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"just don't smoke"


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Navy captain points to study drawing link between nicotine dependence, PTSD risk

posted Tuesday, 5 August 2008

By Steve Mraz, Stars and Stripes

KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany - Put this in your pipe and smoke it.

Those who smoke and dip tobacco double their risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder after experiencing traumatic events, according to researchers.

Navy Capt. Richard Westphal, a mental health clinical specialist at the Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in Washington D.C., mentioned the link between nicotine dependence and PTSD during a training course earlier this week in Kaiserslautern. Westphal's comments were in reference to a late 2005 study published in the medical journal "Archives of General Psychiatry."

More...     © 2008 Stars and Stripes. All Rights Reserved


Related studies:


van der Velden PG, Kleber RJ, Koenen KC.
Smoking predicts posttraumatic stress symptoms among rescue workers: a prospective study of ambulance personnel involved in the Enschede Fireworks Disaster. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2008 Apr 1;94(1-3):267-71. [Abstract]


Fu SS, McFall M, Saxon AJ, et al. Post-traumatic stress disorder and smoking: a systematic review. Nicotine Tob Res. 2007 Nov;9(11):1071-84. [Abstract]


Van der Velden PG, Grievink L, Olff M, et al. Smoking as a risk factor for mental health disturbances after a disaster: a prospective comparative study. J Clin Psychiatry. 2007 Jan;68(1):87-92. [Abstract]


Rasmusson AM, Picciotto MR, Krishnan-Sarin S. Smoking as a complex but critical covariate in neurobiological studies of posttraumatic stress disorders: a review. J Psychopharmacol. 2006 Sep;20(5):693-707. [Abstract]
Comment:  
While there does seem to be a link between smoking and an increased risk of PTSD following trauma this does not necessarily mean smoking per se heightens the risk. Substance use often begins as self-medication of an unrecognized, not yet fully developed underlying mental disorder. Smoking may be an indicator of susceptibility to mental illness, not its cause, though some of the listed studies argue for a possible causitive role for nicotine.

Either way, smoking does not alleviate any mental disorder. It exacerbates them.

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