Other mental health disorders Flashcards

1
Q

cutting

A
  • not associated with suicide;
  • attempt to feel something while depressed;
  • typically superficial
  • happens frequently in borderline personality disorders
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2
Q

Physical signs and symptoms of anxiety

A
  • fatigue
  • headaches
  • nausea
  • paresthesia (usually peripheral);
  • muscle tension/aches
  • dysphagia
  • shortness of breath
  • chest pain
  • diaphoresis
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3
Q

mental signs and symptoms of anxiety

A
  • excessive worry about both rational and irrational things;
  • feeling of impending doom/disaster
  • insomnia
  • irritability
  • restlessness;
  • difficulty concentrating
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4
Q

DSM-5 criteria for general anxiety disorder

A

A. excessive anxiety/worry occuring more days than not over 6 months;
B. difficult to control worry
C. worry/anxiety associated with 3 + of following sx:
- restlessness or feeling keyed up or on edge;
- being easily fatigued
- difficulty concentrating or mind going blank
- irritability
- muscle tension
- sleep disturbance
D. anxiety, worry, or physical sx cause distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas;
E. disturbance not caused by substance or other condition
F. not better explained by other condition

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5
Q

Cognitive behavior therapy

A

not done in primary care;

  • desensitizes to anxieties and sets up coping mechanisms;
  • requires referral
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6
Q

Medications for anxiety in Primary care

A
  • SSRIs are the mainstay
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7
Q

Benzodiazepines in primary care

A
  • work well with short-term anxiety or terrible panic;
  • not preventatitve, act as a band-aid;
  • controlled substance with addictive properties;
  • avoid use as first-line med;
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8
Q

5 HT1A receptor partial agonists in primary care for treatment of anxiety

A
  • example is buspirone
  • adjunct or substitute for benzos;
  • not as effective but safer and not addictive
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9
Q

Tricyclics and anxiety in primary care

A
  • long-term concern: dry-mouth side effect leading to tooth decay
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10
Q

non-mental health medications in primary care

A
  • Propranolol;
  • clonidine;
  • hydroxyzine/diphenhydramine
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11
Q

Propranolol for anxiety

A
  • short-acting antihypertensive that slows down the heart rate for patient’s with fear of public speaking or interviewing;
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12
Q

Clonidine for anxiety

A

blood pressure medication often used with patients with substance-abuse problems
- can prolong opioid high

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13
Q

hydroxyzine/diphenhydramine for anxiety

A
  • makes people sleepy;

- used as adjuncts for older and younger patients

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14
Q

General anxiety disorder comorbidities

A
  • depression
  • substance use/abuse
  • dysthymia
  • IBS
  • headaches
  • ADHD
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15
Q

incidence of anxiety compared to depression

A

1:2

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16
Q

Who treats bipolar disorder

A

specialist only; not treated in primary care

17
Q

Bipolar disorder is referred to as

A

manic depressive disorder

18
Q

Bipolar disorder involves what 2 pones of severity

A
High: 
- extra excited
-happy
- little need for sleep
- incredibly creative;
Low:
- severe depression
19
Q

Bipolar disorder is diagnosed based on

A

cycling between highs and lows

20
Q

how is bipolar disorder different from unipolar depression

A

natures of highs (during depressed phase, virtually identical);

21
Q

Treatment of bipolar

A

antidepressants can fail if depression alone is assumed;

  • can lose effect or make things worse;
  • managed best with mood stabilizer plus antidepressant
22
Q

Which category of Bipolar is most severe

A
  • Bipolar 1
23
Q

Mixed bipolar disorder

A

dysthymia or another disorder attached to bipolar diagnosis, with cycling

24
Q

Bipolar 1

A

true differentiation between high-highs and high-lows

25
Q

Bipolar 2

A

low-lows but not high-highs;

  • may get back to normal, or a little above normal;
  • not completely manic
26
Q

genetic and bipolar

A

more association with genetic association than any other mental illness;
- commonly runs in family

27
Q

Asks all depressed patients what

A

about family history of bipolar disorder

28
Q

Recurrence of bipolar

A
  • recurs even if treated;

- generally requires meds for rest of life

29
Q

Bipolar is often misdiagnosed in early childhood as

A

ADHD

30
Q

Signs and symptoms of mania

A
  • racing thoughts;
  • lack of need to sleep;
  • excess energy;
  • grandiosity;
  • hyperactivity;
  • impulsive behavior
31
Q

Clues that a patient has bipolar disorder

A
  • family history;
  • input from family members {often different than pt perception};
  • marked changes in mood, behavior, or productivity;
  • failure of multiple antidepressants;
  • on/off response to antidepressants;
  • hypomanic response to antidepressants;
  • mood stabilizers or bigger meds have more side effects;
  • unless pt is stable, cooperation between NP and mental health provider is required