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April 2, 2021 by KT

Disorders Notes

Here are my notes on this topic:

1. Emotional Disorders

A. Depression

  • Major Depressive Disorder
  • Lasts for weeks at a time
  • Symptoms
    • lack energy & pleasure
    • helpless
    • sad
    • little pleasure from sex or food
    • trouble concentrating
    • trouble sleeping
    • suicidal thoughts
    • don’t enjoy usual activities
    • feel worthless, sad, guilty
    • pull away from friends
  • Findings
    • react normally to sad images
    • react normally to fearful images
    • rarely smile are happy images
    • rarely laugh at jokes
    • decreased R to likely reward
  • 5% of US adults
  • Childhood depression
    • equal for boys and girls
    • beyond 14, more common in females
  • Range
    • long-term depression
    • more common to have episodes
    • periods of normal mood
    • first episode longest
    • more intense first episode
    • easier to start another
Causes

1. Genetics

    • Early-onset (before age 30)
    • more relatives with depression
    • bulimia, irritable bowel syndrome
    • alcohol or marijuana abuse
    • anxiety & migraines
    • ADHD & OCD
    • Late onset (after 45 to 50)
    • relatives have circulatory problems
    • viral infections in farm animals?
    • Borna disease
    • 1/3 have it

2. Infections

    • Borna disease
    • infectious neurotropic virus
    • abnormal behavior
    • death

3. Estrogen

    • estrogen connection
    • more women than men
    • postpartum depression
    • 20% of mothers
    • recover quickly

4. Brain Abnormalities

    • hemisphere Dominance
    • decreased activity in left hemisphere
    • increased activity in right prefrontal cortex
Treatment

1. Do nothing

      • untreated
      • recover within few months
      • episodes

2. Drugs

      • some respond to one drug and not another
      • antipsychotic drugs
      • antidepressant drugs
      • takes effect minutes to hours
      • weeks before mood elevation
      • Antidepressant Drugs

1. Tricyclics

      • prevent reuptake of serotonin+

2. SSRIs

      • prevent reuptake of serotonin
      • fluoxetine (Prozac)

3. SNRIs

      • block reuptake of serotonin & norepinephrine

4. MAOIs

      • monoamine oxidase inhibitors
      • block enzyme from metabolizing

5. Atypical antidepressants

      • bupropion (Wellbutrin)
      • inhibits reuptake of dopamine & some norepinephrine

6. atypical

7. Placebo

      • placebo vs drug
      • mild to moderate depression
      • no clear benefit
      • severe depression
      • often overlap with drug group
      • no benefit of drug over placebo
      • antidepressants don’t always work

3. ECT

    • electroconvulsive Therapy
    • seizures with electric shock
    • every other day for two weeks
    • invented by Ladislas Meduna
    • 1930’s for schizophrenia
    • ineffectual on schizophrenia
    • overused in 1950’s
    • major side effect = memory loss
    • lasts for several months
    • 50% relapse within 6 months, iif used alone

4. Sleep

    • altered Sleep Patterns
    • sleep problems precede mood changes
    • more eye movements in REM
    • enter REM within 45 minutes
    • 80 minutes for non-depressed
    • like jet lag
    • change sleep cycle
    • stay awake all night
    • alternate sleep schedule

5. Exercise

    • regular, non-strenuous exercise
    • increase blood flow to brain

B. Bipolar

  • Unipolar
    • between depression & normal
  • Bipolar disorder
    • (also called manic-depressive)
    • between depression & mania
  • Manic
    • side effects of steroids & SSRIs
  • drug intoxication
  • (cocaine & amphetamine)
  • tumors
  • mood disorder
  • Presence of mania = bipolar
  • don’t need to have been depressed
  • cyclical changes in mood
  • even if never hit depression
  • sleep (too much, too little)
  •  
  • Bipolar I
  • large swings
  • switch between
  •   good moods (happy, highly active, up)
  •   bad moods (irritable, angry, depressed)
  • men & women (about equal)
  • starts early: 15-25 years old
  • also called manic-depression
  • at least 1 manic episode
  • often many depressive episodes
  • mania can last for day or months
  • Cause
    • unknown
    • more likely among relatives
  • Triggers
    • medications (antidepressants, steroids)
    • sleeplessness
    • drug abuse
    • childbirth
  • Manic Symptoms
    • elevated mood; boost of energy
    • don’t sleep much (not tired)
    • easily distracted
    • racing thoughts
    • bursts of cleaning, doing
    • talking more or faster
    • overestimate abilities
    • poor self control
    • binge eating, drinking or drugs
    • promiscuity
    • spending
    • temper
    • excitement & laughter
    • self-confidence
    • rambling speech
    • loss of inhibitions
  • Bipolar
    • I = large swings
    • II = sad and guilty
    • Cyclothmia = “bipolar light”
  • Bipolar II
    • alternate between sad and guilty
    • never had manic episode
    • high energy-impulsiveness
    • depression
    • milder episodes
    • Also called hypomania
    • more common in women
    • more depression
    • more “mixed” episodes
    • mania & depression at same time
    • women 3x more likely to also have:
    •   alcoholism
    •   anxiety disorder
    • Women more likely to be rapid-cyclers
    • 1+ episode per year
    • Genetics
    • strong hereditary basis
    • twin studies
    • two genes increase probability of bipolar II
    • same genes
    • predispose major depression
    • predispose bipolar disorder
  • All Types
    • high risk of suicide
    • both when manic & depressed
    • manic & depressive moods can overlap
    • drugs for mood stabilization
    • carbamazepine (anti-convulse)
    • lamotrigine (anti-seizure)
    • lithium (anti-manic)
    • valproic acid (anti-seizure)
Treatment
    1. lithium salts
      • most effective therapy
      • don’t know why
    1. consistent sleep schedule

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

      • usually in winter
      • most common closest to poles
    • Treatment
      • expose to very bright lights
      • for about an hour
      • early in morning or evening

C. Anxiety

  • Generalize Anxiety
    • extremely worried
    • little or no reason to worry
    • anxious about getting thru day
    • fear things will go bad
    • develops slowly, often starts as teen
    • symptoms come & go
    • worse under stress
  • Symptoms
    • headaches
    • trouble falling asleep
    • excessive worry
    • aware you’re worrying
    • easily startled, can’t relax
    • unexplained pain
    • stomach aches
    • difficulty swallowing
    • tremors, twitches
  • Can run in families
    • No clear genetic link
  • Treated with combo of:
    • Medications
    • Anti-anxiety
    • Anti-depressants
    • Therapy
    • Thinking, breathing

Obsessive-Compulsive

  • episodes
    • obsessions: upsetting thoughts
    • compulsions: stress reducers
    • development
      • starts in childhood or teen
      • most diagnosed by age 19
    • Symptoms
      • need to repeatedly check things
      • repeated thoughts or images
      • fear of dirt, gems, intruders
      • routines & rituals
      • spend 1+ hrs per day
      • prefer round numbers (lucky)
      • count lines in paragraph
      • wash hair three times
      • morning routine
  • Runs in families
    • no direct genetic link
  • Cognitive therapy
    • fear without obsessive thoughts
  • Exposure-Response prevention
    • see image, change response
  • Medication
  • anti-anxiety medications
  • antidepressants
  • work better than anti-anxiety
  • 2-3 months to work
  •  
  • Panic Disorder
    • frequent periods of anxiety
    • occasional attacks
    • Symptoms
    • rapid breathing
    • increased heart rate
    • sweating
    • fear for several minutes
    • fear of disaster
    • fear losing control
    • may feel like heart attack
    • worry about next attack
    • young women
    • More common in women
    • more in adolescent & young adult
    • GABA
    • main inhibitory NT in amygdala
    • GABA blockers induce panic
  • Benzodiazepines
    • Diazepam
    • Chlordiazepoxide
    • Alprazolam
    • bind to GABAA receptor
    • receptor changes shape
    • attach easily & bind more
    • affect amygdala, midbrain & hypothalamus+
    • can be addictive
    • temporary relief
    • beta-blockers
    • less sweat & pounding heart
  • Propranolol
    • affects synapses in amygdala
    • interferes with protein synthesis
    • weakens emotional R
    • persisting decrease in fear intensity
  • Runs in families
    • no direct genetic link
  •  
  • Social Phobia
    • strong fear of being judged
    • strong feeling of embarrassed
    • fear gets in way of work, etc
    • afraid of doing common things in front of others
    • sign a check in front of a cashier
    • eat or drink in front of others
    • use a public restroom
    • Know its irrational
    • can’t control the fear
    • Starts as child-adolescent
    • diagnoses if symptoms last 6 months+
    • can last for many years
    • Symptoms
      • anxious being with other people
      • hard time talking to others
    • self-conscious
      • afraid others will judge them
    • worry for days before an event
    • avoid groups & crowds
    • blush or sweat around people
    • feel nauseous when with others
    • afraid of being called on in school
    • hate to meet with my boss
    • don’t eat lunch with co-workers
    • worried about being stared at
    • heart pounds if go to meeting
    • can’t eat or sleep for days before staff meeting

D. PTSD

  • Anxiety disorder
    • some get, not most
    • see event (observer)
    • in event (participant)
  • Who gets PTSD?
    • anyone
    • any age
  • Symptoms
  • Three categories:

(1) Re-experiencing symptoms

  • flashbacks
  • bad dreams
  • frightening thoughts

(2) Avoidance symptoms

  • stay away from places, events
  • avoid reminders of experience
  • emotionally numb
  • guilty, depressed or worried
  • loss of  interest hobbies, etc
  • difficulty remembering event

(3) Hyperarousal symptoms

  • relatively constant symptoms
    • not triggered
    • easily startled
    • feel tense or “on edge”
    • trouble sleeping
    • angry outbursts
  • Diagnosis
    • 1 month+
    • 1+ re-experiencing symptom
    • 3+ avoidance symptoms
    • 2+ hyperarousal symptoms
  • Risk
    • some get it but not all
    • most don’t
  • Risk factors
    • previous dangerous events
    • history of mental illness
    • getting hurt
    • seeing people hurt or killed
    • lack of resilience factors
  • Resilience factors
    • support group
    • feeling did right thing
    • coping strategies
    • respond even though afraid
    •  social support after event
  • Medications
  • Antidepressants
  •   sadness, worry, anger & numb
    • Zoloft
    • Paxil
    • side effects
    • annoying but go away (few days)
    • headaches, nausea, sleepy
  • Other medications
    • 1. Benzodiazepines
      • relax and sleep
      • may cause memory problems or become dependency
    • 2. Antipsychotics
      • tend to gain weight
      • Prozac & Celexa
        • feel less tense or sad
        • co-occurring depression

E. Too happy?

2. Personality Disorders

A. Revisiting personality

  • Difficulty defining personality
  • Difficulty defining personality disorders

Causes

  • trait theories = stars, genes, etc.
  • psychodynamic theories = inability to uncover unconscious urges, structures and processes, and fixation
  • behaviorist theories = lack of conditioning, reinforcers and dissimilative stimuli
  • humanist & existential theories = restrictive influences of self or others that hold you back from congruence and self-actualization
  • cognitive theories = not confronting false beliefs and assumptions

B. What are personality disorders

Karen Horney

  • 10 neurotic needs
  • Exaggerated need for…

Normal Plus

Dis-ability

Why personality disorders

  • deeply ingrained
  • can’t easily change

Characteristics

  • order vs. disorder
  • extreme inflexibility
  • internal subjective distress
  • external social distress

10 Disorders, 3 Overlapping Clusters

  • fuzzy edges

C. Cluster A

  • 1 or 3 disorders
  • rare or non-existent
  • odd or eccentric patterns of thinking
  • extreme social detachment
  • unusual beliefs
  • “uncovered” diagnosis

1. Paranoid personality disorder

  • distrust and suspicion of others
  • on guard
  • doubt commitment of others
  • hold grudges
  • hypersensitive to criticism

2. Schizoid personality disorder

  • detachment and limited emotion
  • avoid activities
  • stilted speech
  • lack of joy
  • schizophrenic-like
  • autistic-like

3. Schizotypal personality disorder

  • difficulty with close relationships
  • abnormal thinking & behavior patterns
  • eccentric
  • digressions in thought and speech
  • magical thinking
  • belief in clairvoyance
  • bizarre fantasies
  • witchcraft, aliens

D. Cluster B

  • unstable emotional states
  • erratic behavior
  • aggression toward
  • manipulation of others

1. Antisocial personality disorder

  • disregard for others
  • impulsiveness & aggression
  • encounter with police

2. Borderline personality disorder

  • instability in relationships, emotions, and sense of self, and impulsiveness
  • intense & divergent moods
  • impulsive anger
  • melancholic and mania
  • 1684, Bone
  • 1890, Rosse
  • 1921, Kraepelin
  • Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder
  • on the edge (border) on insanity
  • self harm; risk of suicide
  • splitting = all-none thinking
  • see self as bad
  • 3 distinguishing symptoms
  •   sensitivity to minor rejection
  •   alternating idealism & devaluation
  •   mood regulation problems

3. Histrionic personality disorder

  • over-the-top expressiveness and attention-seeking
  • excessive attention-seeking
  • inappropriate seduction
  • excessive desire for approval
  • based on hysteria
  • wandering womb
  • www.himsteria.com (Links to an external site.)

4. Narcissistic personality disorder

  • unusually strong desire for admiration
  • inflated self-image
  • lack of empathy
  • exaggerated self-importance
  • crave admiration
  • struggle with empathy
  • excessive daydream (power, success, looks)

E. Cluster C

Anxious or fearful thinking

1. Avoidant personality disorder

  • avoidance of social closeness
  •  fear of what others think

2. Dependent personality disorder

  • overly reliant on others
  • afraid to disrupt relationships

3. Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder

  • rigid fixation on details
  • personal standards

3. Psychological Disorders

  • Common disorders everyone has
  • Déjà vu
  •   been here before
  •   best-known memory anomaly
  •   usually passes in seconds
  •   can last for minutes or hours
  •   characterized by
  •     sensitivity or anxiety
  •     overly fatigued
  •   explanations
  •     reincarnation (past lives)
  •     special ability (clairvoyance or telepathy)
  •     psychoanalytic process (now like childhood)
  •     partial recognition (clue confusion)
  •     physiological (changes in temporal lobes, epilepsy)
  • Jamais vu
  •   don’t recognize people you know (aliens)
  •   don’t recognize familiar situations
  •   see person out of normal context
  •   fatigued or intoxicated
  • Time gap
  •   no conscious recollection of trip
  •   late at night; well-traveled route
  •   highway hypnosis
  • Cryptomnesia
  •   unintended p lagiarism
  •   believe it’s a novel creation
  •     but based on earlier works
  •     usually others’ work
  •   Nietzsche, Freud, Helen Keller
  •   George Harrison
  •     My Sweet Lord (Beatles)
  •     He’s So Fine (Chiffons)
  •   failure to recognize it as familiar
  •   minimize by
  •     searching literature
  •     peer review
  • Transient Global Amnesia
  •   rare (1 in 10k)
  •   appears suddenly
  •   lasts for minutes, hours, days
  •     4.5 hrs average
  •   disoriented to time and place
  •     Where am I? repeatedly
  •   no loss of personal identity
  •   brief period of RA & AA
  •     can’t remember last few minutes
  •     can’t form new memory traces
  •   most frequent in older people
  •     over 50
  •   more men than women
  •   other memory systems work (working, semantic, procedural)
  •   many triggers (cold shower, physical stress, large meal, sex)
  •   cause = temporary lack of blood flow to hippocampus
  •   recovery is complete
  •     can’t recall details during attack
  •   not uncommon to reoccur
  •     25% second attack
  •     3% have third attack

4. Schizophrenia

  • The Schizophrenias
  • 1% incidence
  • more likely in US & Europe
  •   10-100 times
  • slightly more common in men?
  •   earlier onset
  •   more severe
  • Originally: dementia praecox
  • 1911, Eugen Bleuler called it schiz
  • starts as teens or early adult
  •   typical onset: 16-30
  •   uncommon onset over 45
  • Symptoms
  •   symptoms vary
  •   seem OK until share thoughts
  •   sit without moving…for hours
  • Episodes
  •   typical, not more than 6 weeks
  •   symptoms come and go
  •   lasts a few days
  •     feel agitated
  •     hallucination
  •   lasts a few months
  •     delusions
  • Range of severity
  •   hospitalized
  •   meaningful lives in communities
  • 3 factors
  •   disconnected mind-motor
  •     spontaneous movement
  •     fluid speech
  •     self-control
  •   disorganized thinking
  •   distorted thinking
  •     delusions
  •     hallucinations
  • Positive Symptoms
  •   unique to schizophrenia; not schiz without them
  •   Delusions
  •     unusual false beliefs
  •       Martians are controlling me
  •       reading my mind
  •       thought insertion
  •       I killed someone
  •       behavior controlled by
  •         people on TV or movies
  •         special messages
  •         magnetic waves
  •     believe you are someone else
  •       often historical person
  •     someone out to get you
  •       paranoid delusions
  •       spying, plotting, cheating
  •   Hallucinations
  •     false sensory experiences
  •       hear voices not there
  •       see things not there
  •     any sense (sight, touch)
  •     voices are most common
  •     invisible objects or people
  •   Thought Disorders
  •     Disorganized thinking
  •     Thought blocking
  •     Nonsense words, rambling sentences
  • Semi-positive & negative
  •   Movement disorders
  •     agitated movements
  •     catatonic (immobility); rare, treated with drugs
  •     can be caused by drugs
  • Negative
  •   occur in other disorders
  •   flat affect
  •     face immobile
  •     monotonous voice
  •   similar to brain damage
  •     poor control of eye movements
  •     unusual facial expressions
  •   negative = lack of
  •     lack of pleasure
  •     lack of affect
  •     lack of initiative & planning (poor hygiene)
  •     lack of patience
  •     lack of social connection (withdrawal)
  •     lack of fluidity (poverty of speech)
  • Cognitive Symptoms
  •   difficult to notice
  •   executive functioning
  •     trouble switching tasks
  •     trouble paying attention
  •     trouble with working memory
  • Types of Schizophrenia
  •   Disorganized
  •   Catatonic
  •   Paranoid
  •   Undifferentiated
  • Causes
  •   Genetics
  •     1% general population
  •     10% when parent or sibling
  •     15% in fraternal twins
  •     50% in identical twins
  •     Children of schiz patients
  •       Less than half
  •     Adopted children
  •       12% siblings in same environment
  •       0 adopted had schiz
  •     People without family history can develop schiz
  •   Dopamine
  •     All treatment drugs block DA receptors
  •     cocaine, amphetamines, LSD aggravate schiz
  •   Glutamate
  •     release less glutamate
  •     have fewer glutamate receptors
  •   Drugs can make things worse
  •     nicotine
  •   Relapse
  •     feel better, stop taking
  •   Brain abnormalities
  •   Environment
  •   Infection

5. Fake Disorders

A. Medical model

B. My fake disorder

  • hysteria
  • himsteria

C. More fakes (Dissociatives)

  • Psychogenic amnesia
  •   caused by extremely stressful
  •   unable to recall personal info
  •   usually lasts a few hours
  •     can last years
  •   always
  •     can always remember past abilities
  •     may not recognize friends & relatives
  •     recall how to play poker
  •     aware can’t remember key info
  •   usually
  •     distressed by inability to remember
  •     recovery is complete
  •       disappears quickly
  •       can remember what couldn’t
  •     doesn’t usually reoccur
  • Psychological fugue
  •   from Latin “to flee”
  •   intolerable stress or anxiety
  •   hours or years
  •     like Holden Cauldied (Catcher in the Rye)
  •   amnesia for personal memories
  •     move away from home
  •     assume new identity
  •       marry another person & have kids
  •       new personality
  •       new friends, name and job
  •   when fugue ends
  •     memory of past life returns
  •   sometimes not completely
  •   can’t recall events during fugue state
  • Multiple personalities
  •   not schizophrenia
  •   severely disturbed thinking
  •   personality divided into 2 or more distinct identities
  •     average is 13
  •   more often in women than men
  •     Three Faces of Eve
  •   Assumed to be:
  •     related to childhood experiences
  •     rarely diagnosed until adolescence
  •     defense mechanism to banish upsetting memories
  •       send them to alternate self
  •     response to severe physical abuse
  •       often sexual
  •       by close relative
  •   each identity can be different
  •     different sex, age or race
  •     each has own likes and dislikes
  •   can suddenly appear and take control
  •   can suddenly disappear
  •   can be aware of each other
  •      carry on conversations
  •   no conscious recall for events when other personality is dominant
  •     what one learns can influence another
  •     one looks at pictures, other says looks familiar
  •   doesn’t exist
  •   never did
  •   made it up

Filed Under: Uncategorized

‘There are two great principles of psychology: people have a tremendous capacity to change, and we usually don’t.”   Ken Tangen

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