Organic affective disorders Flashcards

(43 cards)

1
Q

What is the Triadic Diagnostic System of Mental Disorders?

A

Classical approach to psychiatric disorders based on Kraepelin’s Layer Rule

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2
Q

What is Kraepelin’s Layer Rule?

A
  1. Organic layer
  2. Endogenous layer - endogenous psychiatric disorder (“psychoses”)
  3. Exogenous layer - condition related to psychosocial experiences (“neuroses”)

Only when ruling out organic (1) and endogenous (2) layers can you consider the exogenous layer (3)

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3
Q

What is characteristic of Kraepelin’s Layer Rule?

A

> It is entailed in hierarchical superiority of mood disorders over adjustment disorder

> Not made explicit in ICD-10 or DSM-5

> It is implicit, as the cause of most disorders

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4
Q

What are two key issues with the Triadic Diagnostic System of Mental Disorders?

A
  1. Problems with definition of organic disorders
  2. Problems with definition of endogenous disorders
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5
Q

What is the problem with the definition of organic disorders in the Triadic Diagnostic System of Mental Disorders?

A

No clear definition of the threshold for causal relationship between biological disease and psychopathology

  • Organic affective disorders: obvious primary biological abnormalities
  • Bipolar disorder/MDD: subtle primary biological abnormalities
  • Adjustment disorder: no primary biological abnormalities
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6
Q

What is the problem with the definition of endogenous disorders in the Triadic Diagnostic System of Mental Disorders?

A

No clear definition of the strength of reaction to psychosocial factors and how pronounced biological abnormalities are to be considered endogenous or exogenous

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7
Q

What are the different organic mood (affective) disorders present in the ICD-10?

A
  • Organic manic disorder
  • Organic bipolar disorder
  • Organic depressive disorder
  • Organic mixed affective disorder
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8
Q

What is the aetiology of Parkinson’s disease?

A

Degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in substantial nigra
- which is located in brain stem
- sends projections primarily to motor system

  • complex interactions of dopaminergic and glutamtergic systems in prefronto-striatal loops
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9
Q

What is the proportion of people with Parkinson’s disease attending neurology clinics that suffer from depressive symptoms?

A

50-70%

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10
Q

How are depression and anxiety associated to Parkinson’s disease?

A

> Depression or anxiety may precede neurological symptoms of Parkinson’s disease

> People with depression have 3times higher risk of subsequent Parkinson’s

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11
Q

What do we learn form the case report of a 54-year old women that shows signs of depression as a first manifestation of a large intracerebral lymphoma?

A

> Symptoms: fatigue, loss of interests, persistent low mood, poor appetite, concentration problems

> Daughters noticed their mother’s reckless driving
-> Doctors ordered MRI scan with contrast
-> found lymphoma in right frontal lobe

=> watch out for symptoms that don’t match with depression or bipolar disorder

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12
Q

How are strokes associated to depression?

A

> More than 50% of stroke patients suffer from depressive symptoms

> Patients with non-organic old age depression show subtle white matter structural damage in areas often affected by small vessel cerebrovascular disease
- i.e. fronts

> Stroke might disrupt network -> increasing vulnerability to depression

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13
Q

How are brain injuries associated to depression?

A

High proportion of people even with mild closed head injury suffer from major depression
- they show white matter disruption in areas also seen in non-organic major depression

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14
Q

Can an MRI show white matter disruptions?

A

No
- you need to do a diffusion tensor scan to see them

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15
Q

What are the lead symptoms of dementia syndromes?

A

Slow progression (over more than 6 months) in:
- impairment of recent memory
- behavioural changes
- impairment of language or speech
- fluctuating confusional states or impairments of attention
- visuo-spatial impairments

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16
Q

What are the potential diagnoses when the lead symptoms of dementia syndromes are rapidly progressive (3-6 months) or subacute (weeks)?

A

Creutzfeldt-Jakob, autoimmune or inflammatory encephalopathies

-> neurology referral

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17
Q

In which case is epilepsy the cause of an organic-mood disorder?

A

> Pre-ictal
- dysphoric or depressed mood disappears on remission of seizure

> Inter-ictal (2/3 patients)
- dysthymia, major depressive or dysphoric syndrome, interictal dysphoric disorder:
-> fluctuating symptoms, irritability, pain, anxiety, depressed and elevated mood

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18
Q

What is a pre-ictal epilepsy?

A

Prodrome of complex-partial seizure (i.e. before full seizure)

19
Q

What can be the neurological causes of organic affective disorders?

A
  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Brain tumour (e.g. lymphoma)
  • Cerebrovascular disease (e.g. stroke)
  • Brain injuries
  • Dementia (e.g. fronto-temporal)
  • Epilepsy
20
Q

What are the hormonal and vitamine-relate organic affective disorders?

A
  • Cushing’s syndrome (chronic hypercortisolism)
  • Thyroid dysfunction (severe hyper/hypothyroidism) in adults
  • Endocrine disorders
  • Vitamine deficiency (e.g. folic acid, vitamin B12)
21
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of Cushing syndrome (chronic hypercortisolism)?

A
  • Hirsutism (abnormal hair growth)
  • Round face
  • Hump
  • Easy bruising
  • Stretch marks
  • Abnormal weight gain
22
Q

What is exogenous hypercortisolism?

A

Due to cortisol

23
Q

What is endogenous hypercortisolism?

A

Most often caused by pituitary tumour
-> indirectly passing adrenal production

24
Q

What are the neuropsychiatric symptoms of Cushing’s syndrome (chronic hypercortisolism)?

A

> Initial phase
- manic syndrome (minority)
- irritability (86%)

> Chronic phase
- major depression (57%)
- depressed mood (74%)
- anxiety and panic (66%)

25
What are the types of thyroid dysfunction?
Excess of thyroid hormones in blood
26
How is severe hyperthyroidism in adults associated to anxiety and depressive disorder?
> Approximately - 60% have anxiety disorder - 31-69% have depressive disorder > You need marked abnormalities in thyroid function to cause symptoms of affective disorders - mild abnormalities not clearly associated
27
What are the symptoms of severe thyroid dysfunction (hyper or hypothyroidism)?
- Psychomotor retardation - Decreased appetite - Fatigue lethargy - Severe cognitive impairment - Mimic melancholic depression
28
How are endocrine disorders associated to affective disorders?
There is evidence of associations between affective disorders and endocrine disorders However, it is a complex process
29
How is vitamin deficiency associated to affective disorders?
Deficiency in folic acid can lead to developing depression - percentage higher than vitamin B12 deficiency -> Folic acid AND vitamin B12 need to be checked simultaneously
30
What are the various substance/medication-induced affective disorders?
- Drug-induced mania (no causal role from case reports) - Drug-induced depression - Substance-withdrawal induced depression
31
Which drugs have been reported to be associated to mania-induction?
- First monoamineoxidase inhibitor (Iproniazide): 15% - Dopamine D2 agonist (Bromocriptin): 20% - Levodopa for Parkinson's: 12% - Cortisone and adrenocorticotrophic hormone: 1.5-9% - Phecyclidine (PCP) (originally anaesthetic) - D-Amphetamine
32
Which drugs were reported as potential causes of depressive symptoms?
- Corticosteroids - Contraceptives - Interferon-α - Interleukin-2 - Mefloquine
33
How is substance-withdrawal associated to depression?
Evidence of causal relationship > Withdrawal from stimulants, opioids, alcohol dependence regularly associated with dysphoric mood, anxiety, anhedonia > High rate of depressive disorders among stimulant-dependent patients during early abstinence > 6% depression rates in male alcohol-dependent patients (no co-morbid prior mood disorders) after a month of abstinence
34
Which elements play a role in the very high co-morbid mood disorders rates in substance-dependent patients?
> Chronic use of substances > Failed self-treatment of mood disorders with substance use
35
What is the lifetime rate of major depressive disorder in opioid-dependent patients?
54%
36
What is the lifetime rate of major depressive disorder in alcohol-dependent patients?
38%
37
What is the lifetime rate of major depressive disorder in stimulant-dependent patients?
32%
38
In which cases can we suspect an organic cause of affective disorders?
> Visual hallucinations > Focal-neurological symptoms (impairments in CNS) > Cancers > Diagnosed systemic disorders > Diagnosed neurological disorders affecting the brain > Treatment-resistant chronic course > Unusual presentation of the patient (e.g. not bothered by symptoms rather than disturbed) > Failure to carry out simple activities of daily living
39
When are executive frontal functions involved?
In all tasks that require active processing - e.g. internal generation of concepts, task switching
40
When are executive "frontal" functions regularly impaired in neurological patients?
> Patients with left dorsolateral frontal and subcortical lesions > Severe psychiatric disorders > Persistent in some patients even on remission of measurable symptoms
41
Why are executive functions tests and active neuropsychological tasks useless to differentiate organic from non-organic conditions?
Impaired executive functions are common in non-organic psychiatric disorders -> use passive neuropsychological tasks
42
Which type of neuropsychological tasks are passive tasks?
- Recognition memory - Simple visuo-spatial tasks (e.g. copy circle) - Naming pictures - Word to picture matching to test comprehension
43
What is the meaning of observed impairment in passive neuropsychological tasks?
Organic causes need to be investigated