Depression, Bipolar and anxiety Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the criteria for mild, moderate and severe depression

A

mild: 2 core and 2 other symptoms
moderate: 2 core symptoms and 3+ other symptoms
severe: 3 core symptoms and 4 other symptoms
- functional deficit and severity of individual symptoms should also be taken into account

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Describe the diagnostic criteria for depression

A
  • at least 1 core symptom
  • plus at least 3 or 4 of the following to a minimum of 5 depressive symptoms in total
  • Symptoms should persist for at least 2 weeks and have caused significant distress and impairment
  • organic causes should have been excluded
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What are the 3 core symptoms of dperession

A
  • Persistent sadness or low mood nearly every day for at least 2 weeks
  • Anhedonia: Loss of interest or pleasure in most activities
  • Fatigue: a lack of energy which goes beyond poor sleep
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Give 7 additional symptoms of depression (non core)

A
Physical symptoms: 
- poor appetite  and weight loss (>5% BW in a month)
- disturbed sleep-- insomnia or EMW
- psychomotor agitation (restlessness) or retardation (reduced movement)
- reduced libido
- constipation, aches and pains 
Cognitive: 
- decreased concentration
- increased indecision
- feelings of guilt, worthlessness, low self esteem, tearful, irritable
- recurrent thoughts about death, suicide, suicide attempts
Social:
- not doing well at work
- avoiding contact with friends 
- neglecting hobbies or interests
- difficulties in home life
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

What is thought to cause depression?

A

Multi factoral:

  • biological: genetic, monoamine function decreased
  • psychological: personality traits such as neuroticism, low self esteem and childhood events
  • social: distruption to life events (births, jobs, divorce, illness), stress associated with poor social environment and social isolation, social drift to lower class, alcohol and drug use
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Give 5 physical/ organic causes of depression?

A
  • hypothyroidism
  • diabetes
  • anaemia
  • hormonal inbalance eg addisons
  • substance use
  • pregnancy
  • nutritional deficiencies eg vit B12 and D
  • drugs: L dopa, B blockers, steroids, opioids, digoxin
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What bloods should be done for depression

A
  • FBC, glucose and HbA1c, calcium, TFTs, U&Es, LFTs, haematinics
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

name 5 psychiatric disorders involving depression

A
  • persistent depressive disorder
  • mixed anxiety/ depressive disorder
  • postnatal depression
  • bipolar disorder
  • seasonal affective disorder
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

give 4 RFs for depression

A
  • female
  • significant physical illness
  • fhx, pmh
  • other mental health problems
  • psychosocial problems: divorce, homelessness, abuse
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What are the 5 stages of bereavement

A
  • Denial: shutting out reality to cope
  • Anger: angry at themselves or others
  • Bargaining: hoping to avoid or undo grief
  • Depression: disconnect to avoid trauma
  • Acceptance: coming to terms with the inevitable
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Describe the non pharmacological management of depression

A
  • manage co- morbitidy
  • lifestyle: increase exercise, encourage social interaction and going to work, reding clubs etc
  • meditation and mindfullness
  • psychotherapy eg CBT
  • manage safeguarding
  • assess risk and manage accordingly
  • advise on sleep hygiene: exercise, meditate, no smoking, no screens, good blinds, comfortable mattress, room temp etc
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

What factors contribute to a high risk of suicide?

A
  • made a plan
  • self harm
  • previous attempt
  • male gender
  • unemployment
  • living alone, not married
  • alcohol or drug use
  • religion, children, familly, sense of responsibility are protective
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

What antidepressants should be used in depression?

A

SSRI (fluoxetine, citalopram, sertraline) 1st line
Then try swapping to a different SSRI. If no effect switch to SNRI then TCAs (amitryptline) or MAOIs
Mirtazapine is often used at night to help with sleep symptoms
Mood stabilisers eg lithium, valproate, lamotrigine and carbemazepine are sometimes used

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What are the two types of bipolar and what is the ICD 10 definition

A
  • Bipolar I: 1 or more manic episodes and 1 or more depressive episodes
  • Bipolar II: 1 or more depressive episodes with at least 1 hypomanic episodes
    ICD10: requires at least 2 episodes, one of which must be a hypomanic, manic or mixed episode
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What are the clinical features of mania?

A
  • mood: irritable, eurphia,
  • cognition: distractability, poor concentration, flight of ideas, racing thoughts, confusion, lack of insight
  • behaviour: rapid speech, hyperactivity, reduced sleep, hypersexuality, extravagance
  • psychotic symptoms: deulsions or hallucinations
    Must be present for at least a week to be considered mania and must be severe enough to limit function
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Describe the clinical features of hypomania?

A
  • no psychotic symptoms
  • no impairment in function or need for inpt admission
  • mildly elevated, expansive mood
  • increased energy or activity
  • increased self esteem
  • socialability, talkativeness and over familliarity
  • increased sex drive
  • reduced need for sleep
  • difficulty in focusing on one task
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Give 4 differentials for bipolar

A
• Medication: steroids, illicit substances (amphetamines, cocaine), antidepressants 
• dementia
hyperthyroidism
delerium 
frontal lobe disease (disinhibited)
cerbeal HIV
schizophrenia (if delsions prominent)
cyclothymia
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

What investigations should be done for bipolar disoder?

A
  • CT head
  • EEG
  • screen for drugs
  • TFT
  • anti psychotic drug baseline investigtaions (ecg, bmi, BP, lipids, Hba1c, FBC, U&E, LFT)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

What is the non pharmacological management of bipolar disorder?

A
  • education- relapse recognition and early warning signs
  • dealing w/ consequences eg debt, returning goods, employer liasion
  • good communication
  • self help group
  • support group
  • self monitoring of symptoms
  • coping strategies
  • psychological therapy
  • calming activities
  • telephone support
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

How should acute mania be managed?

A

Anti psychotic eg haloperidol, olanzapine, risperidone. If ineffective try a different one, then try lithium then valproate. If taking anti depressant then stop this.
Assess suicide risk and cycling speed

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

How should acute depressive episodes be managed in bipolar disorder?

A

antidepressives are less effective and can cause mania/hypomania so use carefully. Mild depression may not require specific treatment. If previous mania then try anti manic drug. If mod- severe depression try fluoxetine and olanzapine

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

How should bipolar disorder be managed long term?

A

lithium 1st, then add valproate if ineffective. Valproate + olanzapine if lithium not tolerated or unprepared for lithium monitoring. Therapy lasts 2-5 years generally. CBT is effective. ECT is effective as last resort. When on treatment they need weekly reviews then annual when stable. Lipid levels, lithium levels, renal function, thyroid function, glucose, weight, tobacco and alcohol use and BP all need monitoring.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

What monitoring is required for litium treatment?

A

check lithium levels weekly until dose has been constant for 4 weeks then monthly for 6 months then 3 monthly if stable.
U+E, TSH 6 monthly for hypothyroidism or nephrogenic diabetes insipidus side effects.
Very teratogenic so pregnancy tests and avoid if risk

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

How should lithium be discontinued?

A

gradual reduction over 2-4 weeks as up to 50% get mania

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

What is cyclothymia and dysthmyia?

A

Both mood disorders:

  • cylcothymia: mild periods or elevation/ depression, common in relatives of BPD, similar management to BPD
  • dysthymia: chronic low mood not fulfilling criteria for depression
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

Describe the pathophysiology of generalised anxiety disorder?

A

The amygdala is central to fear and anxiety so function may be distrupted in anxiety disorder.
It appears to be a genetically inherited neurochemical dysfunction that may involve autonomic imbalance; decreased GABA, COMT gene, increased cortisol and increased adenosine receptor function have all be implicated.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
27
Q

What are the diagnostic criteria for generalised anxiety disorder?

A

Excessive anxiety and worry occuring more days than not for at least 6 months about a wide range of activities or events.
They have difficulty controlling the worry. Often worry about how much they worry (type 2 worry). Also have positive worry beliefs (think the worrying helps them to some extent)
Anxiety is associated with 3 or more of: feeling on edge, fatigue, difficulty concentrating, irritability, muscle tension, sleep problems (1 for children).
Plus at least 4 secondary symptoms.
Other specific anxiety disorders exluded.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
28
Q

what anxiety disorder are there other than GAD

A
  • panic disorder
  • phobias including social phobia
  • post traumatic stress disorder
  • OCD
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
29
Q

What are the secondary symptoms of generalised anxiety disoder?

A
  • Autonomic arousal symptoms: palpitations, sweating, tachy, shaking, trembling, dry mouth
  • Chest and abdo: difficulty breathing, feeling of choking, chest pain/ discomfort, nausea or abdo distress
  • mental: dizzy, feeling faint, objects are unreal, fear of dying, loss of control
  • general: flushings or chills, numbness or tingling, irritability, muscle tension or aches, difficulty getting to sleep
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
30
Q

Give 3 RFs and 2 protective factors for anxiety

A
  • age 35-54
  • divorced or separated
  • living alone
  • lone parent
  • age 16-24 and married or cohabiting are protective
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
31
Q

How should GAD be managed?

A
  • education and monitoring 1st
  • low intensity psychological support, self help, psycho- educational groups
  • CBT, applied relaxation, drug therapy
  • crisis team if self harm/ suicide risk
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
32
Q

What drug treatments are options for anxiety

A
  • benzodiazepams or sedative antihistamines if need rapid response- but dont use for longer than 3 weeks
  • SSRI (citalopram or paroxetine) or venlafaxine 1st choice
  • betablockers (propanolol) used in panic disorder but not usually in GAD
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
33
Q

What is neurosis

A

Maladaptive psychological symptoms not due to organic causes or psychosis and usually precipitated by stress. Symptoms inc fatigue, insomnia, irritability, worry, obsessions, compulsions and somatizations (physcial symptoms like trembling, tension, hyperventilation etc). Bit like a mild anxiety.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
34
Q

What is an obsession and a complusion?

A

Obsession: a thought that persists and predominates an individuals thinking despite their awareness the thought is without purpose. (thought that goes round in head even though they know its silly)
Complusion: motor acts of obsessions, may be an obsessional impluse directly leading to an action or may be mediated by an obsessional mental image/ fear- eg I need to turn light on and off 5 times of my family will die.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
35
Q

What is the diagnostic criteria for OCD?

A
  • Obsessions, compulsions or both present on most days for at least 2 weeks.
  • All obsessions and compulsions must: originate in the mind of the pt, be repetitive and unpleasant, be acknowledged by the pt as excessive or unreasonable (if not= psychosis), the pt tries to resist- unsuccessfully
  • Carrying out the obsessive thought or act is not pleasurable
  • Obessions/ compulsions must causes distress or interfere with the pts social or individual functioning
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
36
Q

What is thought to cause OCD?

A

Largely unknown, thought to be due to re entry circuits in the basal ganglia meaning you cant let thoughts/ actions go.

37
Q

What is PANDAS

A

Paediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with step infection- Sudden onset of OCD and tics after group A beta haemolytic step due to cross reaction of antibodies with basal ganglia. Responds to antibiotics and normal OCD management

38
Q

How is OCD managed?

A
  • CBT + exposure response prevention
  • clomipramine (TCA)
  • high dose SSRI
  • anti psychotics
  • deep brain stimulation of subthalamic nucleus can work
    Mild= low in intensity CBT + ERT
    Moderate= SSRI/ TCA or high intensity CBT + ERT
    Severe: SSRI/ TCA + high intensity CBT + ERT
39
Q

What are phobic disorders? which are most common

A

Describe a group of disorders in which anxiety is experienced only in well- defined situations that are not dangerous. These situations are therefore avoided or endured with dread. They become a disorder when they cause marked stress or significantly impair a person’s ability to function.
Social phobia, agoraphobia (fear of crowds, travel or events away from home, simple phobia: restricted to specific situation eg dentist or spiders)

40
Q

What is PTSD?

A

Repetitive, intrusive recollection or re- enactment of a traumatic event of exceptional severity in memories, daytime imagery or dreams.
Emotional detachment, numbing of feeling and avoidance of stimuli follows. Hyperarousal/ vigilance is another main feature.
3 parts: re- experiencing/ flashbacks, avoidance, hyperarousal

41
Q

What is thought to be pathophys of PTSD?

A
  • Hyperactivity of the amygdala leads to exaggerated response to perceived threat
  • Lower levels of cortisol which normally inhibits traumatic memory retrieval and controls the sympathetic response.
  • However were not really sure about this.
42
Q

how is PTSD managed?

A
  • CBT
  • eye movement sensitisation and reprocessing
  • hyponotherapy
  • stress management
  • meds is 2nd line or in combination: SSRI, TCA, MAOI, second generation antipsychotics
43
Q

What is depersonalisation?

A

An unpleasant state of disturbed perception in which people or the self or parts of the body are experienced as being changed, becoming unreal, remote or automatised. They feel disconnected and detached. Can often occur at the height of anxiety.

44
Q

What is the difference between depersonalisation and a dellusion eg in psychosis?

A

in depersonalisation they have insight that this couldnt happen but may believe they are going mad. CNS imaging shows it is associated with functional abnormalities in the sensory cortex

45
Q

what is derealisation?

A
  • psychosensory feeling of detachment or estrangement from surroundings
  • objects appear altered, buildings may metamorphasise in size and colour
  • the pt acknowledges the these ideas are not reality
46
Q

What is dissociative identity disorder?

A

Psychiatric condition characterised by memory gaps and fragmented multiple personalities. There is often an extent of depersonalisation. Fugue is the inability to recall ones past +/- loss of identity or formation of a new identity, associated with unexpected purposeful travel. It is thought to be due to repeated childhood trauma. Treatment is long term therapy.

47
Q

Give 3 examples of tricyclic anti depressants and state how they work

A

amitriptyline,, clomipramine, doxepin, desipramine

- increase levels of both noradrenaline and serotonin

48
Q

State 3 side effects of TCAs

A
  • block histamine: drowsiness, dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation
  • QTc prolongation
  • arrhythmias
  • SLUDGE syndrome
  • agranulocytosis
  • SIADH
  • sexual dysfunction
49
Q

Give 4 contraindications/ cautions of TCAs

A
  • angle closure glaucoma
  • arrhythmias
  • manic phase of bipolar
  • immediate phase after MI
  • enlarged prostate
  • urinary retention
  • heart block
  • thyroid problems
  • affects BMs in diabetics
  • avoid in pregnancy
  • avoid in severe hepatic dysfunction
50
Q

Name 4 SSRIs

A
  • citalopram (prolongs QTc)
  • Sertraline (safest in CVD)
  • Fluoxetine (serotonin syndrome)
  • paroxetine
51
Q

Describe 3 side effects of SSRIs

A
  • nausea
  • dry mouth
  • headache
  • diarrhoea
  • weight gain
  • sexual dysfunction
  • sense of restlessness and agitation
  • hyponaturaemia
  • arrhythmias
  • confusion
  • constipation
  • depersonalisation
  • GI upset
  • sleep disorders
  • hallucination
  • SIADH
52
Q

Give 3 contraindications/ cautions for SSRIs

A
  • poorly controlled epilepsy
  • Manic phases of bipolar
  • cardiac disease
  • DM
  • concurrent ECT
  • history of bleeding disorders
  • angle closure glaucoma (caution)
  • avoid in pregnancy and hepatic dysfunction
  • avoid if eGFR <20
53
Q

What is serotonin syndrome and how is it treated

A

3 features: neuromuscular hyperactivity (such as tremor, hyperreflexia, clonus, myoclonus, rigidity), autonomic dysfunction (tachycardia, blood pressure changes, hyperthermia, diaphoresis, shivering, diarrhoea), and altered mental state (agitation, confusion, mania). Need urgent admission to A&E for fluid resus and monitoring

54
Q

Give two examples of SNRIs

A

Duloxetine and venlafaxine

55
Q

Give 3 side effects of SNRIs?

A
  • broadly, same as SSRIS but more sedation, nausea and sexual dysfunction:
  • sedation
  • nausea
  • dry mouth
  • dizziness
  • headache
  • excessive sweating
  • hypertension
  • sexual dysfunction
  • constipation
  • SIADH
  • hyponaturamia
  • hypothyroidism
  • liver problems may worsen on duloextine
56
Q

describe 3 cautions of SNRIs

A
  • present in breast milk so avoid
  • avoid in hepatic dysfunction
  • avoid if eGFR <30
  • bleeding disorders or ibuprofen/ blood thinners
  • cardiac disease
  • mania
  • seizures
  • glaucoma or raised IOP
57
Q

Give 3 side effects of mirtazapine

A
  • dry mouth
  • constipation
  • weight gain
  • sedation
  • confusion
  • diarrhoea
  • headache
  • myalgia
  • weight gain
58
Q

What food should be avoided when using monoamine oxidase inhibitors? AND WHY

A
  • high thymine foods eg cheese, pickles, meat, wine, marmite

- as reaction can lead to hypertensive crisis

59
Q

How should MAOIs be stopped?

A

slowly tapered over a period of 6 weeks to 6 months (depending on how long theyve been on them for)

60
Q

What is discontinuation syndrome characterised by?

A
  • sweating
  • shakes
  • agitation
  • insomnia
  • headaches
  • irritability
  • nausea and vomiting
  • paraesthesia
  • clonus
  • paroxetine and venlafaxine are trickest to stop- can give fluoextine along side to help reduce dose
61
Q

How long do antidepressants take to work?

A
  • Take at least 2 weeks to work and can make you worse in this time
  • if absolutely no effect after 3 weeks, then switch, if partial effect then up dose and if not enough effect after further 2 weeks then swtich
  • SE should improve after first 2 weeks
62
Q

How long should anti depressants be continued for after symptoms improve?

A

for 6 months after symptoms stopped or 2 years if >1 severe depressive episode

63
Q

How does overdose of TCAs present?

A
  • CNS:mental state change, seizures, resp distress
  • CVS: sinus tachy, prolonged PR/ QT interval, arrhythmias, hypotension
  • Anticholinergic: dry mouth, urinary retention, blurred vision, dilated pupils, flushing, hyperthermia
64
Q

How should TCA overdose be managed?

A
  • fluids,oxygen, intubation
  • activated charcoal if within 2 hrs presentation
  • sodium bicarbonate if QRS widening or ventricular arrhythmias
65
Q

Give 3 examples of mood stabilisers

A
  • lithium (used in mania)
  • antipsychotics: quetiapine is 1st line for bipolar
  • carbemazepine and valproate (cycling between mania and depression, psychosis)
  • lamotrigine (severe depression and bipolar)
66
Q

give 3 side effects and 3 long term effects of lithium?

A
  • Gi upset, metallic taste, dry mouth, fine tremor, polydipsia, polyurea and weight gain
  • hypothyroidism (reversible)
  • hypokalaemia
  • renal impairment (irreversible- occurs most at above theraputic doses so need U&E and LFT monitoring)
67
Q

What puts you at increased risk of lithium toxicity and how does it present

A
  • confusion, coarse tremor, incontinence, N+V, ataxia and seizures
  • increased risk if dehydrated (advise to drink lots of hot)
  • treat with fluids, dialysis and benzos for seizures
68
Q

name 3 common drugs which interact with lithium

A
  • NSAIDs
  • Loop diuretics
  • ACE inhibitors
    can all dangerously increase levels
69
Q

Give one contraindication of propanolol

A

asthma

70
Q

What is Electroconvulsive therapy?

A

The passage of a small electrical current through the brain with a view to including a generalised fit which is therapeutic. This interrupts the hypoconnectivity between the various areas of the brain that maintain depression
It is a very effective treatment for depression, particularly severe depressive episodes, uncontrolled mania and catatonia. Recommended if other treatments have been ineffective
Typically, 6- 12 sessions (2 per week)
Bilateral: more effective. Unilateral: cognitive side effects less severe

71
Q

Give 3 contraindications for ECT

A
  • cardiac disease
  • resp infections
  • electrolyte imbalance
72
Q

Give 4 cautions for ECT

A
  • MI within last 3 months
  • cerebral/ aortic aneurysm
  • raised ICP
  • uncontrolled cardiac failure
  • DVT
  • recent CVA
  • unstable major fracture
  • untreated phaechromocytoma
73
Q

Give 3 side effects of ECT

A
  • prolonged seizures
  • headache and drowsiness
  • weakness and muscular ataxia
  • nausea and anorexia
  • cognitive effects: immediate disorientation/ confusion, retrograde amnesia, anterograde amnesia
74
Q

What are psychotherapies

A

A holistic approach in which the systemic human dialogue becomes a humanising enterprise for relief of suffering and advancement of self esteem. There are many types inc cognitive therapy, behaviour therapy, psychodynamic therapy, group therapy, counselling and play therapy

75
Q

What is cognitive therapy

A

focuses on thoughts and assumptions, promoting the theory that we respond to our interpretation of events, not to raw events alone. It focuses on the here and now problems, tackling the current state of mind rather than exploring past causes of distress or developmental experiences. Model: thoughts- emotions- physiology- behaviour

76
Q

What is behaviour therapy

A

Aim to alter behaviour first which will then change thoughts and emotions.

77
Q

name and describe 3 types of behaviour therapy

A
  • relaxation training: used in anxiety, system of breathing exercises to relax.
  • systemic desensitisation: in phobic disorder, graded exposures during relaxation techniques
  • response prevention: in obsessions, expose to stimulus and prevent the compulsive behaviour
  • thought stopping: for obsessional thoughts without compulsions: pt told to ruminate then taught to stop negative thoughts
  • aversion therapy: for alcohol dependance eg disulfiram
78
Q

What is psychodynamic therapy

A

Attempt to find the origin and meaning of the symptoms, not the presenting complaint. Based on view that venerability comes from early experiences and unresolved issuses. Good for dissociative/ conversion disorders, depression, psychomotor disorders, relationship problems and grief

79
Q

When are group therapies commonly used?

A
  • personality disorders
  • addictions
  • victims of childhood sex abuse
  • major medical illnesses
80
Q

What is counselling and what techniques are used?

A

Professional assistance and guidance in resolving personal or psychological problems. Used in stress and brief anxiety disorders. Strategies inc: problem solving, coping, cognitive therapy

81
Q

What is the difference between directive and non directive play therapy?

A
  • Directive play lead the play toward an identified difficulty to work through
  • Nondirective play: encourages a child to play freely without intrusion and in doing so recognise and solve problems.
82
Q

how should a suicide attempt be assessed?

A
  • inner ring: circumstances of act, what happened, when did feeling start, what happened after, who called for help, how do they feel now
  • middle ring: background to act, how have things been in last few months, what relationships are important, researching tools
  • outer ring: relevant personal and family history, does attempt reflect wish to die, was it to send a message or change circumstance, examine mental state/ mental illness
83
Q

Why do pts self harm?

A
  • communicate a message
  • emotional immaturity
  • inability to cope with stress
  • release from psychological pain, replacing these feelings with physical pain
84
Q

give 5 rfs for self harm

A
  • previous self harm
  • unemployment
  • single/ divorced/ separated
  • witnessed self harm in friends/ familly
  • abnormalities in serotonin release
  • mental illness
  • neglect/ physical/ emotional abuse
  • bullying/ conflicts/ poor interpersonal skills
  • low self esteem, identity problems
  • anti social behaviour disorder
85
Q

How should self harm be managed?

A
  • manage physical effects- eg stiches/ analgesia
  • capacity and consent assessment
  • initial assessment: risk of suicide +/- admit
  • ongoing risks
  • relevant psychiatric/ social interventions
  • safeguarding
86
Q

Which SSRI is safest in cardiac disease?

A

sertraline (no effect on QTc)

87
Q

What are the indications of ETC?

A

treatment resistant depression of severe depression in which there is need for rapid anti depressant effect

  • severe treatment resistant mania
  • catatonia
  • may need to use section 62 if dont conset for treatment
88
Q

What is an obsession?

A

Obsessional thoughts are:
o Ideas, images, or impulses that enter the person’s mind again and again in
stereotyped form.
o Almost invariably distressing, and the person often tries, unsuccessfully, to
resist them.
o Recognized as the person’s own thoughts, even if they are involuntary orrepugnant.

89
Q

What is a compulsion?

A

Compulsive acts or rituals are:
o Stereotyped behaviours that are repeated again and again.
o Not inherently enjoyable, nor do they result in completion of inherently
useful tasks.
o Performed to prevent some objectively unlikely event, often involving harm
to, or caused by, the person, which he or she fears might otherwise occur.
o Usually recognized by the person as pointless or ineffectual and repeated attempts are made to resist them.