This explains my way of thinking about the two diagnosis, especially with my population:
http://www.add.org/?page=ADHDandPTSD
He sounds like an interesting guy.
Despite what he hints at though, ADHD is likely actually
less represented in the veteran than civilian population. While I'm sure you get a fair number of undiagnosed cases that make their way through, ADHD requiring medication or ADHD impacting recent academics is disqualifying and would prevent enlistment into the Army (I'm Reserve Corps army-side; I'm less familiar with Air Force or Navy, but their standards are likely to be similar). Not to say it doesn't happen, but statistically it's less likely than on civvie side.
It's NOT a disqualification once you're in, however, and the military diagnoses and treats a fair bit of ADHD.
So my treatment tree would likely be this:
- If they're already hold a documented diagnosis of ADHD and have a stable/established treatment regimen, I'd likely keep it.
- If tthey do not hold a diagnosis of ADHD and they made it through their childhood, high school, and military career without the use of stimulants for ADHD, I would leverage what techniques they used for this success while treating their PTSD and work on stabilizing that before I'd start a new medication with potential for abuse and potential for exacerbating the symptoms of PTSD I'm trying to treat.
Non-treatment of ADHD isn't ideal. But trying to come up with a new diagnosis of ADHD in a patient with current untreated PTSD is going to be iffy at best and the first step in coming up with an accurate ADHD diagnosis would be to separate out the PTSD symptoms, which would be done by symptom management. Introducing amphetamines and the like to an untreated PTSD case has risks that far outweigh benefits.