Leerdocument DMH
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Leerdocument DMH
Lecture 1
What is psychopathology?
The study of abnormal thoughts, behaviour and feelings.
3 interviews + explaination:
1. Structured interview: clinicians and researchers ask the respondent a series of questions
about symptoms he or she is experiencing or has experienced in the past, entirely
standardized with concrete scoring criteria.
2. Semi-structured: Standardized and open-ended questions are combined, which allows for
the gathering of more personalized information.
3. Unstructured: The questions are open-ended and directed by the clinician based on the
clients response.
Lecture 2
What is the body’s major stress hormone and what does it do>
It’s adrenocorticoptropic hromone, it releases stress hormones like cortisol .
When do people get diagnosed with PTSD ‘with prominent dissociative symptoms’’?
When dissociative symptoms in PTSD are especially prominent and persistent.
What are the 2 environmental and social factors that increase the likelihood for PTSD?
1. The severity and duration and proximity of a trauma.
2. The availability of social support.
What are the 2 psychological factors that increase the likelihood for PTSD?
1. People who already experience increased symptoms of anxiety and depression before
trauma occurs are more likely to devevelop PTSD.
2. People that dissociate shortly after a trauma are increased risk to develop PTSD.
What is agoraphobia?
Fear of places where they might have trouble escaping or getting help if they become anxious. They
fear that they will embarrass themselves if others notice their symptoms or their efforts to escape
during an attack.
Panic attacks often preceed to develop agoraphobia.
Where are differences in the limbic isystem found in ppl with panic disorder?
The amygdala, hypothalamus, and hippocampus. Also dysregulation in the locus coeruleus (part of
brain stem) which regulates the limbic system and lowers the threshold for the activation of anxiety.
What are cognitive issues that makes people prone to panic attacks?
They pay very close attention to their bodily sensations, negatively misinterpret these sensations,
and engage in snowballing catastrophic thinking, exaggering symptoms and the consequences.
What is OCD?
Diagnosed when either obsessions or compulsions or both are present to a significant degree.
- Anxiety is experienced as a result of obessisonal thought aswell as being unable to carry out
compulsive behaviour.
- People know that their thoughts and behaviours are irrational but they cannot control them.
What is hoarding?
Compulsive behaviour that is closely related to OCD. They show emotional attachments to their
possessions, equating them with their identity or humanly characterize them.
What brain circuit is involved in the biological process of OCD and related disorders?
- Involving motor behavior, cognition and emotion: Frontal cortex striatum (part of basal
ganglia) basal gangla thalamus back to frontal cortex.
Where does CBT for skin picking or hair pulling disorder focus on?
Habit reversal training.
What is gynephillia?
When men with transvestic disorder are sexually aroused by thoughts of being a woman.
What are sexual sadism disorder and sexual masochism disorder + the differences?
Sexual sadism: A persons sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviours involve inflicting pain and humiliation
on his or her sex partner.
Sexual masochism: A persons sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviours involve suffering from pain or
humiliation during sex.
What are the similarities between sexual sadism and sexual masochism disorder?
Distress may manifest as guilt, shame, loneliness or intense sexual frustration.
They typically engage in sadistic or masochistic behaviour as their preferred form of bevrediging.
what are biological interventions for parahelia and what are they targeted at?
Eg. Surgical castration or chemical castration through drugs, are aimed at reducing the sex drive in
order to reduce parahilic behaviour.
The aim is to reduce the production of androgens and testosterone.
Why might cross-sex hromone therapies and surgeries not be it for some people?
For most children and adolescents not, because of their long term consequences and childrens
inability to give full consent.
What is a substance?
Any natural or synthesized product that has psychoactive effects – it changes perceptions, thoughts,
emotions, and behaviours.
5 types of stimulants:
1. Cocaine
2. Amphetamine
3. Nicotine
4. Caffeine
5. Prescribed stimulants: Ritalin
What is PCP?
Phencyclidine aka angel dust is a powder.
Lower doses: sense of intoxication, euphoria or affective dulling, talkativeness, lack of concern, slow
reaction time, abnormal involuntary movements.
Intermediate doses: Disorganized thinking, distortions of body image, depersonalization, feeling
unreal.
High doses: Amnesia and coma, seizures, ademhalingsproblemen, bodily thermostate problems. -
can last a couple days.
How does chronic use of psychoactive substance change the reward centers?
It creates a craving for this substances. Dopamine receptors in the brain become less sensitive and as
the brain produces less dopamine, more of the drug is needed to produce the desired effects and
withdrawal symptoms occur if the individual stops taking the drug Sad and unmotivated due to
less dopaminen production.
What are 3 socialcultural risk factors for starting substance abuse and why?
1. Poverty
2. Abusive relationships
3. Fighting parents, violently and frequently.
Why: The effects of substances may be reinforcing and they might think they have little to lose.
What two general approaches are used in the pharmalogical treatment of nicotine?
1. Nicotine replacement therapy (patch, gum) which prevents withdrawal effects
2. Prescription medication: Reduces the craving for nicotine and decreases pleasurable effects.
What is a methadone?
An opioid that has less effects than heroin when taken orally. Used to reduce extreme negative
withdrawal symptoms from heroin dependence and blocks heroin’s intense psychological effects by
blocking the receptors for heroin.
What are the 5 main goals of behavioural and cognitive treatments for substance abuse?
1. Motivating the individual to stop using the addictive drug
2. Teach patients new coping skills to replace the use of substances to cope with stress and
negative feelings.
3. Change the reinforcements for using substances (Like social circles eg).
4. Enhance the individuals support from non-using friends and family members.
5. Bevorderen van therapietrouwheid in combinatie met psychotherapie
Lecture 6: Schizofrenia
What is psychosis?
Being unable to tell the difference between what is real and what is unreal.
4 types of hallucinations?
1. Auditory
2. Visual
3. Tactile
4. Somatic
Incoherence:
Answering questions with unrelated/ barely related comments: Word salad.
What is catatonia?
Disorganized behaviour that reflects unresponsiveness to the environement. Such as sudden
shouting or swearing or socially unacceptable behaviour.
What is anhedionia?
The loss of the ability to experience pleasure, seen in schizophrenia.
What are typical antipsychotig drugs (2 types) called and what do they do?
Neuroleptics.
Phenotiazines, like chorlpromazine. They calm agitation and reduce hallucination and delusion. They
block dopamine receptors. Positive symptoms are reduced, yet negative symptoms are worsened.
Thioxanthenes, butyrophenones: Halfened hospitalization due to schizophrenia.
What is the biological theory, cognitive theory and social theory behind paranoia?
Biological: Paranoia is more common in families with schizophrenia than in healthy families.
Cognitive: It’s a result of an underlying belief that other people are malevolent and deceptive,
combined with a lack of self-confidence about being able to defend themselves.
Social: Differential exposure to discrimination, prejudice, childhood trauma, SES.
What is cognitive therapy for people with paranoid personality disorder based on?
On focusing on increasing their sense of self-efficacy in dealing with difficult situations, thuys
decreasing their fear and hostility toward others.
What did a US study find out about culture and schizotypal personality disorder?
They found ot that african americans are diagnosed with schizotypal personality disorder more
frequently probably because they are more likely to be exposed to conditions that enhance a
vulnerability, like urban living and low SES.
What is splitting?
BPD persons tend to see themselves and others as either all good or all bad and to vacillate (aarzel,
weifel) between these two views. This is the cause of their unstable emotions, reflecting their
weifilingen between the all-good and the all-bad self and the all-good and the all-bad other.
What is STEPPS?
Systems training for emotional predictability and problem solving, a group intervention for people
with BPD, combining cognitive techniques challenging irrational cognitions and behavioural
techniques addressing self-management and problem solving.
Showed greater improvement in negative affect, impulsivity, and functioning than clients receiving
the usual therapy.
What are the 2 pathological personality traits that characterize avoidant pd?
1. Negative affectivity
2. Detachment.
What are the differences between OCD patients and OCD personality disorder?
- The pd involves a more general way of interacting with the world than OCD, which involves
only specififc obsessional thoughts and compulsive behaviours.
- Individuals view their concerns as part of their personality, OCD patients experience it as
unwanted.
- They tend to be workaholics who see little need for leisure activities or friendship.
What are the criteria to diagnose an individual with a PD in the alternative DSM model?
- Show significant difficulties in identity and interpersonal functioning
- Significant pathological personality traits, which are unusual for the developmental state/
envoronment, not caused by a substance.
What is suicide?
Death from injury, poisoning, or suffocation where there is evidence that the injury was self-inflicted,
and that the person intended to kill themselves.
3 types of suicide?
1. Completed suicides: death.
2. Suicide attempts: may or may not end in death
3. Suicidal ideation: thoughts of suicide.
Why are LGBTQI a group identified as a high-risk population for suicidal ideations and behavior,
and depression?
1. Mental health problems are more prevalent among gender minorities
2. Often a subject of peer violence.
3. Questioning sexual orientation or gender identitiy gives more likelihood to experience
depression and suicidality.
What is ADHD?
Attention-deficit/hyperacitivity disorder. Characterized by termendous trouble learning skills like
paying attention, impulse control, and accomplishing long-term goals in children.
What are the 3 subtypes of ADHD and when are they diagnosed?
1. Combined presentation: requires 6 or more symptoms of inattention and 6 or more
symptoms of hyperactivity-impulsivity.
2. Predominantly inattentive presentation: 6 or more symptoms of inattention, but less than 6
hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms.
3. Predominantly hyperactive/impulsive presentation: 6 or more symptoms of hyperactivity-
impulsivity, but less than 6 symptoms of inattention.
What are risks for a person who has ADHD?
1. Developing a conduct disorder: violating social and cultural norms
2. Higher risk for depression, anxiety, substance abuse
What is echolalia?
Simply echoing what one just heard and not generating own words. When trying to generate own
words or sentences, language is one-sided and lacks reciprocity.
What is delirium?
A side issue of a neurcognitive disorder that is characterized by disorientation, recent memory loss,
and a clouding of attention. The signs become worse at night.
Agitation, fear, and disrupted sleep-wake cycles, delusional, hallucinations.
What is dissociaton?
A process where components of mental experience are split off from consciousness but remain
accessible through dreams and hypnosis.
What is DID?
Dissociative identity disorder. People have more personalities, everyone is different age,
characteristics, different gender, and specific functions. Alters. Childhood trauma is often
associated with the development of DID.