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New Braunfels, TX Β· Psychiatric Guidance

PTSD vs Complex PTSD: What's the Difference?New Braunfels, TX

PTSD and Complex PTSD (C-PTSD) both stem from trauma but differ significantly in their origins, symptom profiles, and treatment approaches. C-PTSD results from prolonged or repeated trauma β€” abuse, neglect, domestic violence, captivity β€” rather than a single traumatic event.

This guide is written specifically for residents of New Braunfels, TX (Comal County) looking for clarity on this question before seeking psychiatric care. Lyte Psychiatry serves New Braunfels patients via telehealth with same-week appointment availability.

Location: New Braunfels, Comal County, Texas
Population: 90K
Service Type: Telehealth
Region: San Antonio

Understanding the Difference in New Braunfels

For New Braunfels residents weighing their options, here is a direct comparison of PTSD and Complex PTSD (C-PTSD). Here is what each offers, who it suits, and who it doesn't.

Option A

PTSD

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder β€” F43.10

PTSD develops after exposure to a specific traumatic event (combat, accident, assault, natural disaster). Core symptoms: intrusive re-experiencing, avoidance, negative alterations in cognition/mood, and hyperarousal. FDA-approved treatments: sertraline, paroxetine; evidence-based therapies: PE, EMDR, CPT.

Best For

  • βœ“Single or limited traumatic events
  • βœ“Clear onset tied to a specific traumatic incident
  • βœ“Primarily re-experiencing and hyperarousal symptoms

Not Ideal If

  • βœ—Prolonged childhood abuse or complex relational trauma β€” C-PTSD criteria better fit
Option B

Complex PTSD (C-PTSD)

ICD-11 6B41 β€” Complex PTSD

C-PTSD includes all PTSD features plus disturbances in self-organization: persistent negative self-concept, difficulty regulating emotions, and problems with relationships. It results from chronic interpersonal trauma β€” childhood abuse, domestic violence, prolonged captivity, trafficking.

Best For

  • βœ“History of repeated or prolonged interpersonal trauma
  • βœ“Significant identity, self-worth, and emotional regulation difficulties
  • βœ“Chronic relationship difficulties stemming from early relational trauma

Not Ideal If

  • βœ—Single acute traumatic events without relational/identity disturbance β€” standard PTSD criteria are sufficient

Our Verdict for New Braunfels

C-PTSD requires longer, relationally-focused trauma therapy β€” phase-based treatment rather than just EMDR or PE.

C-PTSD is not yet a DSM-5 diagnosis (it's in ICD-11), but clinically it's distinct from single-event PTSD and requires different treatment phasing. Phase-based trauma therapy (stabilization first, then trauma processing) is recommended. At Lyte Psychiatry, our evaluation screens for both and coordinates with trauma-specialized therapists for appropriate treatment planning.

Getting PTSD Help in New Braunfels, TX

New Braunfels residents have access to Lyte Psychiatry's full psychiatric services β€” evaluated and managed by board-eligible psychiatrists and psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNPs). Whether you are seeking clarity on ptsd vs complex ptsd, or are ready to begin treatment, here is what matters locally.

Serving New Braunfels and Nearby Areas

Lyte Psychiatry provides telehealth psychiatric services to residents of New Braunfels (Comal County). Same-week appointments are typically available.

Also serving nearby:

SeguinSan MarcosKyleSchertzCanyon Lake

Insurance Accepted in TX

Lyte Psychiatry accepts all major Texas insurance plans. Most patients pay $20–$50 per visit after copay.

Who We Serve in New Braunfels

Fast-growing Hill Country city between San Antonio and Austin. Relocation stress and growth anxiety. Our New Braunfels patients navigating ptsd vs complex ptsd decisions include:

new transplantsyoung familiestourism workersHill Country retirees

Conditions We Treat in New Braunfels

Regardless of where you land on ptsd vs complex ptsd, these are the conditions Lyte Psychiatry treats for New Braunfels patients:

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from New Braunfels residents about ptsd vs complex ptsd.

Is C-PTSD in the DSM-5?

No β€” Complex PTSD is recognized in the ICD-11 (the WHO's diagnostic manual) but not the DSM-5 (used by most US clinicians). US providers typically diagnose PTSD with additional diagnoses capturing the self-organization disturbances (PTSD + BPD, or PTSD + persistent depressive disorder). The clinical concept of C-PTSD is widely recognized regardless.

How is PTSD vs C-PTSD treated differently?

Standard PTSD: EMDR, Prolonged Exposure (PE), Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), SSRIs. C-PTSD: phase-based treatment starting with stabilization (emotional regulation skills, safety) before trauma processing. Jumping to trauma exposure without stabilization in C-PTSD can worsen symptoms.

Can medication help C-PTSD?

Yes. SSRIs (sertraline, paroxetine), prazosin for nightmares, and mood stabilizers for emotional dysregulation are all used as adjuncts to therapy for C-PTSD. Medication doesn't address the trauma itself but reduces symptom severity enough to engage in therapy.

Does insurance cover PTSD treatment in Texas?

Yes. MHPAEA requires insurance coverage for PTSD treatment. Lyte Psychiatry accepts all major Texas insurance plans for PTSD psychiatric evaluation and medication management.

How do I get trauma treatment in Texas?

Lyte Psychiatry offers PTSD and trauma evaluation with medication management and referrals to EMDR and trauma-focused CBT therapists. Same-week telehealth appointments across Texas.

Ready to Get Clarity From a New Braunfels Psychiatrist?

Stop researching in circles. A 50-minute evaluation at Lyte Psychiatry gives you a specific diagnosis, a specific treatment plan, and answers to exactly the questions you have been searching. Same-week appointments available for New Braunfels residents.

Book a New Braunfels Evaluation β†’

Accepting TX insurance Β· Telehealth Β· 469-733-0848