Week 9 - Self/Body Image & Psychosis Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 components to “self-concept”?

A

1) self-image

2) self-esteem

3) ideal self

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2
Q

What is the critical visual methodology?

A

Visual meaning made at 3 sites:

1) image production

2) the image itself

3) site of audiencing

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3
Q

What is PCOS?

A

Polycystic ovary syndrome

Hormone IMBALANCE/irregular periods

Excess hair growth

Weight gain

Infertility

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4
Q

What’s an explanation of body dysmorphia?

What’s the DSM-V TR criteria?

A

Constantly feeling or believing that there’s something WRONG with how you LOOK

DSM-V TR criteria:

1) preoccupation with perceived deficits/flaws in appearance not/slightly appear to others

2) repetitive behavior/mental acts

3) preoccupation causes significant clinical distress

4) appearance preoccupation is not better explained by concerns w body fat or weight meeting eating disorder criteria

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5
Q

What is some treatment of body dysmorphia?

A

1) cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)

2) selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI’s)

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6
Q

What is psychosis?

A

A condition in which people have difficulty distinguishing what is REAL and what is NOT REAL

Hallucinations

Delusions

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7
Q

What are hallucinations?

A

Often associated with MENTAL ILLNESS or neurological illness

CAN be induced in healthy people too

Can distinguish between “true hallucinations” and pseudo-hallucinations (where the person is aware that what they are experiencing is NOT real)

Can occur in any sensory modality

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8
Q

True or false. Seem to grow less common with development

A

True

Childhood 17%

adolescence 7.5%

Adulthood 5%

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9
Q

What are auditory voice hallucinations?

A

More typical symptom of psychosis

NEGATIVE OR COMMANDING tone

Simple, sporadic, transient extremely common in pop

“phantom”

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10
Q

True or false. More complex hallucinations are common in people w/out psychosis or neurological illness

A

False

They’re UNCOMMON in people w/out psychosis or neurological illness

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11
Q

What is the “hearing voices movement”?

A

Hearing voices can be part of the human experience…

Etc…

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12
Q

What are delusions?

A

Beliefs which are POORLY/NOT at all justified by evidence or reason, persist despite evidence

Can be MONOTHEMATIC (following a single theme), or polythematic (following many themes)

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13
Q

Psychosis can be a ________ of many different conditions

A

Symptom

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14
Q

What is schizophrenia?

What are the (+) and (-) symptoms?

A

Most prevalent condition with PSYCHOSIS as a central feature

(+) symptom: the present of an experience/behaviour that people don’t typically DON’T show
Ex) hallucinations and delusions

(-) symptom: the lack of an experience/behaviour that people typically DO show
Ex) social withdrawal and poverty of speech

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15
Q

What are some psychomotor symptoms?

A

People with schizophrenia often present with CATATONIA (abnormal movements or immobility)

Can develop into…

Malignant catatonia (life-threatening)

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16
Q

Patients with schizophrenia sometimes report that their thoughts and actions are happening _____ __ ______ _______ or that they are _________ _________ by another person or entity

What’s a possible explanation of this?

A

Out of their control (avolition)

Being controlled (delusion of control/alien control)

——————————————————————————-

Is that patients may have a sensorimotor disorder which makes them UNABLE to predict the outcome of their movements

Since they are PRONE to delusion, they may rationalize false explanations for the movement

17
Q

How does schizophrenia typically progress?

Some patients recover __________, most will have ________ symptoms

A

Prodomal phase —> active phase —> residual phase

—————————————————————————

Completely; residual

18
Q

True or false. People with schizophrenia tend to have experience lifelong social difficulties, even after recovery

A

True

Condition typically arises in young adulthood

19
Q

Amongst people that have been diagnosed with schizophrenia…

(Give some other common disorders)

A

• 15% also have panic disorder
• 29% also have posttraumatic stress disorder
• 23% also have obsessive-compulsive disorder
• 50% of patients also have depression
• 47% of patients also have a history of substance abuse

20
Q

What is some treatment for psychosis?

A

1) people are often hospitalized (can be full or partial)

2) assisted living (some require supervision for a living), can also be permanent to temporary

3) medications generally act on DOPAMINE, tend to act quicker on (+) symptoms

4) cognitive remediation/cognitive reinterpretation (CBT)

5) community (assertive community)

6) family approaches (psychoeducation)

21
Q

What is the problem with 1st generation anti-psychotics?

A

RISK of inducing movement disorders (ex. Parkinson’s)

HOWEVER

2nd generation drugs are generally prescribed as first line treatment, but RISK of weight gain/metabolic dysfunction

22
Q

What are some causes of psychosis? (4)

A

1) genetics

2) dopamine hypothesis (most effective drugs act on dopamine)

3) misinterpretation hypothesis (misinterpret sensations, attribute them to external forces)

4) dissociation hypothesis (hallucinations could be a consequence of dissociation)

23
Q

How do psychosis and trauma intertwine?

A

Symptoms of PTSD often have psychotic characteristics

Ex) vivid flashbacks

Relationship b/w childhood trauma and hallucinations

***MORE TRAUMA = INCREASED PREVALENCE