CAM and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

In the form of the Transcendental Meditation program CAM offers a method of eliminating deep-rooted stress, the efficacy of which has been demonstrated in several related studies. Any discussion of CAM and post-traumatic stress disorder should include a study of its application to Vietnam War Veterans in which improvements were observed on all variables, and several participants were able to return to work after several years of being unable to hold a job. The intervention has been studied for its impact on brain and autonomic nervous system function. It has been found to be highly effective against other stress-related conditions such as hypertension, and to improve brain coherence—a measure of effective brain function. It should be considered a possible ‘new and improved mode of treatment’ for PTSD, and further studies of its application made.


Introduction
The paper in your November 2005 issue, 'Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: Evidence-Based Research for the Third Millennium', by Iribarren and co-workers (1), contained many pertinent references and very useful discussion. It did not, however, propose more than palliative care to PTSD sufferers, reducing discomfort, but not the helplessness, trials and tribulations of long-term chronic disease management.
Had it included a study on Vietnam war veterans at the Denver Vietnam Veterans Outreach Program in 1981 (2), this might have been different. The study's authors reasoned that since, in previous studies of the Transcendental Meditation TM program (TM) (Transcendental Meditation and TM are service marks registered in the US Patent and Trademark Office, licensed to Maharishi Vedic Education Development Corporation, and used under sublicense), many of the symptoms of post-Vietnam Adjustment had been seen to reduce (see below), veterans with PVA should improve. In their study, 28 veterans were randomized between two groups, one of which received normal psychotherapy and the other, the TM program. Eight in the psychotherapy group completed the study and 10 in the TM group. Measurements were made before and after a 3 month experimental period of delayed stress syndrome, anxiety, depression ( Fig. 1), insomnia, alcohol use, family problems, employment status and GSR habituation to a stressful stimulus. Improvements were seen on all measures for the TM group, with P-values ranging from 0.05 to 0.001, except for GSR's where improvement only reached P < 0.10, requiring either more time or more subjects to reach P < 0.05 if the same trend had been maintained. By comparison, no similar changes were observed in the psychotherapy group: deep rooted stress of the kind encountered in war induced PTSD, 'shell shock', can be difficult to resolve by conventional means, as evidenced by Iribarren et al. (1).
In the Denver study (2), the particular form of PTSD, post-Vietnam adjustment was observed to reduce from 9.70 ± 2.98 to 5.80 ± 4.26, P < 0.001 for the paired, one tailed t-test, pre and post. After the 3 month experimental period, 7 out of the 10 of those who had participated in the Transcendental Meditation program felt so much improved that they decided they no longer needed the Veteran's Center services. The remaining three decided to continue with a combination of TM and therapy-indicating increased hope and belief that they too could recover. Personal impressions of the effects of TM as an intervention included the report, 'I feel after I meditate that I no longer have the same burden of tension, rage and guilt inside-it's as if a huge burden has been lifted.' It should be added that for TM 3 months is a short period over which to if an article is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work this must be clearly indicated. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org measure improvements related to stress decrease. In many TM studies, measured quantities are usually seen to continue changing for periods of many years, e.g. health expenditures have been seen to continue decreasing for several years (3).
Despite the small size of the study, its promise is such that it should be followed up on a larger scale. Iribarren et al. (1) paper made 11 references to war-related PTSD, including 8 to the Vietnam war. They pointed out that PTSD is increasing. About 8% of the population (over 20 million people) experience it at some point in their lives, with 6-8 million current sufferers. To reduce this level of suffering, and numbers of long-term out of work, hospitalized or on medication, and associated costs, any possible means of systematically reducing PTSD symptoms should be investigated.
Modern neuroscience considers decreased brain wave coherence indicative of decreased integration and effectiveness of brain function. In the Virtual Scanning System of Assessment and Treatment (21), such cortical coherence is directly associated with the kind of poor physical, mental and emotional health associated with PTSD, and restoring coherence is a major aim of its system of flashing light color therapy (22). TM's systematic increase of coherence suggests that it can restore normal brain function after damage caused by trauma and unresolved after-effects.