Somatisation disorder
Hypochondrial disorder
Persistent belief in the presence of an underlying serious DISEASE, e.g. Cancer
* Patient again refuses to accept reassurance or negative test results
Conversion disorder
Typically involve loss of motor or sensory function
* Some patients may experience secondary gain from loss of function
* Patients may be indifferent to their apparent disorder
* Psychogenic aphonia is a form of conversion disorder: not speaking after a shocking event.
Dissociative disorder
Body dysmorphic disorder
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) IV criteria:
* Preoccupation with an imagine defect in appearance. If a slight physical anomaly is present, the person’s concern is markedly excessive
* The preoccupation causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning
* The preoccupation is not better accounted for by another mental disorder (e.g., dissatisfaction with body shape and size in Anorexia Nervosa)
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) features
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatment
Management
* Following a traumatic event single-session interventions (often referred to as debriefing) are not recommended
* Watchful waiting may be used for mild symptoms lasting less than 4 weeks
* Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) or eye movement desensitisation and
reprocessing (EMDR) therapy may be used in more severe cases
* Drug treatments for PTSD should not be used as a routine first-line treatment for adults. If drug
treatment is used then paroxetine or mirtazapine are recommended
Post-concussion syndrome
Typical features include
* Headache
* Fatigue
* Anxiety/depression * Dizziness
‘Baby-blues’
Seen in around 60-70% of women
Typically 3-7 days following birth and more common in primips
Mothers: characteristically anxious, tearful and irritable
Postnatal depression
Affects around 10% of women
Most cases start within a month and typically peaks at 3 months
Features are similar to depression seen in other circumstances
Puerperal psychosi
Affects approximately 0.2% of women
Onset usually within the first 2-3 weeks following birth
Features include severe swings in mood (similar to bipolar disorder) and disordered perception (e.g. auditory hallucinations)
Schizophrenia:
Auditory hallucinations of a specific type:
* Two or more voices discussing the patient in the third person
* Thought echo
* Voices commenting on the patient’s behaviour
Thought disorder (occasionally referred to as thought alienation):
* Thought insertion
* Thought withdrawal
* Thought broadcasting
Passivity phenomena:
* Bodily sensations being controlled by external influence
* Actions/impulses/feelings - experiences which are imposed on the individual or influenced by
others
Delusional perceptions
* A two stage process: where first a normal object is perceived then secondly there is a sudden intense delusional insight into the objects meaning for the patient e.g. ‘the traffic light is green therefore i am the king’.
SCZ Factors associated with poor prognosis
Strong family history
* Gradual onset
* LowIQ
* Premorbid history of social withdrawal
* Lack of obvious precipitant
SCZ Risk of developing schizophrenia
Monozygotic twin has schizophrenia = 50%
* Parent has schizophrenia = 10-15%
* Sibling has schizophrenia = 10%
* No relatives with schizophrenia = 1%
Alcohol withdrawal
time frame
Alcohol withdrawal mechanism
Mechanism
* Chronic alcohol consumption enhances GABA mediated inhibition in the CNS (similar to benzodiazepines) and inhibits NMDA-type glutamate receptors
* Alcohol withdrawal is thought to lead to the opposite (↓ inhibitory GABA and ↑ NMDA glutamate transmission)
Bulimia nervosa management
Management
* Referral for specialist care is appropriate in all cases
* Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is currently consider first-line treatment
* Interpersonal psychotherapy is also used but takes much longer than CBT
* Pharmacological treatments have a limited role - a trial of high-dose fluoxetine is currently
licensed for bulimia but long-term data is lacking
Anorexia features
Most things low
* G’s and C’s raised: growth hormone, glucose, salivary glands, cortisol, cholesterol, carotinemia
Hospitalized patients with AN and NGT feeding are at risk of
f refeeding syndrome, which can
lead to profound hypophosphatemia
actors associated with risk of suicide following an episode of deliberate self harm:
Efforts to avoid discovery * Planning
* Leaving a written note
* Final acts such as sorting out finances * Violent method
Serotonin Syndrome features
Features
* Agitation
* Hyperthermia
* Tachycardia
* Labile BP
* Hyperreflexia and ↑ tone
Serotonin Syndrome drugs
SSRI
* MAOI (e.g. Moclobemide)
Restless legs syndrome (RLS)
RLS Causes and associations