Update: Lipov has withdrawn his US Department of Defence applications for grants. The DoD is nit-picking him to death and after 4 years of their rhetoric and unreasonable demands, he is out of the DoD "business". No idea if he has plans to pursue another route for funding, but a Chicago Hospital has taken up his cause and may be offering some help or facility usage. A study is currently underway under the Navy in San Diego.
The brain is a delicate organ, and must be considered differently than other body parts in terms of "injury". The thinking here is to remove this type of insular cortex abnormality from the guarded possession of the psychological world - where in my opinion, little has been accomplished, relatively, to dramatically help PTSD as much as the SGB has- and place it in the domain of plain ol' biological systems. Psych treatments should be used as a close secondary support in my opinion. I would like to see PTSD victims treated in this order, ideally.
And at the end of the day, psychiatrists already inevitably turn to bio knowledge and meds to help with whatever area of the brain may be dysfunctional - so yes, maybe many "mental" issues are ultimately another type of injury as well.
If the brain is somehow damaged or caused to malfunction as a result of any occurrence, be it merely observed, heard, or via impact, these are all still injuries in my way of thinking. Radiation causes no real physical impact, and yet we all accept it can cause significant damage, physically and probably mentally as well.
Is it that much of a stretch to think of the brain "injuring" itself in a situation where life feels completely threatened? The brain will make the "last ditch" sacrifice of malfunctioning its own adrenaline production if it can mean extra energy for "fight or flight" in what it may perceive as the final minutes of survival. It seems, sadly, that the mechanism to stop this adrenaline production is not so well developed, resulting in PTSD. If this is what is happening, and I think it is, then why would this be considered a "mental" illness" at all? There are other instances where the brain shuts on and off systems (pain for one) when life is threatened. None of these is considered psychological.
Perfectly functional soldiers will suddenly turn into paranoid, under-functioning and terrified souls as a result watching a single brief and brutal battle. I do not consider them mentally ill at all. I consider them to have been injured in some way.
I think that PTSD is not out of line with traumatic brain injuries. Lipov is truly on to something, especially if treatment can be expedited and the very low-risk and minimally invasive SGB can become a first line of treatment, and not the last. Other trauma-skilled doctors are on board with this this re-classifications as well. It feels intuitively correct to me. Yes, I think the world of psychology will need to start accepting that the physiological is a real player. What is so wrong with that? Can shrinks and docs not play nicely together and share toys?
Refusal of the psych world (actually all sciences) to "let go" of their precious tenets frustrates me on a daily basis. When sciences will not open up to consider change in the morays on which older premises are built, time is wasted and egos clog the path to progress.
It has been firmly believed for ages that nothing travels faster than the speed of light, and yet this week, scientists have discovered that something else does. So many of Einstein's theories must now be reconsidered, and many scientists hate this sea change after spending careers focusing on what they were sure was completely indisputable. The "truth" is not the problem here, the stubborn and concrete scientists are.
Again, I cannot stress enough how important it is to those of us who have had profound success with the SGB, and those who hope to try, to try to keep a positive attitude about this procedure. Any ethical issues about Dr. Lipov and his choice of patients can only be resolved by a direct convo with the doctor himself. My procedure was NOT done by Lipov, so it is not all about him.
I still hope to encourage any sufferers to strongly consider this potentially fast-acting treatment if you can make it happen.