Upcoming Events
- May 22 My Journey with Autism: A Panel Discussion with Four Successful Houstonians
Four successful Houstonians will share their personal stories of living with an autism spectrum disorder at a panel discussion hosted by The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
- Jun 5 Free Varicose Vein Screening
UT Dermatology offers multiple minimally invasive treatment options for patients with varicose veins and spider veins. UT Physicians dermatologist Sirunya Silapunt, M.D., RPhS., offers a free vein screening.
Study looks at PTSD risk factors

Paul Schulz, M.D.
UT Physicians are investigating whether post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a brain disorder that can affect multiple parts of the body and cause lifelong illnesses.
“In the last few years, we’ve made a great deal of headway in our studies and understanding of PTSD. It has become apparent that PTSD isn’t just a psychological adjustment disorder,” says UT Physicians neurologist Paul Schulz, M.D., lead investigator. “We and others have shown more strokes, heart attacks, alcohol use, drug abuse, depression, and dementia associated with PTSD patients.”
Dr. Schulz, whose clinical experience includes 25 years of working with soldiers suffering from PTSD at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, sees patients at UT Physicians and the Mischer Neuroscience Institute at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center.
“Memorial Hermann has the busiest trauma emergency room in the world,” Dr. Schulz says. “We see people with PTSD who are victims of violence, or have experienced something traumatic such as a bad car accident or their house burning down. You can heal the injury, but the brain is still affected in some people.”
He says that any discoveries they make from the civilian population study could be directly relevant to military personnel.
“As far as we can tell, PTSD acquired through civilian trauma is the same as military PTSD. But in the VA system, we didn’t have access to military personnel at the time of the inciting event – they were overseas. Here at UTHealth and Memorial Hermann, we see people within hours of their trauma and sometimes within minutes,” he says. “The problem with PTSD is that it’s lifelong. We could potentially affect the quality of life for millions of people worldwide.”
In the first part of the study, Dr. Schulz and his team are trying to determine risk factors for PTSD by enrolling 400 patients who have experienced trauma. “From that group, we expect to identify about 80 people with PTSD, and we hope to be able to determine factors associated with their getting PTSD versus the other 320 who didn’t get it,” he says.
In the second part of the study, researchers hope to use the risk factors to identify 80 of 400 new trauma patients and treat them in advance to see whether they can prevent PTSD. The second phase will also include brain scans at baseline and one year after the traumatic event. “There is a suggestion that some specific parts of the brain may shrink as a person develops PTSD,” he says. “If that’s the case, there may be treatment approaches based on the affected areas of the brain.”
According to the National Institutes of Health, PTSD is an anxiety disorder with unknown cause. It changes the body’s response to stress, affecting hormones and chemicals that carry information between the nerves. There are three general symptom categories: reliving the event acutely enough to affect daily life; avoidance, emotional numbness, and depression; and having an exaggerated response to things that startle the person, as well as irritability and angry outbursts. PTSD occurs in 20 to 25 percent of people who experience a trauma, but symptoms are often delayed for months, which in turn delays treatment.
“For a long time, we assumed that PTSD was an adjustment disorder in the psychiatric realm that required anxiety medications and antidepressants,” Dr. Schulz says. “But we couldn’t understand why people got PTSD and why it was so difficult to get rid of. Frankly, the medications don’t work very well in people with PTSD.”
The “holy grail,” he says, is trying to find ways to prevent the conversion of acute stress disorder into chronic PTSD.
“Once we can identify a group of people who are more likely to develop it, we can offer intensive anti-anxiety treatment in a controlled study to see whether it will prevent the development of PTSD,” Schulz says.
—Deborah Mann Lake, Office of Advancement, Media Relations
The medical group practice of The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, UT Physicians offers the most advanced technologies with a personalized touch from its flagship location in the Texas Medical Center and at a growing number of clinics throughout the greater Houston area.
For assistance, please call UT Physicians at 1-888-4UT-DOCS (1-888-488-3627). Access directories of our clinics by clicking on Clinics & Locations.



