|
JBJS welcomes reader comments on published articles. Letters to the Editor are reviewed by JBJS editors but are not peer-reviewed. To submit your letter, please follow the "submit a response" link that appears in the content box at the upper right of the full text of the article.
Letters to the Editor to:
-
- Scientific Articles:
Adam J. Starr, Wade R. Smith, William H. Frawley, Drake S. Borer, Steven J. Morgan, Charles M. Reinert, and Maxine Mendoza-Welch
- Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder After Orthopaedic Trauma
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2004; 86: 1115-1121
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
|
|
Electronic letters published:
-
Drs. Starr, Frawley, and Reinert respond:
- Adam J. Starr, William Frawley, Charles Reinert
(16 August 2004)
-
Dr. Starr responds:
- Adam J. Starr
(29 July 2004)
-
Litigation or Compensation Issues Confounding Post Traumatic Stress
- Ray Bellamy
(29 July 2004)
-
Clarifying the Presence of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms following Orthopaedic Trauma
- Roxane Cohen Silver
(26 July 2004)
|
Drs. Starr, Frawley, and Reinert respond: |
16 August 2004 |
|
|
Adam J. Starr, physician University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, William Frawley, Charles Reinert
Send letter to journal:
Re: Drs. Starr, Frawley, and Reinert respond:
adam.starr{at}utsouthwestern.edu Adam J. Starr, et al.
|
To the Editor:
It was a pleasure to receive Dr. Silver’s letter regarding our paper.
She raises
several good points, and we’ll do our best to address them.
First, Dr. Silver points out that, according the DSM-IV, PTSD cannot
be
diagnosed until at least one month post-trauma, and she suggests, that patients
who were less than 4 weeks post trauma should have been excluded. We considered excluding patients seen at less than 4 weeks, but
decided
against it. In our sample, patients further out from injury had more
symptoms
of PTSD. Exclusion of patients less than 4 weeks post-trauma made the
apparent prevalence of the illness even higher. If we excluded those
assessed
less than 30 days after injury, the rate of PTSD would jump to 55%. If a 50% rate of the illness seems startlingly high, 55% would be
even worse.
Since our goal was to measure the prevalence of illness among
orthopaedic
trauma outpatients, we decided to include those assessed soon after
injury.
Patients who return to their orthopaedic surgeon’s office 2 weeks after
injury
with symptoms of PTSD may not meet rigid criteria for the illness, but the
symptoms are still present. Our goal was to record those symptoms, and
bring them to the attention of other orthopaedic surgeons. For that reason
we
wanted to be as inclusive as possible.
Next, Dr. Silver raises concerns about our failure to assess other
criteria listed
in the DSM-IV, and states, “In fact, because all DSM-IV criteria were not
assessed (e.g., degree of functional impairment; duration of symptoms),
respondents should NOT have been assumed to have PTSD”.
The question of impairment is very important. In fact, a search for
causes of
impairment after orthopaedic trauma was one thing that led us to do this
study.
If one asks orthopaedic trauma patients, “Are you impaired?” the
answer for
many is a resounding “Yes!” We assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that the fact
that the patients were seeking treatment at an orthopaedic clinic meant
their
injury had caused a “clinically significant impairment”.
It seems probable that some patients’ impairment is due to their
physical
injury. But for others, impairment may arise from psychological distress.
In
fact, it may be difficult to tell whether impaired function is caused by
physical
injury, or by psychological distress, or by some combination of the two.
Psychological distress is strongly associated with poor functional outcome
scores among high-energy lower extremity trauma patients (1). Could the
same be true for less severely injured orthopaedic trauma patients? And,
how
common are PTSD symptoms among orthopaedic trauma patients? As best we
can tell, nobody knows the answer to those questions.
Our goal with this study was to try to estimate the prevalence
of PTSD
in our patient population. In the future we hope to see if
functional impairment can be reduced by treating psychological distress.
As we noted, “…diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder based on a
questionnaire is not the same as a clinical diagnosis made by a mental
health
professional. A more rigorous diagnosis may reveal different results.”
Dr. Silver, a mental health professional, may be right when she says
we
should be more circumspect with our terminology.
However, if we assume that our patients answered the questions
honestly, it
is hard to ignore their responses. Perhaps, in the interest of diagnostic
rigor,
it would be more accurate to say that patients in our sample do not meet
all
criteria to make the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder; they
just
have lots of post-traumatic stress symptoms.
Given that we failed to adopt
the one-month criterion for symptom duration, and that we assumed that
attendance at an orthopaedic trauma clinic constituted evidence of a
“clinically significant impairment”, Dr. Silver’s criticism of our
assignment of
the diagnosis is probably deserved.
Dr. Silver also raises the question of the impact of the September 11
terrorist
attacks on our patient sample, and cites research carried out by her and
her
colleagues (1), a web-based survey of 933 people residing outside New
York,
NY. The sample of people assessed by Silver et al. included only one
patient
personally injured in the attacks. Thirty-eight percent of the respondents
had
no direct first-hand exposure to the attacks as they occurred, and another
60% reported watching them occur live on TV. Only 2% of the sample had
direct firsthand exposure to the attacks. Surprisingly, at 2 months, 17%
of the
respondents reported September 11 related post-traumatic stress symptoms;
5.8% did so at 6 months.
It may be that the September 11 attacks inflated the results of our
study. Or,
it may be that direct personal injury, such as that sustained by our
patients, is
more likely to cause post-traumatic stress symptoms than indirect exposure
to an event such as the September 11 attacks.
Dr. Silver also notes, “Many of the items on the Revised Civilian
Mississippi Scale
for PTSD assess trauma symptoms that are NOT specific to the orthopaedic
trauma or injury”. Our patient sample was composed entirely of people who had sustained
an
orthopaedic injury who were seen in follow-up in an orthopaedic trauma
clinic. The cover sheet for our questionnaire carried the title, “Study of
Stress
after Orthopaedic Trauma”, and stated, “You are being asked to complete
this
questionnaire because you have sustained an injury. Our goal with this
study
is to see how injury affects orthopaedic patients emotionally or
psychologically”. Questions 1, 4, 10, 11, 12 and 13 from the Revised
Civilian
Mississippi Scale for PTSD were altered by us to include references to
“the
injury”, “my injury”, or “since I was injured”, instead of “the event”, as
originally written by Norris and Perilla, the questionnaire’s developers
(2).
Questions 19, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30 were used verbatim
from
Norris and Perilla. Our thought was that the cover sheet and the questions
made it clear that the goal of the questionnaire was to assess how injury
affected patients psychologically or emotionally. There is a possibility
that
symptoms arising from the September 11 attacks may have inflated our
results. Since we did not address the attacks directly, we have no way to
be
certain if this is the case.
Finally, Dr. Silver suggests that a more traditional analytic
strategy might
have assisted us in identifying at risk individuals who might benefit from
psychological referral. Previously, we had performed a multiple
independent
variable logistic regression with backward elimination, initially
including
those variables which were statistically significant (p < .05) at a
univariate
level. The intent was to ascertain if combinations of significant
variables were
good predictors. Using this technique, ISS remained in the model, while
summed EAIS and elapsed time since injury were dropped. Motivated by her
suggestion, we increased the complexity of the model to include other
variables and numerous first-order interactions. We found that age and ISS
remained in an additive model whereby the predicted probability of PTSD
increased with higher ISS and with lower age. However, the area under the
associated ROC curve was .57, a value in the same range as reported for
single variables in the paper. So, we think logistic regression adds
little useful
information to the analysis of the data.
As for identifying “at risk” individuals, we think we have.
Orthopaedic trauma
patients are at risk for PTSD, or at least for PTSD symptoms. And, at
least in
our sample, patients who said the emotional problems caused by their
injury
were more difficult than the physical problems were at increased risk. We
think this simple question may serve as a screening tool in identifying
patients who may benefit from further screening or treatment.
Sincerely,
Adam Starr, William Frawley, Charles Reinert
1. McCarthy ML, MacKenzie EJ, Edwin D, Bosse MJ, Castillo RC, Starr
A.
Psychological distress associated with severe lower limb injury. J Bone
Joint
Surg Am, 2003; 85: 1689 - 1697.
2. Norris FH, Perilla JL. The revised Civilian Mississippi Scale for
PTSD:
reliability, validity, and cross-language stability. J Trauma Stress.1996;
9:285
-98. |
|
Dr. Starr responds: |
29 July 2004 |
|
|
Adam J. Starr, physician University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Starr responds:
adam.starr{at}utsouthwestern.edu Adam J. Starr
|
To the Editor:
I appreciate Dr. Bellamy’s interest in our study, and agree with him
that
information about the compensation status of our patients would have been
useful. Unfortunately, we did not collect that information.
Other data I wish we had, but don’t, is information about education
level,
social-support network, level of self-efficacy (the patient’s confidence
in
being able to resume life activities), and smoking history. These
variables,
along with involvement in disability compensation, were identified as
predictors of a poorer score for the Sickness Impact Profile in the LEAP
study (1). Further examination of LEAP study patients indicated that factors
associated with psychological distress include history of a drinking
problem,
neuroticism, a poor sense of self-efficacy, and poor social support (2).
My guess is that some of these same variables may also be predictive of PTSD
among the general orthopaedic trauma population. However, since we did not
collect that data I cannot be certain.
Sincerely, Adam J. Starr, MD
References:
1. Bosse MJ, MacKenzie EJ, Kellam JF, Burgess AR, Webb LX,
Swiontkowski MF
et al. Reconstruction or amputation of lower limb threatening injuries: an
analysis of two-year outcomes in level-I trauma centers. NEJM. 2002 347:
1924-31.
2. McCarthy ML, MacKenzie EJ, Edwin D, Bosse MJ, Castillo RC, Starr
A.
Psychological distress associated with severe lower limb injury. J Bone
Joint
Surg Am, 2003; 85: 1689 - 1697. |
|
Litigation or Compensation Issues Confounding Post Traumatic Stress |
29 July 2004 |
|
|
Ray Bellamy, Orthopedic Surgeon Tallahassee Orthopedic Clinic
Send letter to journal:
Re: Litigation or Compensation Issues Confounding Post Traumatic Stress
ray.bellamy{at}med.fsu.edu Ray Bellamy
|
To the Editor:
I read with interest the study by Starr,et.al. I am unaware of any mention of litigation
status or compensation issues among the study subjects. Given the well
known propensity of litigants to be stressed by the litigation process
which adds to the impact of the physical injury, this would appear to be
essential information.
When compensation issues exist, full emotional and
physical recovery is often compromised. Litigants usually are aware that
the amount of any judgement depends on evidence that permanent injury has
been sustained, and some guilt regarding their possible complicity in
their symptoms (or magnification thereof) is common. There is additionally
the stress of perhaps being doubted by defense attorneys, family members,
friends, and coworkers as to the severity of the impairments, and possible
life-altering financial settlement which may be rewarded.
All of the above
add up to significant confounding factors in the attempted smooth physical
rehabilitation and emotional adjustment of the trauma victim. It would
appear that mention of compensation status is an essential part of any
ananlysis of emotional state following trauma. |
|
Clarifying the Presence of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms following Orthopaedic Trauma |
26 July 2004 |
|
|
Roxane Cohen Silver, Professor Dept. of Psychology & Social Behavior and Dept. of Medicine, University of California, Irvine
Send letter to journal:
Re: Clarifying the Presence of Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms following Orthopaedic Trauma
rsilver{at}uci.edu Roxane Cohen Silver
|
To the Editor:
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a serious psychological
condition that has received increasing attention over the past decade, and
Starr and colleagues (1) should be commended for their attempt to alert
orthopaedic surgeons to the fact that psychological consequences of a
severe orthopaedic injury are possible and important. Nonetheless, the
percentage of respondents who “met the criteria” for PTSD (as measured by
the Revised Civilian Mississippi Scale for PTSD) was startlingly high.
Because the presence of a serious psychiatric disorder in more than one-
half a traumatized sample is exceedingly rare, it led to a further
examination of the methods and analytic strategy used in this report.
There are a number of issues that deserve mention.
1. PTSD cannot be diagnosed until at least one month post-trauma.
The authors note that some respondents had been injured as little as 2
days prior to assessment. Individuals under 4 weeks post trauma should
have been excluded from the sample.
2. For a PTSD diagnosis, the person's response to the event must
involve intense fear, helplessness, or horror – Criterion A2 of the DSM-
IV. This does not appear to have been assessed.
3. Per the DSM-IV, symptoms must be present for one month’s duration
(Criterion E). This does not appear to have been measured in the present
investigation.
4. Criterion F – that the disturbance must cause clinically
significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other
important areas of functioning – is considered by many to be the hallmark
of the disorder, and does not appear to have been assessed.
Thus, it is clear that while the investigators measured symptoms that
were consistent with criteria B, C and D of the DSM-IV, the absence of the
full assessment of PTSD requires investigators to be extremely circumspect
about their terminology. In fact, because all DSM-IV criteria were not
assessed (e.g., degree of functional impairment; duration of symptoms),
respondents should NOT have been assumed to have PTSD.
Moreover, an important historical event occurred very close to the
assessment of PTSD among the respondents in this study. The September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks had a substantial impact on the psychological state
of individuals across the country – not simply those individuals who lived
in a directly affected community.(2) Moreover, these attacks had a clear,
demonstrable impact over six months post-attacks, with substantial numbers
of individuals from a nationally representative sample showing
posttraumatic stress symptoms and elevated levels of distress.(2) The fact
that the assessment of PTSD was conducted within weeks of the attacks at
one site, and within months after the attacks at the second site, may have
inflated the results obtained. In fact, many of the items on the Revised
Civilian Mississippi Scale for PTSD assess trauma symptoms that are NOT
specific to the orthopedic trauma or injury (e.g., items #1, 4, 10, 11,
12, 13, 19, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30).
Finally, a more traditional way to analyze these data to examine
demographic and injury-related predictors of the presence or absence of
posttraumatic stress symptoms would have been to use logistic regression.
The non-traditional analytic strategy employed may have masked factors
that, in combination, could have assisted the orthopaedic surgeon in
identifying at-risk individuals who might benefit from psychological
referral.
1 Starr AJ, Smith WR, Frawley WH, Borer DS, Morgan SJ, Reinert CM,
Medoza-Welch M. Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder after
orthopaedic trauma. J Bone Joint Surg. 2004;86:1115-1121.
2 Silver RC, Holman EA, McIntosh DN, Poulin M, Gil-Rivas V.
Nationwide longitudinal study of psychological responses to September 11.
JAMA. 2002;288:1235-1244. |
|