Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD, is a kind of disorders of anxiety that develops after a person witnesses or experiences a distressing event that involved a intimidation of grievance or bereavement. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is classified generally recognized as an anxiety disorder. However, it can also lead to other mental problems such as depression, emotional numbness and memory disturbances in which the patient feels as if reliving the trauma (Herman, 40-150). PTSD may occur following a shock or a traumatic event, or take more than 6 months after the event. Some people have a more prolonged disease that can last for many years.
Disorder
PTSD arises after a person is exposed to a severe psychological suffering: measures or situations that produce terror, vulnerability or dismay, as a life-threatening danger or a risk situation for the physical. The indirect trauma, such as seeing another person in a situation of life or death, can also cause PTSD (Herman, 40-150). Calamities or other tragedies can also cause the disorder. Not every person exposed to such ordeal will develop the disease. Nevertheless, these events can bring intrusive memories, images, thoughts, dreams, memories or intense reactions to situations that reflect a phase of the tragedy or trauma.
History of Disorder
PTSD symptoms are characterized by the way they reoccur or their re-experience. Patients of stress re-experience features of the traumatic or tragic event in a vibrant and painful way. These may include flashbacks in which the person feels that the event recurs, usually in the form of nightmares and repetitive, distressing and disturbing descriptions or other sensory impressions or images from the event. These act as the reminders of traumatic event and thus arouse intense distress or physiological imbalances.
In addition to the above symptoms, PTSD can lead to panic attacks, avoidance behavior in many situations, ...