Anxiety Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three models of stress?

A

Bio mechanical engineering

Mediopsychiological

Psychological (transactional)

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2
Q

How does stress occur?

A

The body is designed to cope with certain amounts of stress but too much causes damage and negative effects on the body

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3
Q

What is th medicophysiological theory of stress

A

Fight or flight reposnse

Alarm reaction
Physiological adaptation
Exhaustion

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4
Q

What is the bio mechanical model of stress

A

Overload on a structure leads to damage e.g. too much force on a muscle leads to damage

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5
Q

What is the psychological (transactional) model of stress

A

An interactive response that is unique to someone’s own perspective

Someone assess a situation and decide how they cope with it. They deal with stress in two ways:
Problem focused
Emotional focused

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6
Q

What is a problem focused way to react to stress?

A

Do things to get rid of things that relate to stress.

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7
Q

What is an emotion focused approach to dealing with stress

A

Modifying your emotional response with mental defence mechanisms.

E.g. go a run, denial, taking a sedative drug

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8
Q

What is the pathophysiology of anxiety

A

The production of steroids causes damage to the reticular system of the brain, heightening its further response in anticipation of stress

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9
Q

What are the fight or flight responses of anxiety

A
Psychological arousal
Autonomic arousal 
Muscle tension
Hyperventilation
Sleep disturbance
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10
Q

What symptoms occur due to the psychological component of anxiety?

A
Fearful anticipation
Irritability
Sensitivity to noise
Poor concentration
Worrying thoughts
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11
Q

What symptoms of autonomic arousal occur during an anxiety response?

A

GI- Dry mouth, swallowing difficulties, dyspepsia

Resp-tight chest, difficulty inhaling

Cardio- palpitations, chest pain

Urinary- erectile failure

CNS- dizziness and sweating

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12
Q

What can muscle tension caused by anxiety cause?

A

Tremor
Headache
Muscle pain

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13
Q

What can hyperventilation caused by anxiety lead to

A

CO2 deficit hypocapnia
Numbness/tingkjng in the extremities may lead to carpopedal spasm
Breathlessness

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14
Q

What symptoms of sleep disturbance can be caused by anxiety

A

Frequent waking
Insomnia
Nightmares and night terrors

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15
Q

How are phobic anxiety dorsders and general anxiety disorders

Similar
Different

A

Symptoms are practically the same

Phobias- occurs in specific situations

Generalised- occurs all the time

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16
Q

Describe the presentation of generalised anxiety disorder

A
Persistant nervousness
Trembling
Muscle tremors
Palpitations
Dizziness
Epigastric discomfort 

Lasts for a few months, described as free flowing anxiety

17
Q

What are the psychiatric differentials for generalised anxiety disorders

A

Depression
Schizophrenia
Dementia
Substance misuse

18
Q

What are the physical differentials for generalised anxiety disorders

A

Thyrotoxicosis
Pheaechromoctoma
Hypoglycaemia
Asthma or arrythmias

19
Q

How do you manage generalised anxiety disorder?

A

Counselling- clear plan of management, explanation and education, advice re caffeine, alcohol and exercise

Relaxation training-group or individual, DVD’s

Medication- sedatives, SSRI or TCA

CBT

20
Q

Describe phobic anxiety disorders?

A

Same core features as generalised anxiety disorders
Only in specific circumstances
Leads to phobic avoidance
sufferer also experiences perceived threat of encountering the feared object or situation

21
Q

What are the three clinically important syndromes in phobic anxiety disorders

A

Specific phobias

Social phobias

Agoraphobia- scared to leave house, can cause panic attacks

22
Q

Describe the presentation of social phobia

A

Avoidance of scrutinisation/ being observed.
Avoid restaurants, shops or queues, public speaking
May present with blushing,hand tremors, nausea
May lead to panic attacks

23
Q

How do you manage social phobias?

A

CBT, bake to challenge the negative views of self, safety barriers, unrealistically high stands dad and excessive self monitoring

SSRI’s

Education

24
Q

How does OCD present

A

An association with recurrent thoughts/ideas or impulses
Patient often tries to resist these thoughts and actions
Patient knows it’s their own thought but may not be rational

25
Q

How is OCD different to OCPD

A

Presence of obsessional thoughts and compulsions to do things is only present in OCD.

People are distressed by intrusive thoughts and compulsions in OCD

People with OCD are more likely to seek help

26
Q

How do you manage OCD

A

Education and explanation (involve partner/family)

Serotinergic drugs (SSRI)
Clomipramine 

CBF (best outcome)

Psychosurgery- treatment resistant OCD

27
Q

Where can PTSD arise from

A

A protracted stress reposnse from a substantial event e.g.

Combat
Disaster
Rape
Assault
Torture
28
Q

How is PTSD characterised

A

Hyperarousal- persistant anxiety, irritability, insomnia, poor concentration

Re-experiencing phenomena- intensive intrusive images, flashbacks when awake, nightmares during sleep, also have anhedonia

Avoidance- emotional numbness, cue avoidances, recall difficulties, diminished interests

29
Q

What may make you vulnerable to PTSD

A
Mood disorder
Previous trauma as a child
Lack of social support
Female
Lack of higher education and social groups
Good paternal relationships
30
Q

How do you treat PTSD

A

Survivors of disasters screened at one million GH
Mild symptoms “watchful waiting” and review a month later
Trauma focused CBT if more severe symptoms
Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing
Risk of dependence with sedatives so SSRI or TCA