In the link Girl3 provided (thanks!) the receptors were shown to be altered/not as functional after trauma exposure, regardless of the presence of PTSD or not. And the study also helps me see why SSRIs don't do anything for me. In fact, they make me feel terrible. All of them do.
Am I wrong to jump to the conclusion that serotonin in the wrong thing to be looking for in PTSD? Sure trauma did cause a receptor change/damage, but this was not shown to be etiological for PTSD in most cases.
As Girl3 says, no great new medicine is in view yet to even be tested. And I doubt a modified SSRI that targets specific receptors will do anything to touch PTSD.
I am not a doctor, and I wish I were since that would allow me to understand the anatomy and the discussion much more keenly.
My last therapist said my idea that when they find a way to fix Autism they will also know how to fix PTSD is ludicrous, since they are not in any way related. But my point is that when we understand the brain and all related systems attached to it to that extent, both conditions will be better understood and workable solutions may be found.
Quote:
Am I wrong to jump to the conclusion that serotonin in the wrong thing to be looking for in PTSD? Sure trauma did cause a receptor change/damage, but this was not shown to be etiological for PTSD in most cases.
As Girl3 says, no great new medicine is in view yet to even be tested. And I doubt a modified SSRI that targets specific receptors will do anything to touch PTSD.
I am not a doctor, and I wish I were since that would allow me to understand the anatomy and the discussion much more keenly.
My last therapist said my idea that when they find a way to fix Autism they will also know how to fix PTSD is ludicrous, since they are not in any way related. But my point is that when we understand the brain and all related systems attached to it to that extent, both conditions will be better understood and workable solutions may be found.
Quote:
Because low [11C]P943 binding potential was found in both of the trauma groups, this "suggests that abnormal serotonin type 1B expression does not sufficiently explain the phenotype of PTSD," write the researchers."Thus, the data more strongly support the hypothesis that the extent of...alteration reflects features of trauma exposure...rather than the nature of the response to the trauma."