Treatment Center
866·323·5612 FREE HELPLINE
Recovery from addiction starts here...
Alcohol Treatment Center
Alcoholism and Aging
Dual Diagnosis
Club Drugs Treatment Center
Cocaine Treatment Center
Codeine Treatment Center
Darvocet Treatment Center
Dilaudid Treatment Center
Ecstasy Treatment Center
Fentanyl Treatment Center
Hallucinogens Treatment Center
Heroin Treatment Center
Inhalants Treatment Center
Lortab Treatment Center
LSD Treatment Center
Marijuana Treatment Center
Methadone Treatment Center
Meth Treatment Center
Nicotine Treatment Center
Norco Treatment Center
Oxycontin Treatment Center
Percocet Treatment Center
Prescription Treatment Center
Rohypnol Treatment Center
Vicodin Treatment Center
Hydrocodone Treatment Center
Azure Acres Recovery Center CA
Bayside Marin CA
Bowling Green Brandywine PA
Camp Recovery Center CA
Cove Forge Erie PA
Cove Forge Pittsburgh PA
Cove Forge Williamsburg PA
Keystone Treatment Center SD
Life Center of Galax VA
Life Healing Center NM
New Life Lodge TN
Sierra Tucson AZ
Sober Living by The Sea CA
Starlite Recovery Center TX
Twelve Oaks Recovery FL
Wellness Resource Center FL
White Deer Run Allentown PA
White Deer Run Allenwood PA
White Deer Run Altoona PA
White Deer Run Bloomsburg PA
White Deer Run Chambersburg PA
White Deer Run Harrisburg PA
White Deer Run Lancaster PA
White Deer Run Lebanon PA
White Deer Run Lewisburg PA
White Deer Run New Castle PA
White Deer Run Pottsville PA
White Deer Run Reading PA
White Deer Run Williamsport PA
White Deer Run York PA
Wilmington Treatment Center NC
PTSD Can Lead to a More Severe Course and Worse Outcomes When Coupled With Substance Abuse
From one-third to one-half of those seeking treatment for a substance-use disorder (SUD) can also have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The first multi-center study of PTSD among individuals seeking treatment for an SUD has found a greater prevalence of PTSD among those who were drug- rather than alcohol-dependent, and that having PTSD was associated with a more severe course and worse outcome for an SUD.
Results are published in the March 2008 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.
“We already knew that there is a quite relevant association between PTSD and SUDs,” said Martin Driessen, professor of psychiatry at Ev. Hospital Bielefeld in Germany, and corresponding author for the study. “More specifically, PTSD is a risk factor for the development of an SUD, particularly a drug dependence. However, it was unclear whether this is true for both abusers and dependent subjects, or only one of these groups, which is why we studied clearly dependent subjects.”
“Drug dependence has frequently been observed in war veterans who also suffer from PTSD,” added Andreas Heinz, director and chair of the department of psychiatry at Charité – University Medical Center Berlin. “Both men and women often increase drug abuse and develop dependence following war and other trauma.”
For this study, Driessen and his colleagues interviewed 459 subjects (274 males, 185 females) seeking help in 14 German addiction-treatment centers: 39.7 percent had alcohol dependence; 33.6 percent had drug dependence; and 26.8 percent had both. Interviewers used the International Diagnostic Checklists, Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale, Addiction Severity Index, and Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale to assess all participants. Individual characteristics and treatment outcomes were later analyzed.
Results showed the prevalence of PTSD was greater among those with drug rather than alcohol dependence. “We found a prevalence of PTSD that was roughly double, around 30 percent, in drug-dependent subjects than that found in alcohol-dependent subjects, at about 15 percent,” said Driessen. “Although we expected this, based on previous research, we were somewhat surprised to find such a high difference between drug and alcohol dependence.”
Having a PTSD was also associated with worse outcomes for an SUD, Driessen said, such as more family problems, less employment, and more severe psychological symptoms.
“The subjects suffering from PTSD had higher hospitalization rates, shorter periods of abstinence, and higher drug craving,” added Heinz. “However, the study did not show whether PTSD was a cause or consequence of drug dependence in individual subjects.”
In addition, said Driessen, the associations between an SUD and PTSD were stronger when the PTSD diagnosis was definitive – that is, based on the interview as well as the questionnaire – compared to those patients with a probable or subsyndromal PTSD. A mere trauma exposure without PTSD was not associated with an SUD, he noted.
Both Driessen and Heinz recommended that clinicians examine patients with an SUD in order to determine if PTSD is an underlying factor, and that researchers continue investigating specific treatment options.
“Women in this study showed higher PTSD rates, which is in accordance with the literature,” said Heinz. “Women also more often show clinical depression, which often precedes alcohol dependence, while in men, depression seems to follow alcohol dependence in most cases. Further research on psychotrauma and its sequelae such as PTSD, anxiety and depression may point to gender differences in the course and consequences of drug and alcohol addiction. In addition, neurobiological correlates such as monoamine and stress hormone dysfunction and alterations in central processing of affective and reward-indicating stimuli should be assessed. They may predict treatment response and indicate whether specific treatment options with psychotherapy or addictive pharmacological therapy are helpful.”
Funding for this Addiction Science Made Easy project is provided by the Addiction Technology Transfer Center National Office, under the cooperative agreement from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment of SAMHSA.
Articles were written based on the following published research:
Martin Driessen, Silke Schulte, Christel Luedecke, Ingo Schaefer, Frauke Sutmann, Martin Ohlmeier, Ulrich Kemper, Gertrud Koesters, Claudia Chodzinski, Udo Schneider, Thomas Broese, Christian Dette, Ulla Havemann-Reinicke, the TRAUMAB-Study Group. (March 2008). Trauma and PTSD in patients with alcohol, drug, or dual dependence: a multi-center study. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER). 32(3): 481–488.
Source: The Addiction Technology Transfer Center
« Previous Page

Treatment Center News
- How Much Drinking Is Too Much?
- Bingeing and Boredom
- Older Men More Likely to Seek Treatment for Alcohol
- Voters Support Both Nevada Smoking Proposals
- Untrained Docs Fail to Recommend Effective Stop-Smoking Therapies
- Study Examines Alcohol Gene
- PTSD Can Lead to a More Severe Course and Worse Outcomes When Coupled With Substance Abuse
- Teens Suggest Solutions to the 'Nothing To Do' Problem
- Ecstasy Can Quickly Hurt Brain, Researchers Say
- Vaccines Target Smoking, Drugs, Other Ills
Treatment Centers
Sober Living By The Sea California Provides alcohol and drug treatment to those in need.
Bayside Marin California Provides treatment in an atmosphere of health, serenity, and luxury.
Life Healing Center New Mexico Specializes in the treatment of traumatic issues and experiences.
Sober Living By The Sea California Provides alcohol and drug treatment to those in need.
Bayside Marin California Provides treatment in an atmosphere of health, serenity, and luxury.
Life Healing Center New Mexico Specializes in the treatment of traumatic issues and experiences.
More Treatment Centers »
Contact Treatment Centers

