Impulse Control Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Where in the brain do impulses originate from?

A

hypothalamus

midbrain

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2
Q

Anatomically, the (blank) seems to be a driving force and the (blank) seem to be inhibitory

A

amygdala; orbitofrontal and prefrontal cortices

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3
Q

Where do impulses project to?

A

prefrontal cortex

orbital frontal cortex

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4
Q

What are bottom-up drives for? Where do they come from?

A

signal/trigger;

amygdala, insula

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5
Q

What are top-down brakes for? Where do they come from?

A

suppression/regulation;

orbital frontal cortex, anterior cingulate gyrus

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6
Q

This form of dementia causes impulse control problems

A

frontotemporal dementia

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7
Q

What kind of neuromodulators contribute to poor impulse control?

A

low 5HT

enhanced dopamine

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8
Q

What can we use to increase 5HT to treat impulsivity probs?

A

SSRIs

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9
Q

What can we use to decrease dopamine to treat impulsivity probs?

A

anti-psychcotics (D2 antagonists)

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10
Q

Low levels of this metabolite correlated with more violent aggression, loss of impulse control, greater risk taking, and more physical wounds

A

5HT

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11
Q

Low serotonin is associated with low (blank) and higher (blank)

A

social rank; dysfunctional aggression

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12
Q

Response to a perceived threat or provocation

A

reactive aggression

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13
Q

What causes reactive aggression?

A

lower threshold to perceived provocation or lower threshold to respond aggressively

**associated with more impulsivity

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14
Q

Behavior that anticipates reward

A

proactive aggression

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15
Q

What things can cause proactive aggression?

A

attention, esteem of peers
money, drugs
more positive outcome expectancies of aggression

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16
Q

Describe the 5HT levels in most murderers? In suicide victims? In murders that involve sex crime?

A

normal in most murderers; low in suicide; very low 5HT in murders in sex crimes

17
Q

Dopamine agonists

A

Requip (ropinirole)

Mirapex (pramipexole)

18
Q

What are some conditions that arise in people put on dopamine agonists ?

A

pathological gambling
hypersexuality

**more dopamine, more aggression

19
Q

Using the “gas” and “brake” analogy for impulse control, dopamine is the (blank), and 5HT is the (blank)

A

gas; brakes

20
Q

Recurrent verbal or physical aggression (outbursts of aggression)
-grossly out of proportion to provocation
Not premeditated
No tangible objective (no clear reason for aggression)

A

Intermittent explosive disorder

21
Q

Patients with intermittent explosive disorder, frequently report (blank) following the outburst

A

graying out or memory lapse

22
Q

T/F: Intermittent episodes of aggression lead to potential for increasing med doses and irrational polypharmacy

A

true

23
Q

What are some disorders that might be in your differential if your patient has intermittent episodes?

A
bipolar disorder
major depression
panic disorder
PTSD (high emotional arousal)
conduct disorder
antisocial personality disorder
borderline personality disorder
24
Q

Which type of aggression is most consistent with intermittent explosive disorder?

A

reactive aggression

25
Q

Failure to resist an impulse, drive, or temptation to perform an act that is harmful to the person or to others

A

kleptomanis (stealing) and pyromania (fire setting)

26
Q

What do pts feel before acting impulsively? During the act? After the act?

A

building tension/arousal; pleasure, relief, gratification, relief from the urge, may not feel regret or guilt

**this is the cycle these pts feel

27
Q

Deliberate fire setting on multiple occasions
Fascination about fire
Tension/relief cycle
No real motive, but to feel relief
Rare - Only 3% of those jailed for setting fires

A

pyromania

28
Q

Failure to resist impulses to steal
**Not desired for value or use
Tension/relief cycle
Aware that act is wrong/ senseless

A

kleptomania

29
Q

In kleptomania, are patients aware that the act is wrong/senseless? How do they feel about their actions? More common in males and females?

A

yes; they feel depressed and anxious about their actions; more common in females!

30
Q

What is one example of kleptomania?

A

stealing salt and pepper shakers from a restaurant

**something useless, no financial incentive

31
Q

What can you use to treat impulse control disorders?

A

Propranolol (Inderal) **well studied antiaggression med

SSRIs (fluoxetine, sertraline, citalopram, escitalopram, paroxetine) - increase 5HT

Carbamazepine
Clozapine - antipsychotic (decrease D2)

32
Q

Can benzos be used for impulse control disorders?

A

not a good idea, can cause paradoxical disinhibition (angry drunk)

**inhibit the inhibitory factors…

33
Q

So what happens when you give a benzo for impulse problems?

A

significant increase in impulsivity and aggression

34
Q

Good med for recurrent impulsive violence?

A

propranolol