Clinically speaking... Flashbacks are just “flashbacks” regardless of which sense is in play, people simply differentiate to ease communication. Emotional, auditory, olfactory, etc.
I’m not sure how many other disorders use the term itself... Drug induced disorders do, for sure, (if you’d looked up flashbacks 10 years ago you wouldn’t be getting PTSD references but drug references... not because PTSD doesn’t have flashbacks, just because drug induced flashbacks were more talked about. It’s just a function of search algorithms. With all the pop-culture references to PTSD & the new addition of CPTSD into the international classification of disease -and all the hot debate surrounding that, plus the attempt to get it into the DSM- the first several dozen pages of searches are going to be skewed towards PTSD, instead of others disorders that have them). ...BUT... Each disorder has its own shorthand, and there’s a looooot more to every disorder than what’s in the diagnostic criteria.
Just as an example, the diagnostic criteria for PTSD? Half a page. The Science & Practice of PTSD volume 2? Over 700 pages. ADHD, meanwhile (the other disorder I know best) doesn’t have flashbacks, per se, but we do have intrusive thoughts, impulse control issues, & emotional dysregulation. Add those 3 things together? What’s actually a vivid
memory often looks like a flashback, because the emotion is actually re-experienced. But even though it’s relived, there’s a series of extra steps (the impulse control & emotional dysregulation) that means it’s not
really a flashback. And is handled differently. Getting more present like with PTSD? Does NOT* help! Because it’s the present that kicked off the memory, one just ends up in a vicious loop trying to treat an ADHD perfect recall like a PTSD flashback. It’s bad juju. Serious sucks. :wtf: (*Unless one accidentally uses a completely distracting grounding trick. That can help. Disorder crossover.) Meanwhile? Being “flooded” can also look like an emotional flashback, when instead, it’s actually a function of anxiety & rumination in disorders like GAD & OCD as well as PTSD. Because, just like with ADHD, there’s extra steps that happen before being knocked over by the emotion. And just like with ADHD? Flooding brought on by anxiety or rumination is handled differently than impulse control issues and emotionally dysregulation which is handled differently than flashbacks. (Clear as mud? :wtf: )
So not only do several disorders share flashbacks, but a whole helluva lot of other disorders share end results that
look the same, but actually come from wildly different places.
I happen to be comorbid ADHD + PTSD. Which means that sometimes? I don’t know whether what I’m feeling is a flashback, an ADHD-style super intense dysregulated memory, anxiety driven emotional flooding, or grief driven emotional flooding.
All 4 of which can simply strike out of the blue, and feel exactly the same. Which means I’m often “throwing pasta at the wall to see if it sticks”... meaning using -often very different- coping skills to see what works.
3. I have been diagnosed with general anxiety, some form of depression, and a panic disorder.
These are actually each “BIG” deal things, in and of their own right. 700 page book big, times 3. Don’t get sucked into the trap of thinking something is “just” anxiety, or “just” depression, etc. because people use the terms to describe everyday things (like I was a bit depressed today, instead of saying sad / tired, etc... or test anxiety, separation anxiety.) It’s like medically speaking a bruise is trauma, being raped is trauma, and having your arms and legs ripped off and bleeding out is trauma. They’re
all trauma, but a bruise isn’t rape isn’t death. Depression, anxiety, & panic all have similar spectrums... and having an anxiety
disorder, depressive
disorder, panic
disorder... means that you’re on the upper end of that spectrum.
HTH