollars a year paying for equipment, programs and traveling to film, but it is more the time it takes to do this work. I put in on average 70 hours a week since I publish everyday, emails and phone calls come in and I can't find a part time job to make up for the lost income. We're suffering financially.

It irks me that some group out there is raking in millions a year doing less than I'm doing except they give out backpacks and pay for a great PR campaign but I have to worry about paying for gas and keeping the cable company paid.

What I do doesn't cost much at all and never will.

Matthew 10:8
New International Version (NIV)
8 Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse those who have leprosy, drive out demons.
Freely you have received; freely give.

Thank you very much for staying with me all these years.

Chaplain Kathie

Wounded Times Blog

Editor and Publisher

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Do PTSD researchers get paid to repeat studies?

Gene Associated With Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Found By Boston Researchers
Editor's Choice
Main Category: Anxiety / Stress
Also Included In: Genetics; Mental Health; Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 09 Aug 2012

A study published online in Molecular Psychiatry reports that researchers have discovered a new gene that is associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The findings suggest that retinoid-related orphan receptor alpha (RORA) is involved in protecting brain cells from the damaging effects of stress and that it could also play a role in developing PTSD.

PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that is characterized by serious changes in behavioral, cognitive, emotional and psychological functioning after experiencing a psychologically traumatic event. According to earlier research, around 8% of the U.S. population will develop PTSD at some time in their life. This figure is considerably higher amongst veterans, with as many as 1 in 5 veterans suffering from PTSD. Earlier genome wide-association studies (GWAS) have associated the RORA gene to other psychiatric conditions, such as bipolar disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression and autism.
read more here

Almost like this announcement in May
Memory gene may fuel PTSD
May 14th, 2012
CNN
Dr. Sanjay Gupta

A vivid memory can be an asset if you're studying for an exam or trying to recall the details of a conversation, but that aptitude may backfire when it comes to forming long-term responses to emotional trauma.

In a new study, Swiss researchers have found that a certain gene associated with a good memory - and in particular, the ability to remember emotionally charged images - is also linked to an increased risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among survivors of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.
click link for more


And this one in January

Researchers now looking at PTSD link in DNA?
Veterans taking part in massive DNA project
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
Carolyn Johnson

PALO ALTO, Calif. (KGO) -- Bay Area veterans are answering the call to help with a massive research project and when it is up and running, it could provide new answers for some difficult-to-treat conditions.
click link for more


Oh, come on now. They have been "discovering" the link going back to 2008 on this blog alone.

Scientists find why bad memories stay with us
Glue that makes bad memories stick may help with Alzheimer's, study says
By Andrea Thompson
updated 2 hours, 25 minutes ago

Scientists may have found the glue that keeps fearful memories stuck in the brain, a discovery that could be useful in new treatments for Alzheimer's disease and post-traumatic stress disorder.

That glue seems to be a protein that is key to maintaining the structure of cells and also is essential to embryonic development, a new study suggests.

The protein, called beta-catenin, transmits early signals in species ranging from flies to frogs to mice that separate an embryo into front and back or top and bottom. It also acts like Velcro, fastening a cell's internal skeleton to proteins on its external membranes that in turn connect them to other cells.
click link for more.

Canadian Military Suicide study supports depression-suicide link

Major depression drives suicidal thinking in soldiers and vets, new Canadian study shows

Sharon Kirkey
2 hours ago


Soldiers and veterans seeking treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder should be screened closely for major depression, say the authors of a new Canadian study that shows depression is the single greatest driver of suicidal thinking.

Appearing in this month’s issue of The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, the study of 250 actively serving Canadian Forces, RCMP members and veterans comes as record numbers of suicides are occurring among American troops returning from Afghanistan and Iraq, and as the number of suicides reported among Canadian Forces personnel last year reached its highest since 1995.

In vets diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, about half also experience symptoms of major depressive disorder at some point in their lives, the authors of the new study write.

But “the task of predicting which people may be at an increased risk of completing suicide is a complex and challenging care issue,” they said.
read more here

Vietnam Veteran's medals replaced after originals lost to hurricane Katrina

Vet receives new Purple Heart, other medals lost during Katrina
Posted: Aug 09, 2012
By Charles Herrington
WDAM News

Courtesy: Camp Shelby Joint Forces Training Center Public Affairs Office
CAMP SHELBY, MS (WDAM)

A Hattiesburg Vietnam veteran who lost his Purple Heart and other service medals in Hurricane Katrina has had them replaced, thanks to Congressman Steven Palazzo.

Navy veteran Michael Risley was presented with the Military Order of the Purple Heart at Camp Shelby Thursday morning.
He originally received the medal for wounds he suffered in Vietnam in 1968.
read more here

Vietnam Veteran killed saving granddaughter from thieves

Vietnam Veteran and grandfather dies saving 12-year-old granddaughter from thieves
Detroit Police are still searching for suspects
By: Kim Russell
DETROIT (WXYZ) - Detroit Police are searching for the thieves who barged into a house full of children, beat a 16-year-old with a baseball bat, then shot and killed a grandfather.

“He jumped in front of a bullet for his 12-year-old granddaughter,” said Melissa Villneff, the daughter of the man killed.

She and her brother Michael Villneff describe their father as a hero. They say 62-year-old John Villneff was a Vietnam Veteran who received two Purple Hearts. He had one son, two daughters, and 12 grandchildren.

He lived next door to his daughter’s house on Rutland on the city’s west side. His adult children were out enjoying a Tigers game. His grandchildren, who are between the ages of 10 and 16 were at home together Wednesday night when young men with guns and a bat came to their home.

Relatives say the young men attacked the 16-year-old, hitting him in the head with a baseball bat. They demanded what was inside a safe at the home. They soon learned the safe contained almost nothing of value. They then stole a Wii and an Xbox.

A 12-year-old girl at the home managed to take pictures of the suspects as they committed their crime. She then ran from the home towards her grandfather’s home next door. He came out to see what was wrong. The war veteran saw armed men coming for her, covered her, and pushed her into the safety of his home as he was shot.

He died at his home.

“I didn’t get to tell him I love him,” said Michael Villneff. “He is a hero.”
read more here