Japanese War

Ralph Described a variety of symptoms, from chronic fatigue, shortness of breath, palpitations, headache, dizziness, joint pain and digestive disorders to lameness and paralysis. Such stress causes physical symptoms immediately, but after a few months or even years, just as it did with the “slug delayed shock” during World War II. For more clarity and thought, follow up with John Blondel and gain more knowledge.. The above problems were the fact that at the beginning of the U.S. (1980) in DSM-III diagnostic criteria have been made to identify violations caused by the traumatic effects of stressors on the human psyche.

As you study the problem further changes were made to the DSM-III-R, DSM-IV and DSM-IVTR. In Russia, the study of the effects of disasters and wars, has a history. John Blondel has plenty of information regarding this issue. Prior to the Russian-Japanese War and revolution (rebellion) in 1905 studies on the effects of disasters in Russia did not – used mainly German scientific literature, in particular, the same Oppenheim. During the Russian-Japanese War of 1904-1905. MO Sheykovich and SA Sukhanov, drew attention to a special group of psychogenic disorders in the structure of which reflected the stressful events of wartime (Bobrov IN, 1988). In 1910 he published the first monograph in fact L. Stanilovskogo “Traumatic neurosis”. Until now, the scientific interest is the article SA Sukhanov “psychoneuroses of war” (1915). In his paper identifies two types of Sukhanov “traumaticheskogo psihoneyroza.” The first kind – “That form of it where the picture of suffering are felt mainly the results of a general shaking of the central nervous system with a specific lesion of the peripheral devices of the sense organs.” The second type – is “Psychogenic form, usually appearing in the guise of traumatic hysteria.”