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Ptsd And Neurodegenerative Diseases

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OKRADLAK

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My Dr said they would be monitoring me for ND disease because of certain symptoms.When he found I had PTSD he said there is some research which almost considers PTSD to be ND in itself.

I had not slept for several days so I was in a fog........Is this true??

Could be linked. I am wondering if people with PTSD really can go onto develop neurodegenerative diseases?

Scary.
 
I'm not a neurologist by any means. However, my mother and I have had conversations about things like this. My stepfather's mother developed dementia (Alzheimers, Parkinson, whatever you want to call it) several years ago. She was in and out of different housing arrangements because she would be so disruptive. Her husband didn't exactly age gracefully either, but his body was in worse shape than his mind. His wife however was verbally abusive of him.

It finally got to the point where her dementia got so bad she simply couldn't function at all in a normal living situaton. She had to be sent to a nursing home. My mother talked to me later about helping move out all her things. She said she found some of her old journals and thumbed through them. She was struck by how angry and bitter she would get over day to day things and how she just seemed to rave about the same things over and over again. She told me she believed the reason my stepdads mother developed her neurodegenerative condition was because she held onto things that made her mad. She took them and kept them in her and that, my mother suggested, began to break her down mentally over time. Sort of like when you don't eat healthy food your immune system isn't very strong so you get sick more easily.

In addition, once my stepdads mother and father were seperated, his father immediately started to seem much more mentally sharp and focused.

I don't know if what your doctor says is true. Odds are he's not certain either. Neurodegenerative diseases are one of those things that no one is certain of the cause. There are studies suggesting that living close to a highway increases a child's risk of developing autism. No one really knows. However my feeling is that if someone develops PTSD but never really deals with it there chances of developing dementia or something like that would increase. If the sufferer takes steps to reconcile the trauma and reduce the stress, I doubt it would effect them in that way.
 
Yes i know. Have altzheimers in both sides of the family too. They'd better put their foot down with finding a treatment lol
Scott
 
Wow this is a little stressing I must say... My mother had some type of mental illnes but to be really honest I have no idea nor does anyone else seem to really know what it was. I lived with my parents when at around my age of 12 or 13 she began to exbibit signs of alzheimer like symptoms. She would forget many tasks she was doing. seemed in a haze often and forget my name when I came home from school or sometimes leave to walk around the block and i would have to go find her as she would sometimes loose her way.

I was told but again i was to young to really remember my mother being in a hospital when I was around 6-8 years of age and she had "shock treatments" and other procedures done again to this day I am not really sure exactly what. Well I am 48 was recently dx'd with ADHD and of course now PTSD.

OK, i understand and feel your concern I am glad that you are talking about it here. Many neuro illnesses,diseases and disorders are genetic but many are now treatable and manageable. I would suggest educating yourself as much as you can and try to surround yourself with those that accept the realities that these neuro conditions exist. I know it will be hard trust me i really know how hard it is. If i had been diagnosed with and treated properly at a young age my whole life I am sure would have turned out differently.......... Ahh but it does not mean it cannot change now.

I have looked at myself as lucky re my PTSD . I see so many sad stories here as to why people here have it and i consider my self lucky....yes lucky. I think about ADHD and i say I am lucky to as even though i do have it I might be able to manage it and there are so manu people that cant.

You need to surround youself with those that embrace your concerns and discuss them openly not ignore and hide from them. This forum is definitly one place and i hope you can share your concerns with your T and P and others in your life. I support you and I know many others here do in all your concerns I really do....
 
Well that's slightly scary.

My grandmother (moms side) ended up institutionalized before she was sixty. Not in the nice part either. She was dangerous. :(

My mom's YOUNGER brother recently was hospitalized, released, and, well, I'll stop there.

I know it's a PTSD symptom to feel like a ticking time bomb but seriously?

Does anyone try to battle the brain fog? Math exercises? Puzzles? Online courses?

I have an alarm that won't go off until I solve the math problem, in the morning. It's evil. I'm getting faster at it though!
 
It bothers me a lot. I already have three Traumatic Brain Injuries and Alzheimer's in my family. And then the PTSD for decades now.... Ugh.
 
Hmmm, this is all very concerning. But I looked it up and the articles I found are very speculative and not at all conclusive or even causative. So I wouldn't freak quite yet guys
 
I haven't Googled this yet, although admit I probably will. I clicked on it because my neuro system is in complete revolt at the moment in other ways, athough would have to doubt it's PTSD related. I did like what Liam said, though. The thing is, the PTSD does tend to disallow us seeing the bits in these articles sometimes either highlighting where this stuff is speculative or maybe sort of in the last paragraph like some sensationalist articles do, you know? Our adrenaline jumps right to WHOA, NO WAY, worst-case scenario, like when the dog brings home a large bone and instantly it's a human femur from a murder in your back yard-not an old cow who perished 50 years ago.
 
Ah this all makes sense.
22 years old and the only way I can describe how it feels is like Alzheimers. I zone out and do things, when I zone back in people will tell me about what I just did but I don't recall any of it.
Wild. Hope it doesn't get worst.
 
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