Mer Scott
Quiz by , created more than 1 year ago

PHCY320 (Psychiatry) Quiz on PSY7 Schizophrenia, created by Mer Scott on 13/10/2019.

3
0
0
Mer Scott
Created by Mer Scott almost 5 years ago
Close

PSY7 Schizophrenia

Question 1 of 23

1

Which of these is not a disorder in which psychosis is defined?

Select one of the following:

  • Psychotic disorder due to a general medical condition

  • Substance-induced psychotic disorder

  • Schizophrenia

  • Schizoaffective disorder

  • Delusional disorder

  • Bipolar

Explanation

Question 2 of 23

1

Schizophrenia:
~ % of population, psychotic illness, mostly people, (regular/irregular psychotic episodes), lifelong and highly disabling.

Positive and negative symptoms:
- A positive symptom is one that a behavior, thought or feeling. Positive symptoms associated with schizophrenia also occur in other disorders such as , psychotic depression, and 's. Positive symptoms are – (paranoid), hallucinations, thought , other abnormal behaviors e.g. aggression.
- Negative symptoms a behavior, thought or feeling. Negative symptoms – flattened response, social , apathy, anhedonia.

Cognitive symptoms:
- - poor methodical planning in brain makes basic tasks difficult
- Difficulty representing and maintaining , allocating , evaluating/monitoring performance
- Impaired fluency
These are the best predictor of outcome.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    1
    young
    chronic
    adds
    bipolar
    Alzheimer
    delusions
    disordered
    take away
    emotional
    withdrawal
    Executive dysfunction
    goals
    attention
    verbal

Explanation

Question 3 of 23

1

Burden of illness
• 25-50% attempt suicide and % eventually succeed
• Mortality rate 8 times higher than general population due to high rate of etc,
• Life expectancy years shorter than the general population
• Patients - early onset, intellectual , relationships, risk of suicide, stigma, self treatment:
• Family/Care Giver - stressors, financial , pressure on
• Community – healthcare, economic, stigma
• Duration of (DUP) has major impact on outcomes

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    10
    CV disease, suicide
    25-30
    development
    drugs, alcohol and smoking
    cost
    relationships
    untreated psychosis

Explanation

Question 4 of 23

1

Early symptoms indicating the onset of schizophrenia:
• Worrisome drop in
• New trouble
• Suspiciousness, ideas or uneasiness with others
• Withdrawing socially, spending a lot more time than usual
• Unusual, overly intense new , strange feelings or having feelings at all
• Decline in
• Difficulty telling reality from fantasy
• Confused or trouble communicating

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    grades or job performance
    thinking clearly or concentrating
    paranoid
    alone
    no
    ideas
    self-care or personal hygiene
    speech

Explanation

Question 5 of 23

1

Match the symptoms to the region:
Positive symptoms -
Affective symptoms (anxiety, suicidality) -
Aggressive symptoms -
Cognitive symptoms -
Negative symptoms -

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    mesolimbic pathway
    ventromedial prefrontal cortex
    orbitofrontal cortex, amygdala
    dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
    mesocortical pathway, prefrontal cortex

Explanation

Question 6 of 23

1

Diagnosis
• Based on patient and often family following presentation of first psychotic episode
• Clinical status/rating determined using psychiatric examination with (PANSS) and Clinical Global Impression scales (CGI) - commonly use Diagnostics and Statistics Manual (DSM-V) or ICD-11
• Also use At Risk Mental State (ARMS) Brief Psychiatric Scale (BPS)
not otherwise specified often in patient notes due to associated with the term schizophrenia

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    interviews
    Positive and Negative Symptom Score
    Psychosis
    stigma

Explanation

Question 7 of 23

1

Five dopaminergic pathways:
a) – controls motor function/movement
b) - pleasurable sensations, euphoria & delusions/hallucinations (positive sypmtoms)
c) - mediates cognition and affect (and negative symptoms)
d) - prolactin secretion
e) there's another one he didn't tell us it's name i don't think it's important??

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    Nigrostriatal
    Mesolimbic
    Mesocortical
    Tuberoinfundibular

Explanation

Question 8 of 23

1

Schizophrenia - the Dopamine Hypothesis.
Majority of symptoms explained by dysregulation of dopaminergic pathways:
- activity of mesolimbic pathway explains pos symptoms
- activity of mesocortical pathways explains cog, aff, neg symptoms
- activity of nigrostriatal and tuberoinfundibular

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    Integrated
    High
    Low
    Normal

Explanation

Question 9 of 23

1

Order these drugs from lowest affinity for D2 Rs (low potency, to highest affinity for D2 Rs (high potency); low being 1 and high being 4.
1.
2.
3.
4.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    Haloperidol
    Prochlorperazine
    Clozapine
    Chlorpromazine

Explanation

Question 10 of 23

1

NMDA receptor hypofunction hypothesis:

There are NMDA receptors in the brain. NMDA receptors in the have glutamate projections. A glutamate projection is a pathway that uses glutamate, an neurotransmitter. Schizophrenia may be caused by activity in these glutamate projections.
When the glutamate projections are -active, downstream of the mesolimbic DA pathway does occur, meaning the DA pathway is . This causes positive symptoms.
Also low of the excitatory NT glutamate means , and DA pathways become . This may cause the cognitive, negative, and affective symptoms.

TLDR; Low activity of in the causes low activity of in connected pathways, causing high activity in the and low activity in the .

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    cortical brainstem
    descending
    excitatory
    low
    hypo
    inhibition
    not
    mesolimbic
    hyperactive
    activity
    tonic excitation is lost
    mesocortical
    hypoactive
    NMDR receptors
    brainstem
    glutamate
    mesolimbic pathway
    mesocortical pathways

Explanation

Question 11 of 23

1

Therapy - Antipsychotics
• Note that DA (e.g. methamphetamine) can produce behavioural phenomenon indistinguishable from acute schizophrenia, so this supports the dopamine hypothesis
• Nearly all antipsychotics are but some also block to varying degrees
• Potency correlates with at D2 receptors - not but dose correlate effectiveness.
• “Typicals” are effective at treating symptoms vs “atypicals”
• Days/weeks/months to work suggests effects e.g.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    agonists
    overactivity
    D2 antagonists
    5-HT2A
    activity
    not
    negative
    secondary
    ↑ D2 receptors in limbic structures
    less

Explanation

Question 12 of 23

1

“Typical” antipsychotics – D2 antagonists - and how they affect the dopaminergic pathways:
1. Mesolimbic - reduces to activity, stopping positive symptoms and the response.
2. Mesocortical - still low activity
3. Nigrostriatal - reduced to activity, explains side effects
4. Tuberoinfundibular - to low activity, explains elevated

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    normal
    pleasure/reward
    low
    parkinsonian
    reduced
    prolactin

Explanation

Question 13 of 23

1

‘Typicals’ aka ‘First generation antipsychotic’ side effects:
- Extrapyramidal side effects – direct block of nigrostriatal DA receptors
- Muscle spasm within hours, can be fatal
- subjective tension & need to move, objective restlessness, distress
• Pseudo-Parkinsonism - gait disturbance
• Tardive Dyskinesia - movements, reversible?
- Dry , blurred , constipation, weight , sedative, -prolongation, dyscrasia’s, postural , elevated prolactin
- Sexual common with both typical and ‘atypicals’

Role in current treatment - history of response, of depots, good for management e.g. chlorpromazine, haloperidol, zuclopenthixol, fluphenazine.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    Dystonia
    Akathisia
    rigidity, tremor, bradykinesia,
    abnormal involuntary
    mouth
    vision
    gain
    QT
    hypotension
    dysfunction
    range
    good
    acute

Explanation

Question 14 of 23

1

“Atypical” antipsychotics
• D2 antagonists AND - defining property of ‘atypicals’
• Critically, likely to induce dystonia/akathisia/ in the antipsychotic naïve
• Reduced symptoms in contrast to the ‘typicals’- debatable?
• Perceived side effects with atypicals? e.g. olanzapine, risperidone etc.
• Metabolic syndrome - weight , elevated , insulin , diabetes
• Less effect on prolactin - except
• ~ 30-50% of all patients are treatment-resistant to varying degrees and need

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    5-HT2A antagonism
    less
    Parkinsonism
    negative
    less common
    gain
    lipids
    resistance
    risperidone
    clozapine

Explanation

Question 15 of 23

1

Antipsychotic antagonism of WHICH RECEPTORS is associated with weight gain?

Select one of the following:

  • 5-HT2c & H1

  • 5-HT2c & H2

  • 5-HT1a & H1

  • 5-HT1a & H2

Explanation

Question 16 of 23

1

Antipsychotic M3 antagonism impairs:

Select one of the following:

  • insulin regulation

  • prolactin regulation

Explanation

Question 17 of 23

1

Which of these drugs is MOST likely to cause hypotension?

Select one of the following:

  • Chlorpromazine

  • Haloperidol

  • Quetiapine

Explanation

Question 18 of 23

1

Which 2 drugs are the most sedating?

Select one of the following:

  • Chlorpromazine, Clozapine

  • Clozapine, Olanzapine

  • Olanzapine, Zuclopenthixol

Explanation

Question 19 of 23

1

Which 3 drugs are most likely to cause extra-pyrimidal SEs?

Select one of the following:

  • Zuclopenthixol, Haloperidol, Chlorpromazine

  • Chlorpromazine, Risperidone, Aripiprazole

  • Aripiprazole, Zuclopenthixol, Haloperidol

Explanation

Question 20 of 23

1

Treatment resistant schizophrenia
• Defined by - treatment with a minimum of antipsychotics for at least weeks at maximum dose
• Occurs in ~% of patients with schizophrenia
• Clozapine induces remission in ~% of patients with TRS, and is the only antipsychotic shown to decrease rates, and increase rate of living
• Takes about 9 on average post-first-psychotic-episode before used in NZ due to significant side effects - during this time patients typically have very poor quality of life

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    2
    6
    tolerated
    30
    30-50
    suicide & re-hospitalization
    independent
    years

Explanation

Question 21 of 23

1

Which of these is NOT a side effect of clozapine?

Select one of the following:

  • Tachycardia

  • Hypotension

  • Seizures

  • Constipation

  • Weight gain

  • Hypersalivation

  • Nausea and vomiting

  • Sedation

  • Diarrhoea

Explanation

Question 22 of 23

1

Clozapine monitoring:
- Verbal for - toxic megacolon risk
- Blood monitoring for (0.8% of patients, during the first year peaks at 8-10 weeks of Tx) and (3-4%)
• Monitor for the first 18 weeks, then every 2 weeks for the remainder of the year, then
• 2.4 fold higher incidence in versus caucasians with a 5% increase in risk/decade
% experience a further issue following re-challenge after neutropenia...
• NO re-challenge following

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    constipation
    agranulocytosis
    neutropenia
    weekly
    monthly
    Asians
    38
    agranulocytosis or myocarditis

Explanation

Question 23 of 23

1

Clozapine Interactions
• Metabolised by CYP450 1A2 and less so by 2D6)
– levels decreased by high levels of , cigarette smoking
- levels increased by ,
may increase sedation and respiratory depression
may increase constipation risk, pyrexia
• Evening oil and may increase seizures
may exacerbate ADRs

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    caffeine, valproate, carbamazepine
    clarithromycin, rifampicin, erythromycin
    fluoxetine, paroxetine
    Benzodiazepines
    Anticholinergics
    primrose
    tramadol
    Lithium

Explanation