A great Catch-22, you get PTSD from stroke because your doctor doesn't know how to get you to 100% recovery. So ask your doctor how they are preventing those inflammatory consequences?
New review article explains link between PTSD and increased cardiovascular disease risk
A growing number of patient studies show that people who suffered
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are at a higher risk of developing
cardiovascular diseases, including stroke and heart attack. A new
review article in American Journal of Physiology—Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
examines the recent scientific literature to explain how the two are
linked. The authors found evidence that PTSD leads to overactive nerve
activity, dysfunctional immune response and activation of the hormone
system that controls blood pressure (the renin-angiotensin system).
"These changes ultimately contribute to the culmination of increased
cardiovascular disease risk," the authors wrote. Cardiovascular events,
including stroke and heart attack, also can be stressful enough to cause
PTSD symptoms, "putting these individuals at greater risk for future
adverse cardiovascular events," the authors noted.
The article "Autonomic and inflammatory consequences of posttraumatic
stress disorder (PTSD) and the link to cardiovascular disease" is
published ahead-of-print in American Journal of Physiology—Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology.
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