PTSD Care Built for the Las Colinas Community

Las Colinas sits at the corporate heart of DFW—Fortune 500 headquarters, international business travel through one of the world’s busiest airports, and a workforce that includes transferees and professionals from across the country and around the world. That environment shapes who walks through our doors looking for PTSD care, and it shapes what people need from a clinic: discreet, evidence-based care delivered around demanding schedules, with respect for the wide range of cultural and linguistic backgrounds our patients bring with them.

Our location at 1507 LBJ Freeway, Suite 750 technically sits just over the line in Farmers Branch (75234), but it serves the Las Colinas/Irving corridor and is immediately accessible from I-635 (LBJ Freeway), the President George Bush Turnpike, and SH-114. Patients coming from Las Colinas, Irving, Coppell, Carrollton, Addison, Grapevine, Euless, and the surrounding Mid-Cities can typically reach us in 15 to 20 minutes—and DFW Airport is less than 15 minutes away. We’re open Monday through Friday from 6:00 AM to 9:00 PM and Saturday from 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM, with same-week appointments available.

Understanding PTSD

Post-traumatic stress disorder is a mental health condition that can develop after a person experiences or witnesses a traumatic event. The triggering event might be a single incident—a serious accident, an assault, a sudden loss, a medical emergency, an act of violence—or it might be repeated exposure to high-stress situations over time, as is common for military members, first responders, and people who have lived through war, political violence, or sustained displacement. PTSD can also develop from being closely connected to an event without being physically present. PTSD affects the brain’s ability to process memories, regulate emotion, and distinguish past danger from present safety, which is why symptoms can feel so overwhelming and so disconnected from current circumstances.

It is important to recognize that PTSD is not a sign of weakness or something you can simply “get over.” It is a treatable neurobiological condition that responds well to evidence-based care. People with PTSD may relive the trauma through flashbacks or nightmares, avoid reminders of the event, feel constantly on edge, or feel emotionally numb and disconnected from the people they love. None of that means something is wrong with who you are. It means the nervous system learned to keep you alive in a moment of extreme threat and hasn’t yet been given the tools to know it’s safe to stand down.

Common Symptoms of PTSD

PTSD symptoms vary widely from person to person, but they typically cluster into four areas:

Intrusive memories. Flashbacks, nightmares, unwanted recurring memories, or strong physical reactions to reminders of the trauma. These can feel like reliving the event, not just remembering it.

Avoidance. Steering clear of places, people, activities, or even conversations that bring up reminders of what happened. This can shrink someone’s life significantly, often without people realizing it. For some Las Colinas residents this looks like avoiding flying when business travel requires it, refusing certain stretches of freeway, or pulling back from social events that feel exposed.

Negative changes in mood and thinking. Persistent guilt or shame, distorted beliefs about oneself or others, emotional numbness, loss of interest in things that used to matter, or feeling disconnected from loved ones. Survivor’s guilt is particularly common after community violence, war exposure, or displacement.

Heightened arousal. Being easily startled, sleep problems, irritability or outbursts, hypervigilance, difficulty concentrating, or feeling like you can’t relax even in safe environments.

Complex PTSD and Co-Occurring Conditions

Complex PTSD typically arises from prolonged or repeated trauma—ongoing abuse, captivity, sustained exposure to combat, repeated medical trauma, or childhood adversity. It also commonly develops in people who lived through extended political violence, war, refugee experiences, or repeated displacement. Complex PTSD includes the core symptoms of PTSD but also involves harder-to-shake patterns: difficulty regulating emotion, persistent feelings of shame or guilt, problems trusting others, and a fractured sense of self. It requires a treatment approach that pays attention to relationship and identity, not just symptom reduction.

PTSD also frequently co-occurs with other conditions—depression, anxiety disorders, substance use, chronic pain, OCD, and sleep disorders are all common. When PTSD and another condition show up together, treating only one of them usually doesn’t work; we assess the full picture during your first visit and build an integrated plan that addresses what’s actually present.

PTSD in International Professionals, Transferees, and Immigrant Communities

Las Colinas is one of the most internationally diverse corporate communities in DFW, and many of our patients carry trauma histories that traveled with them. Naming these patterns matters because pre-immigration trauma is common, often invisible to U.S.-trained clinicians who don’t ask about it, and very treatable when it’s properly recognized:

Pre-immigration and refugee trauma. Many international professionals in Las Colinas left countries that have experienced political instability, civil conflict, natural disaster, or sustained violence. Some came directly through corporate relocation; others arrived first as refugees or asylees and built careers afterward. PTSD from these experiences often goes untreated for years—partly because of stigma, partly because building a new life takes priority, and partly because U.S. mental health care isn’t always set up to recognize what they’re carrying.

Survivor’s guilt and family-abroad concerns. Patients with family still living in unstable regions sometimes experience ongoing activation tied to news events from home, communication gaps, and the guilt of being safe when others are not. This is a real PTSD pattern, not a personality trait or a failure to assimilate.

Cultural and language considerations in trauma work. Trauma is shaped by the cultural frames a person grew up in. We approach treatment with respect for that, ask rather than assume, and adapt our work to fit the patient rather than the other way around.

Workplace and corporate pressure layered on top. For H-1B workers and corporate transferees, the demands of a high-stakes career can sit directly on top of unaddressed pre-immigration trauma. The job often gets all the attention; the underlying nervous system gets none. Treatment can address both.

Confidentiality, Career, and Care

Concerns about confidentiality are legitimate and common in tight corporate communities, and they take on additional weight for patients with immigration status concerns, security clearances, or specialized employer relationships. Mental health treatment records are protected by HIPAA, and your employer cannot access them without your written authorization. Treatment for PTSD generally does not affect immigration status, though specific situations vary and we recommend patients with concerns consult an immigration attorney for guidance specific to their case. We work to make care discreet: extended hours that don’t require explaining absences, appointment times that fit before-work or after-work routines, and clear conversations about what is and isn’t shared with anyone.

Common Sources of Trauma in the Las Colinas Area

Trauma can happen to anyone, but certain patterns show up more often in the communities we serve. Naming them isn’t about defining anyone by their experiences—it’s about reducing the shame that keeps people from asking for help:

Pre-immigration trauma. As discussed above, war exposure, political violence, displacement, and refugee experiences are real PTSD sources that are common in this community and often underaddressed.

Business travel and aviation-related trauma. Frequent fliers through DFW sometimes carry trauma from in-flight emergencies they witnessed, severe turbulence events, or incidents abroad during business travel. For some patients, the proximity of the airport itself becomes a constant low-grade activation.

Motor vehicle accidents on North Dallas corridors. I-635 (LBJ), the President George Bush Turnpike, SH-114, the Dallas North Tollway, and the surrounding high-speed corridors carry heavy traffic, and serious MVAs are common. MVA-related PTSD is frequently underdiagnosed and very responsive to specialty treatment.

Severe weather events. North Texas sits in Tornado Alley, and the DFW Metroplex has been hit by significant storms repeatedly. The February 2021 winter storm (Uri) caused grid failure, frozen pipes across Irving and Las Colinas neighborhoods, and lasting damage. For patients whose trauma involved storms, flooding, or sudden infrastructure failure, severe weather forecasts can trigger significant symptom flares.

Community violence in the DFW region. The Allen Outlets shooting (May 2023) and other recent events affected the broader Metroplex. Many Las Colinas residents have connections—through family, friends, work, or community—to people directly impacted. Secondary trauma is real, and patients don’t have to have been at the scene to be affected.

Military service and combat exposure. The DFW Metroplex has a substantial veteran population. Combat-related PTSD, military sexual trauma, and the cumulative effects of multiple deployments all respond to evidence-based care. We accept Tricare and coordinate with VA care when patients are also using VA benefits.

First responder and emergency services exposure. Fire, EMS, law enforcement, and dispatch personnel across Dallas County—Irving Fire, Irving PD, Farmers Branch PD, Dallas County Sheriff’s, and surrounding agencies—carry repeated exposure to traumatic incidents. Cumulative occupational trauma is real.

Medical trauma. ICU stays, difficult births, cancer treatment, sudden medical emergencies, and pandemic-era healthcare experiences can all leave lasting PTSD. So can being a healthcare worker—nurses, techs, and physicians at the hospital systems across Irving, Carrollton, and the broader North Dallas region carry their own version of medical trauma.

Assault, abuse, and loss. Survivors of physical or sexual assault, intimate partner violence, childhood abuse, or sudden traumatic loss often live with PTSD for years before getting specialized care. The barrier is rarely the willingness to heal—it’s finding someone who knows how to help.

Trauma-Informed Care

Our trauma-informed approach is the foundation of everything we do. We build safety and trust from the first session, move at a pace that respects your nervous system, and explain every step clearly so that nothing feels coercive or surprising. Treatment is collaborative—you are always in control of what we work on, when, and how. Choice and consent aren’t checkboxes; they’re how trauma treatment actually works, because the wrong pace can re-create the helplessness the trauma started with.

We work with your timing. Some patients are ready to talk about specific events in early sessions; others need months of stabilization first. Both paths are legitimate, and we don’t push anyone faster than they can sustain. We also work to make care culturally and linguistically respectful, recognizing that trauma and healing both look different across cultures.

In-Person Appointments

In-person appointments in Las Colinas provide a valuable opportunity for direct interaction with experienced clinicians who specialize in trauma care. Whether you are commuting from Irving, Coppell, Carrollton, Addison, Grapevine, or elsewhere across the Mid-Cities, these sessions allow for thorough assessments, personalized therapy, and real-time adjustments to treatment.

For trauma work in particular, being physically present matters. Clinicians can observe subtle signs of activation that virtual care can miss, support grounding in real time, and provide the kind of steady presence that helps the nervous system settle. We also pace sessions so you leave each appointment feeling more settled, not more activated.

How North Texas Weather Can Affect PTSD Symptoms

Living in North Texas creates conditions that can interact with PTSD symptoms in ways patients in other parts of the country don’t experience. We’ve noticed several patterns worth naming, because patients are often relieved to learn they aren’t imagining the connection:

Spring severe weather and trauma reactivation. March through June brings tornadoes, hail, and severe storms that hit the DFW Metroplex hard. For patients whose trauma involved sudden weather events, storms during deployment, or any loss-of-control event, watch boxes and warnings can drive sharp spikes in symptoms—intrusive memories, sleep disruption, hypervigilance. We plan ahead with patients each spring.

Winter weather and Uri reactivation. Since the February 2021 winter storm and grid failure, many North Texas patients now experience significant symptom flares during winter weather forecasts that would have been unremarkable before. Checking heaters, pipes, water supplies, and elderly relatives can become compulsive in ways that didn’t exist before Uri.

Summer heat, sleep, and travel. North Texas summers are long and hot, which affects sleep quality. Poor sleep makes every PTSD symptom worse—nightmares, irritability, hypervigilance, emotional reactivity. For patients who travel frequently and pass through airports, hotels, and rental cars regularly, the layered exposure can be exhausting.

Treatments We Offer in Las Colinas

Our clinic in Las Colinas offers a comprehensive range of PTSD treatments designed to work together. We combine evidence-based trauma-focused psychotherapy, medication management, and advanced neuromodulation to provide care that meets you where you are. Our goal is to reduce symptoms, restore functioning, and help you reclaim the parts of your life that PTSD has narrowed.

PTSD treatment is not one-size-fits-all. Some patients respond well to medication alone, others benefit most from trauma-focused therapy, and many find the greatest relief through a combination of approaches—often layered over time as the nervous system stabilizes and deeper work becomes possible.

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Trauma-Focused Psychotherapy (CPT, PE, EMDR)

Several psychotherapies have strong evidence for PTSD, and the right choice depends on the person and the trauma. We offer or coordinate the three most established approaches:

Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT). A structured, time-limited therapy that helps patients identify and revise the “stuck points” that trauma often leaves behind—beliefs about safety, trust, control, esteem, and intimacy that no longer match present reality. CPT is typically 12 sessions and works well for patients who prefer a more verbal, structured approach.

Prolonged Exposure (PE). A trauma-focused therapy that involves gradually approaching memories, situations, and reminders of the trauma in a safe, controlled way so the nervous system can learn that the threat is past. PE is highly effective and is delivered at a pace you control.

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). A therapy that uses bilateral stimulation (typically eye movements) while a patient briefly attends to trauma memories, helping the brain reprocess them so they no longer carry the same emotional charge. EMDR is well-established for PTSD and is often a good fit for patients who find detailed verbal description of trauma too difficult—including patients working across a language they didn’t grow up in.

The choice between approaches is collaborative. We discuss the options during your evaluation and match the therapy to your goals, your readiness, and the kind of trauma you’re working through.

Medication Management (SSRIs, SNRIs, Prazosin for Nightmares)

Medication can play an important role in PTSD treatment, especially when sleep, mood, and hyperarousal symptoms are severe enough to make therapy hard to engage with. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) are commonly prescribed for PTSD; sertraline and paroxetine are the two SSRIs with FDA approval specifically for PTSD, though others are also commonly used. These medications can reduce depression, anxiety, irritability, and intrusive symptoms over a course of weeks.

Prazosin deserves special mention. Originally a blood pressure medication, prazosin has been shown to significantly reduce the frequency and intensity of trauma-related nightmares for many patients. For PTSD patients whose nights have become the worst part of their day, prazosin can be transformative—not because it treats the underlying trauma, but because restoring sleep often opens the door to everything else that needs to happen in recovery. We monitor blood pressure carefully when prescribing prazosin.

Our medication management services in Las Colinas are led by our psychiatric nurse practitioners Andrea Montes, PMHNP, and Najah Syed, PMHNP, who oversee careful monitoring of dosage, side effects, and overall effectiveness. We prioritize safety, especially around sleep medications, blood pressure considerations with prazosin, and any other medications you may already be taking. Regular follow-ups ensure adjustments can be made promptly.

TMS for PTSD

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive treatment that uses targeted magnetic pulses to stimulate areas of the brain involved in mood regulation and trauma processing. TMS is FDA-approved for depression and has shown meaningful benefit for PTSD symptoms, particularly when medication and therapy alone have not been sufficient.

TMS sessions are conducted in a comfortable clinical setting, easily accessible from I-635, the President George Bush Turnpike, or SH-114, and minutes from DFW Airport. The procedure is typically well-tolerated, requires no sedation or recovery time, and patients can drive themselves home and return to normal activities the same day. Many patients report improvements in sleep, mood, and overall emotional reactivity over a course of treatment.

Ketamine Therapy for PTSD

Ketamine is a newer, fast-acting option for PTSD, particularly for patients with treatment-resistant symptoms or significant depression alongside their PTSD. Unlike traditional antidepressants, which work through serotonin and can take weeks to show effect, ketamine acts on the glutamate system and can produce noticeable symptom relief within hours or days.

Ketamine therapy is delivered under medical supervision in a series of carefully monitored sessions. In Las Colinas, we integrate ketamine into a broader treatment plan—typically alongside trauma-focused therapy, because the window of reduced symptom intensity that ketamine opens can be a powerful time to do the deeper psychological work that trauma recovery requires. Ketamine is not appropriate for everyone, and we’ll have a clear conversation about whether it’s the right fit during your evaluation.

Specialized Care for Veterans, First Responders & Medical Trauma

People whose trauma comes from service to others often face their own set of barriers to care: cultural expectations of toughness, concerns about how treatment will affect a career or security clearance, and the legitimate sense that civilian providers don’t always understand the work. We take all of that seriously.

For veterans, we approach treatment with respect for the culture and complexity of military service. We accept Tricare and coordinate with VA care when patients are also using VA benefits. For first responders—Irving Fire, Irving PD, Farmers Branch PD, Dallas County Sheriff’s, and surrounding agencies—we understand cumulative occupational trauma and the unique challenge of treating PTSD in someone who still has to go back on shift. For healthcare workers and medical trauma survivors across the North Dallas health systems, we recognize the particular layer of trauma that comes from being both witness and participant in critical moments.

We’re not a VA clinic and not a peer-support program, but we work alongside both, and many of our patients use multiple resources together. What we add is specialty-level psychiatric and trauma care delivered close to home.

Meet Our Las Colinas Team

Our Las Colinas clinic is led by two psychiatric nurse practitioners with training in mood, anxiety, and trauma-related disorders:

Andrea Montes, PMHNP — Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner. View profile.

Najah Syed, PMHNP — Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner. View profile.

Our Las Colinas team takes a trauma-informed, patient-first approach grounded in evidence-based practice: treatment plans built around your specific symptoms and goals, transparent conversations about what each option can and can’t do, and a steady pace that respects your nervous system. With same-week appointments, extended hours, Tricare accepted, and discretion that respects the realities of corporate and international professional life, we’re committed to delivering specialty PTSD care that’s both rigorous and genuinely accessible.

Your First Visit

Starting PTSD treatment can feel daunting, and we know that walking through the door is sometimes the hardest part. Your first visit is designed to be welcoming, thorough, and unhurried. Most first appointments run 60 to 90 minutes—long enough to actually hear your story without rushing through it.

You won’t be asked to describe your trauma in detail at the first visit unless you choose to. We’ll talk about what’s bringing you in, how symptoms are affecting your life, your history, and your goals. The actual trauma work, if and when you decide to do it, happens at a pace and a moment that you and your clinician choose together.

Comprehensive PTSD Evaluation

The comprehensive evaluation includes a detailed clinical interview, standardized PTSD assessments, screening for co-occurring conditions (depression, anxiety, substance use, sleep disorders, OCD), and—when appropriate and with your permission—input from family members or other healthcare providers. This process helps identify the full picture of what you’re carrying, which is the only way to build a treatment plan that actually addresses it.

We also explore your history with PTSD, any previous treatments, and the strategies you’ve already been using to cope. That history matters; it tells us what’s been tried, what’s helped, and what to do differently this time.

Personalized Treatment Plan & Goal Setting

Following the evaluation, we collaborate with you to create a personalized treatment plan that aligns with your needs and preferences. This plan outlines the recommended therapies, medication options, and any additional supports that may be beneficial. Goals in PTSD treatment often start practical—better sleep, fewer nightmares, less reactivity—and expand from there into the broader work of reclaiming the life you want.

We encourage open communication and ongoing feedback so that treatment stays responsive to your evolving needs. Recovery from PTSD is not linear; we expect that and adjust the plan accordingly.

 

Las Colinas PTSD Treatment FAQs

Where is your PTSD clinic located in Las Colinas?

Our clinic is located at 1507 LBJ Freeway, Suite 750, just over the line in Farmers Branch (75234) but immediately adjacent to Las Colinas and convenient to Irving, Coppell, Carrollton, Addison, Grapevine, and DFW Airport. The location sits directly on I-635, which makes it accessible from across the Mid-Cities and North Dallas.

Do you treat PTSD in international professionals, corporate transferees, and refugees?

Yes. Many Las Colinas residents are corporate transferees, H-1B workers, and international professionals who carry pre-immigration trauma alongside the demands of building a life in a new country. We approach this with care and discretion. PTSD related to political violence, war, displacement, or migration experiences is treatable, and we work to make care culturally and linguistically respectful.

Is PTSD treatment confidential? Can my employer or immigration status be affected?

Mental health treatment records are protected by HIPAA, and your employer cannot access them without your written authorization. Treatment for PTSD generally does not affect immigration status, though specific situations vary and patients with concerns are encouraged to consult an immigration attorney for guidance specific to their case. We work to make care discreet, with extended hours that don’t require explaining absences to your team.

Do you treat PTSD in veterans, first responders, and healthcare workers?

Yes. Many of our Las Colinas patients are veterans, active first responders from Irving Fire, Irving PD, Farmers Branch PD, Dallas County Sheriff’s, and surrounding agencies, and healthcare workers across the North Dallas health systems. We accept Tricare and work alongside VA care when patients are also using VA benefits.

What is prazosin and how does it help PTSD nightmares?

Prazosin is a medication originally developed for blood pressure that has been shown to reduce the frequency and intensity of PTSD-related nightmares. It works by blocking the adrenaline response that often drives trauma nightmares, helping patients sleep more deeply and wake less often. It’s often a key part of medication management for PTSD when sleep disturbance is a major symptom, and we monitor blood pressure carefully when prescribing it.

What forms of PTSD treatment do you offer in Las Colinas?

We offer evidence-based PTSD treatments including trauma-focused psychotherapy (Cognitive Processing Therapy, Prolonged Exposure, and EMDR), medication management (SSRIs, SNRIs, and prazosin for nightmares), FDA-approved Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), and ketamine therapy for treatment-resistant symptoms.

Do you accept insurance for PTSD treatment?

We are in-network with most major insurance plans including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Optum, United Healthcare, Tricare, Wellpoint, and many others. Please contact our Las Colinas office at 214-997-0934 to verify your specific coverage before your first appointment.

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