TBI Consumer Report: Coping with Post-TBI Emotional Distress

Mount Sinai Medical Center
TBI Consumer Report: Coping with Post-TBI Emotional Distress

Introduction

Between 1993 and 1998, the Research and Training Center on Community Integration of People with traumatic brain injury (TBI) interviewed hundreds of individuals about their lives after experiencing traumatic brain injuries. People were eligible to be part of this sample if they viewed themselves as someone who has experienced a brain injury and has a disability. A comparison group of individuals who view themselves as non-disabled was also interviewed. These samples include men and women from all regions of New York State - rural areas, cities, and suburbs. People as young as 18 and as old as 65, of all races, income levels, and life experiences participated in this research. In each issue of TBI Consumer Report, we share some of the insights resulting from these interviews. Here we focus on EMOTIONAL DISTRESS.

What Was the Starting Point for this Research?

Before doing any formal research, the RTC gathered together a panel of 50 women to talk about their health. Many of them discussed the emotional problems they had experienced since brain injury and the negative effect it had on their lives. Some of them noted that their emotional problems were seen by their doctors as unrelated to brain injury, although this was contrary to their own experience. This discussion led to our conducting a formal study, including both men and women, to better understand the degree to which people experience emotional problems after TBI. From the RTC sample (see above), 100 people at least one year post-TBI were selected. Members of this group participated in a structured clinical interview to document their emotional challenges. The group was varied in composition, but the average study participant had been injured eight years prior, was white, not working, and 40 years old. The sample was nearly evenly split between men and women.

What Did We Find?

The most commonly experienced emotional problems after TBI were depression, anxiety, and substance abuse/dependency:

  • Depression is a condition marked by emotional and physical problems. People who are depressed experience a loss of pleasure in things that they usually find enjoyable. They typically feel sad and worthless and have trouble getting through each day. They often complain of altered sleep, appetite and concentration difficulties. In the general population, we would expect that six people in any group of 100 will experience a major depression in their lives. In our sample, 10 times this many (60) had experienced major depression since their TBI. Thus, brain injury triggered a bout of severe depression in the majority of the sample. However, the good news is that more than half of these 60 individuals had gotten over their depression by the time of the interview. Depression seems for many to be open to healing.
  • Anxiety was found about twice more often in our sample of individuals with TBI than in the general population. "Anxiety" refers to a variety of disorders. For example, posttraumatic stress is a type of anxiety in which people experience flashbacks in which they relive the event that caused their TBI. Phobias are another common type of anxiety, in which the person experiences great fear centered on a specific situation, such as being in an elevator or car, or flying in a plane. Unlike depression, most people who had anxiety disorders after TBI continued experiencing these problems up to the time of the interview.
  • Substance use/abuse was also frequently found. Findings about this form of emotional challenge will not be discussed here, but instead in Issue No. 6 of TBI Consumer Report.

What Should You Do If You Are Depressed or Anxious?

If you are experiencing emotional challenges, the first step is to acknowledge you are having a problem. Next you should seek professional help. The earlier you ask for help the better, as waiting often makes things worse. And, depression and anxiety can be helped.

You should look for a professional who is both familiar with TBI and who specializes in helping people with emotional problems. To obtain a suitable referral, call the Brain Injury Association in your state, or a local rehabilitation hospital or mental health clinic. Properly trained professionals come from many fields; they may be physicians, psychologists, or social workers.

When first meeting with this professional, you need to jointly determine if your depression or anxiety is getting worse, improving or remaining the same. You should describe the emotional difficulties you experienced before (if any) and have been experiencing since TBI, as well as any attempts you have made to self-medicate.

This professional will discuss with you the two most common treatment approaches for depression and anxiety: medications and psychotherapy. Either or both of these may be suitable in addressing the difficulties you are having. If you choose to try medications and the person you are seeing is not an expert in prescribing and monitoring such medications, you may at that time be referred to a psychiatrist for selection of an appropriate drug regimen.

What Should You Know about Medications?

Medications to reduce depression and anxiety are often the first step taken in treating severe emotional disturbances. They are used most often in combination with psychotherapy. With many of these drugs, the initial dosage is low and is increased slowly, during which time your reactions to medications are carefully monitored.

You need to be an active decision maker when selecting a medication that is right for you. Be fully informed about side effects by asking questions: Is this drug associated with weight gain? A change in sexual desire? Fatigue? Decreased ability to concentrate? Would a nonmedication approach work for you? Which medications have the fewest side effects?

Three "shoulds" apply to wise use of medications: First, you should keep in contact with your prescribing physician. Second, you should not increase or decrease the dosage without consulting that doctor. And, third, you should create a system to help you remember to take medications as prescribed. For example, some people ask a parent or spouse to remind them, or they use a pillbox holding each day's medications. Others tie their taking medications to a once-a-day event that they know they don't forget to do, such as feeding the cat or eating breakfast. To doubly ensure their remembering, they place their medications next to the cat food or near the cereal bowls, so that these visual cues aid their memory.

What Should You Do If You Are Depressed or Anxious?

Psychotherapy (talk therapy) may be used in combination with mood medications, or it can begin before or after medications are started. It should be continued for a time after you stop taking medications, as a means of insuring that your improved emotional well-being continues. Talk therapy can occur between you and a therapist, or it can be done in groups, with several individuals meeting together with one or two therapists.

Therapy is a place in which you share your fears and worries, mourn the losses you have experienced as part of injury, talk about the new you, deal with the reactions of others, plan for a new future, and learn healthy strategies for coping with life's challenges. Therapy should focus primarily on here-and-now issues related to your adjustment to injury. Psychotherapy should encourage your attempts to better understand your situation, help you build flexible ways of thinking, encourage you to use compensatory strategies (such as memory aids), and address the behaviors that you and others find unacceptable. A major focus of therapy is to review recent activities to determine what went wrong in specific situations. This paves the way for anticipating problems in similar future situations and helps you plan strategies for preventing further failures.

Who is a good therapist? One who engages in the kind of talk therapy described above. This is a person who you feel really listens to you and does not judge you or your actions. This person can be a trained mental health professional or can be a religious leader, a person in a community agency or members of a self-help group. The essential element in his or her training is being highly knowledgeable about TBI and how it can affect day-to-day life.

What Else Can You Do to Help Overcome Emotional Distress?

Many people find aerobic exercise to be useful in overcoming or reducing depression. With sustained, fast-paced exercise such as running, walking, swimming, or biking, they find themselves less tense and fatigued, and with increased energy and improved self-esteem. As we reported in TBI Consumer Report (Issue No. 2) exercisers with TBI who we interviewed experienced less depression and fewer cognitive problems.

Some people find that depression and anxiety are reduced simply by adding structured activities into their daily lives. This may mean they return to school or volunteer their time at a community agency. They might join a self-help group or church activities. They may even increase the number of daily household activities in which they engage. This structure increases the individual's self-esteem and enhances his/her contribution to the family's welfare.

Other people opt for therapeutic approaches such as biofeedback, eye movement therapy, hypnosis, relaxation therapy and desensitization techniques. Other alternative treatments include acupuncture, massage, yoga, Tai Chi, and other forms of meditation, as well as over-the-counter herbal medications for mood. These approaches help some individuals but not others.

A final point: The most important thing you can do is to stay actively engaged in seeking means to improve your mood. This means that you must own your emotional state and define your well-being as your responsibility. Thus, if one path you take to feel better doesn't work, it is up to you to try another approach. Both depression and anxiety after TBI can be helped, especially when you reach out to others in your community to help you find the right path. Your task is to find the way that works best for you.

TBI Consumer Report is a publication of the Research and Training Center on Community Integration of Individuals with Traumatic Brain Injury, supported between 1993 and 2004 by Grant Nos. H133B30038 and H133B980013, to the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York City, from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, United States Department of Education.

Posted on BrainLine July 25, 2008.

From Mount Sinai Medical Center. www.mssm.edu .

Comments (4)

Please remember, we are not able to give medical or legal advice. If you have medical concerns, please consult your doctor. All posted comments are the views and opinions of the poster only.

I had a fall from a high fence hitting my head on concrete, after that fall it is not the same experiencing anxiety,mood swings,sleeping problems. It does set life back for myself I was homeless at that time. I was already disoriented from that part. Yes it is sad because I can remember being more energetic and alive before the accident. The emotions you feel is overwhelming people can't look at you and know you went through trauma. To have trauma from life then to have an unstable mind after an accident is challenging. I feel hopeless that I can't get up to go work. All the fear of people and stepping out side. This is real for people who don't understand TBI.

God Bless You and your struggles try talking directly to your spouse they may find clear communication helpful as I have someone very close I have concerns about

TBI x 2 yrs. Self worth is an issue and I found difficult to relay or discuss with family members. Do not experience frank PTSD due to amnesia but have heighten awareness of financial and authority issues which spouse identifies as me being paranoid. Resent and anger to being judge is vocalized which I feel is surficing as anxiety. I donot experience frank depression since I am a health care provider who has survived a severe multiple TBIs. Yet I have noticed increase moodiness, decreased likes and decrease libido. Yet no obvious saddness. Currently on SSRI FROM SSRI/NSRI COMBO. This site an article helpful to provide info and direction. Have two sources of mental health intervention, wcp Psychiatrist and NP ALSO VA psychiatrist and couselor. Hope I can get a handle on this before 8 yrs if not I hope to share a positive attitude with positive results.

Im new to this..I suffered several TBI's in an automobile accident only 6 months ago, yet the past 4 have been the worst of my life. Sounds dramatic I know, but its not untrue. This depression is real...real scary. Ive been dealing with multiple issues from the accident mentally and a few physically. The physical issues I can handle, its these neurological issues I am having a very difficult time with. My memory is horrible, my vision is always blurred now, like I need glasses, I have this constant ringing in my ears that gets so loud at times its painful. I wake up tired and go to bed tired regardless of how much sleep I get...serious fatigue that I must fight to stay awake at work. I have headaches daily from sun up to sun down and a good day is a day it doesnt turn into a migraine....then there's the agitation. Im always angry..or aggravated I should say and the smallest thing can set me off to full fledged anger and there I stay for hours and if Im not angry, Im in deep dark despair...like sobbing, snot from my nose despair. Ive no interest in ANYTHING i once held dear to me...nothing...I feel..empty. My family has become afraid of me..what kind of sh*+ is that? I went from the nicest, easy going, laid back person you'd have ever met, loved my kids, fishing, LSU and Saints football, socializing with friends and strangers. I loved making people smile and laugh...now I cant stand to be around anyone...I just want to sleep...there's no pain when I sleep, no anxiety, anger, depression..and no chance to be mean to my family. Ive never in my life been depressed and never understood it..felt that people who were depressed were people who never recognized the good things they have in life and only focused on the negatives..I see I couldn't have been further from the truth. Im trying to find help, at least my wife and I now know its the TBI..its not me turning into a completely different person. I just want it to be over....I want to be me again.