Yoga, deep breathing used to treat soldiers’ stress

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Hugo Patrocino, 29, served 8 years as a Marine and did two tours of duty in Iraq. Here, he practices yoga at Red Pearl Studio in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He is among some of the veterans who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan, many suffering from PTSD, and are embracing yoga as a way to heal from war's psychological wounds.
Hugo Patrocino, 29, served 8 years as a Marine and did two tours of duty in Iraq. Here, he practices yoga at Red Pearl Studio in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He is among some of the veterans who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan, many suffering from PTSD, and are embracing yoga as a way to heal from war's psychological wounds. (MCT News Service)
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Common symptoms of PTSD are hyper-vigilance, which makes veterans jumpy at the slightest sound; intrusive thoughts such as flashbacks and nightmares; and emotional numbness, including the inability to feel love.

Treating PTSD often involves medication and psychotherapy to force patients to grapple with their trauma. But yoga and meditation could be a gentler, less invasive way to treat the effects of combat stress, said Jack Nitschke, one of the lead investigators of the study.

“No one thinks yoga is a panacea,” said Nitschke, a neuroscientist and UW associate professor of psychiatry and psychology. “This would be one more treatment that could be tailored to veterans suffering from PTSD.”

Of the 20 Wisconsin veterans participating in the pilot study, many experienced fewer PTSD symptoms and anxiety problems after learning meditation and deep breathing, said Emma Seppala, the research scientist who initiated the study.

Depression and anxiety levels were measured before and after the meditation and deep breathing course. Startle responses were gauged by measuring the number of eye blinks in response to sudden, loud sounds.

Veterans who experience trauma in war zones tend to have a higher resting pulse rate. Meditation and deep breathing helped the veterans participating in the pilot study lower their heart and breathing rates, sort of like hitting the reset button on their nervous system.

“We know that memory is very malleable. What I think is happening is the association between trauma and memory change – they remember what happened, but it’s no longer present and now,” said Seppala, associate director at the Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education at Stanford University.

One of the veterans said on the last day of the study that he remembered everything that happened to him but his war experiences were no longer a part of him. Follow-up queries of participants more than a year after the study have been positive. Not everyone sticks with the program, though.

“One of the guys said, ‘I’m sorry. I have to drop out because I’m not ready to let go,’ ” said Seppala.

Travis Leanna, 26, a UW-Madison student who deployed to Iraq, admits he was skeptical. He was not diagnosed with PTSD and didn’t want to be seen as weak. But he decided to volunteer for the pilot study.

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