Terminology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the biological factors in the biopsychosocial model?

A
  • Genetics
  • Substances
  • Illnesses/Injuries
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2
Q

What are the psychological factors in the biopsychosocial model?

A
  • Developmental Experiences
  • Early relationship patterns
  • Current relationship patterns
  • Defense mechanisms
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3
Q

What are the social factors in the biopsychosocial model?

A
  • Current life experiences and stressors
  • Cultural factors
  • Religious/spiritual factors
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4
Q

What three things are included in a general description of patients?

A

A. Appearance
B. Behavior
C. Motor Activity

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5
Q

Pathological imitation of movements of one person by another

A

Echopraxia

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6
Q

general term for an immobile position that is constantly maintained

A

Catalepsy

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7
Q

markedly slowed motor activity, often to a point of immobility and seeming unawareness of surroundings

A

Catatonic stupor

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8
Q

condition of a person who can be molded into a position that is then maintained; when the examiner moves the person’s limb, the limb feels that it is made of wax

A

Waxy flexibility

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9
Q

temporary loss of muscle tone and weakness precipitated by a variety of emotional states

A

Cataplexy

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10
Q

repetitive fixed pattern of physical action or speech

A

Stereotypy

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11
Q

excessive motor and cognitive over activity, usually nonproductive and in response to internal tension

A

Psychomotor agitation

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12
Q

subjective feeling of muscular tension secondary to antipsychotic or other medication, which can cause restlessness, pacing, repeated sitting and standing; can be mistaken for agitation

A

Akathisia

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13
Q

decreased motor and cognitive activity, visible slowing of thought, speech, and movement

A

Psychomotor retardation

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14
Q

difficulty in performing voluntary movements, as in extrapyramidal disorders

A

Dyskinesia

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15
Q

slowness of motor activity with a decrease in normal spontaneous movement

A

Bradykinesia

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16
Q

random and involuntary quick, jerky, purposeless movements

A

Chorea

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17
Q

slow, sustained contractions of the trunk or limbs; can be medication induced

A

Dystonia

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18
Q

(mood swings) oscillations between euphoria, depression, or anxiety

A

Labile mood

19
Q

a person’s difficulty in describing or being aware of emotions or mood

A

Alexithymia

20
Q

Mood vs. Affect

A

Mood - a pervasive and sustained emotion, subjectively experienced and reported by the patient and observed by others; examples include depression, elation, anger

Affect - the observed expression of emotion, possibly inconsistent with the patient’s description of the emotion

21
Q

absence or near absence of any signs of affective expression; voice monotonous, face immobile

A

Flat affect

22
Q

rapid speech that is increased in amount and difficult to interrupt

A

Pressured speech

23
Q

false perception of orders that a person may feel obliged to obey or unable to resist (often dangerous)

A

Command hallucination

24
Q

indirect speech that is delayed in reaching the point but eventually gets from the original point to the desired goal; characterized by an over inclusion of details and parenthetical remarks

A

Circumstantiality

25
Q

inability to have goal directed associations of thought; speaker never gets from desired point to desired goal

A

Tangentiality

26
Q

persisting response to a previous stimulus after a new stimulus has been presented; often associated with cognitive disorders

A

Perseveration

27
Q

flow of thought in which ideas shift from one subject to another in a completely unrelated way; when severe, speech may be incoherent

A

Loosening of associations

28
Q

rapid, continuous verbalizations or plays on words produce constant shifting from one idea to another; ideas tend to be connected but too fast for the listener to comprehend

A

Flight of ideas

29
Q

a fixed false belief, based on incorrect inference about external reality, not consistent with the patient’s intelligence and cultural background, cannot be corrected by reasoning.

A

Delusion

30
Q

pathological persistence of an irresistible thought or feeling that cannot be eliminated from consciousness by logical effort, associated with anxiety

A

Obsession

31
Q

pathological need to act on an impulse that, if resisted, produces anxiety; repetitive behavior in response to an obsession or performed according to certain rules

A

Compulsion

32
Q

ability to appreciate nuances of meaning; multidimensional thinking with ability to use metaphors and hypotheses appropriately

A

Abstract thinking

33
Q

Pathological feeling of sadness

A

Depression

34
Q

condition in which the emotional tone is in harmony with the accompanying idea, thought, or speech; also further described as broad or full affect in which a full range of emotions is appropriately expressed

A

Appropriate affect

35
Q

disharmony between the emotional feeling tone and the idea, thought, or speech accompanying it

A

Inappropriate affect

36
Q

reduction in the intensity of externalized feeling tone

A

Restricted or constricted affect

37
Q

false sensory perception not associated with real external stimuli; there may or may not be a delusional interpretation of the hallucinatory experience

A

Hallucination

38
Q

hallucination in which the content is consistent with either a manic or depressed mood; e.g. the manic patient would hear voices saying the patient is of inflated worth, power, and knowledge

A

Mood congruent hallucination

39
Q

hallucination in which the content is not consistent with either a depressed or manic mood

A

Mood incongruent hallucination

40
Q

misperception or misinterpretation of real external sensory stimuli

A

Illusion

41
Q

defense mechanism involving the segregation of any group of mental or behavioral processes from the rest of the person’s psychic activity

A

Dissociation

42
Q

partial or total inability to recall past experiences; may be medical or emotional in origin

A

Amnesia

43
Q

amnesia for events occurring after a point in time

A

Anterograde

44
Q

amnesia for events occurring before a point in time

A

Retrograde