Mer Scott
Quiz by , created more than 1 year ago

PHCY320 (Psychiatry) Quiz on PSY2 GAD and phobias, created by Mer Scott on 12/10/2019.

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Mer Scott
Created by Mer Scott almost 5 years ago
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PSY2 GAD and phobias

Question 1 of 20

1

Affective disorders include phobias, anxiety, depression, and bipolar disorder. They affect external and internal . Emotional symptoms are misery, apathy, pessimism, low , loss of , indecision, and more. Biological symptoms are loss of , slowed , disturbances, and appetite .

Explanation? theory... CNS is deficient monoaminergic transmission such ie 5-HT/, .

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    response
    emotion
    self-esteem
    motivation
    libido
    thought
    sleep
    changes
    Monoamine
    serotonin
    noradrenaline and dopamine

Explanation

Question 2 of 20

1

Not technically part of the learning objectives but it was in the lecture.....
Noradrenaline - regulates
Serotonin - regulates
Dopamine - does so much, just remember: the pathway controls secretion and we monitor that in some psychotic patients on meds that effect dopamine. also the pathway contols delusions and .

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    mood, arousal, cognitive, autonomic fns
    mood, anxiety, sleep
    tuberoinfundibular
    prolactin
    mesolimbic
    hallucinations

Explanation

Question 3 of 20

1

Anxiety disorders -
1. anxiety disorder
2. disorder
3. anxiety

is usually first line followed by .
were previously classified as anxiety disorders but are now separate.

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    Generalised
    Panic
    Social
    CBT
    SSRIs and SNRIs
    OCD and PTSD

Explanation

Question 4 of 20

1

Anxiety epidemiology:
- Specific phobias are but patients rarely seek . Response rates in about of people and remission in about a .
- 7.7% and 4.4% diagnosed at some point
- Highest rates in women (9%)
- Anxiety and depression are the leading cause of loss of health after coronary heart disease
- Peoplw with GAD, panic disorder, and social anxiety to experience suicidal ideation and suicide attempts

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    common
    care
    half
    quarter
    women
    men
    25 - 54
    second
    50% more likely

Explanation

Question 5 of 20

1

Match the condition to the median age of onset.
Social anxiety -
GAD -
Panic disorder -
Agoraphobia (fear of going somewhere or doing something that will cause anxiety or panic) - ~

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    12
    32
    24
    22

Explanation

Question 6 of 20

1

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) focuses on challenging and unhelpful cognitive distortions e.g. thoughts, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors, improving regulation, and the development of personal . intervention.

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    emotional
    coping strategies
    Group or solo
    changing

Explanation

Question 7 of 20

1

CBT disadvantages
- requires expert
- , especially for rural patients
- poorly CBT is ineffective and possibly , leads to further CBt aversion
- requires on patient's parT
- anxiety with tasks is distressing
- can increase symptoms and distress , has a similar dropout rate to

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    trained
    cost and access
    conducted or paced
    distressing
    EFFORT and PERSEVERANCE
    exposure
    initially
    antidepressants

Explanation

Question 8 of 20

1

Experiencing stress especially early in life can induce sensitization and risk of psychiatric illness.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 9 of 20

1

Below are a list of anxiety symptoms. Select ALL that overlap with depression symptoms.

Select one or more of the following:

  • Sleep issues

  • Concentration issues

  • Fatigue

  • Psychomotor arousal (restlessness)

  • Anxiety

  • Irritability

  • Panic attacks

  • Muscle tension

  • Compulsion

Explanation

Question 10 of 20

1

Comorbidity of anxiety and depression is common and increases severity of both, also increasing recovery or preventing it.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 11 of 20

1

GAD core symptoms: general or unexplained anxiety, worry, increased , difficulty . Diagnosis requires persistent symptoms most days >.
Panic disorder: begins as panic attack, followed by > of persistent about having another attack OR maladaptive* change in related to attacks. Physical symptoms of attacks = pain, or both, dizziness, nausea, , increase RR.

* maladaptive = not adjusting adequately or appropriately

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    concentrating
    arousal
    6 months
    spontaneous
    1 month
    concern
    behavior
    abdominal and/or chest
    chills or heat
    sweating, shaking, tachycardia

Explanation

Question 12 of 20

1

Common conditions associated with panic;
- Substance induced: use(includes adverse affects of meds), withdrawal, product use
- Medical conditions
1. Commonly thyroidism, , seizure disorders, hypo
2. Less commonly thyroidism,

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    stimulant
    OTC
    alcohol or benzo
    caffeine
    hyper
    arrythmias
    hypo
    PE, menopause, Cushings
    glycaemia

Explanation

Question 13 of 20

1

Which of these is not a symptom of social anxiety disorder?

Select one of the following:

  • Sweating

  • Tachycardia

  • Flushing (face, neck)

  • Diarrhoea

  • Constipation

Explanation

Question 14 of 20

1

Most people with social anxiety develop another concurrent mood, anxiety, or substance use disorder.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 15 of 20

1

Obsessive compulsive disorders are chronic and vary in . People with OCD have intense urges to perform acts which they know are senseless/excessive.
Obsessions:
- repetitive eg contaminated by germs, fear of harming other
- repetitive eg sexually explicit, violent
- repetitive eg need for symmetry or order
Compulsions:
- repetitive eg hand washing, need to ask
- repetitive eg counting excessively, silently repeating words

on which behaviors are abnormal or unnecessary varies, from good all the way to absent ().
Diagnosis can be difficult.

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    severity
    thoughts
    images
    urges
    activities
    mental acts
    Insight
    delusional beliefs

Explanation

Question 16 of 20

1

Pathology:
- Anxiety and fear symptoms linked to amygdala circuit ( together) - specifically over-activation of the
- Worry (miseries, obsessions) linked to CSTC loop (), over-activation of
These circuits may be involved in all anxiety disorders.
- Avoidance linked to over-activation of the amygdala and (PAG). motor responvse.
- Breathing is regulated by the amygdala and (PBN)... sense of being smothered, increased RR, explains those symptoms etc

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    amygdala, ACC and OFC
    amygdala
    cortico-striatal-thalamic-cortical
    thalamus and striatum
    periaqueductal gray
    Fight or flight
    parabrachial nucleus

Explanation

Question 17 of 20

1

SNRIs have a significantly longer response time in contrast to SSRIs.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 18 of 20

1

Selective (SSRIs) are a class of drugs that are typically used as antidepressants or anxiolytics.
Fluoxetine, citalopram, escitalopram, sertraline, paroxetine, etc.
Side effects: commonly , changes, sexual (70% of patients, gender irrelevant), even . Some of these will go away eg nausea is transient. Low risk.
MoA: increased serotonergic acitivity/agents* enhances , alleviating over-activation and anxiety. *Increased . Post-synaptic send signal to post-synaptic cell to desensitize receptors. Time course to desensitization correlates with onset of .

SSRIs vary a little...
- Fluoxetine also facilitates by acting on 5-HT Rs on neurons
- Sertraline has effects on adrenergic receptors and reuptake inhibition
- Citalopram has an R enantionmer with weak properties

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    serotonin reuptake inhibitors
    nausea or sedation, insomnia
    weight
    dysfunction
    anxiety
    toxicity
    serotonergic input to the amygdala
    5-HT at synapses
    receptors
    nucleus
    tolerance
    NA and DA release
    GABAergic
    DA
    antihistamine

Explanation

Question 19 of 20

1

Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
- Clomipramine, - for panic
- 2nd/3rd line
- Inhibit reuptake
- UEs: and confusion, motor , - blurred vision, dry mouth, urinary retention, cardiotoxic -
- More drug interactions than SSRIs

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    imipramine
    NA and/or 5-HT
    sedation
    incoordination
    antimuscarinic
    ventricular arrythmias, QT prolongation

Explanation

Question 20 of 20

1

Other anxiolytics:

Benzodiazepines - alleviate anxiety by enhancing actions at receptors int he amygdala.

SNRIs -

Alpha-2 agonist (affects NA and 5-HT) -

5-HT(1a) agonist -

Alpha-2-gamma ligands - - bind to receptors to block glutamate release

Atypical anti psychotics -

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    phasic inhibitory
    post-synaptic GABA(a)
    venlafaxine
    mirtazipine
    buspirone
    pregabalin, gabapentin
    pre-synaptic
    quetiapine, olanzapine

Explanation