History and MSE Flashcards
Order of history
PC
HPC
Past psychiatric history
Past medical history
Medication history
Personal history
- birth and early development
- family background and early childhood
- education
- occupation
- psychosexual/relationships
Substance use
- alcohol
- soking
- other substances
Forensic history
Premorbid personality
Social history
Collateral history
Order of MSE
Appearance and behaviour
Speech
Mood
Thought
Perception
Cognition
Insight
Movement vocab (MSE)
Akathisia
Parkinsonism (shuffling gait, pill rolling hand tremor, slowed movements, rigidity)
Mannerisms, stereotypies, tics, compulsions
Catatonia
Speech definitions vocab (MSE)
Rate, tone, volume, flow, rhythm
Pressure of speech, poverty of thought, thought block
Circumstantial, flight of ideas (understandable still), derailment
clanging, punning, neologisms
dysarthria, dysphasia
Mood (2 types)
Subjective
Objective = low, elated, irritable anxious, LABILE, FLATTENED/BLUNTED
Affect is incongruent if the perosn’s report doesn’t match their presentation
normal = ‘reactive and euthymic’
Thought: types of delusions
primary delusions are rare
secondary delusions = follow another symptoms (e.g. altered mood, hallucination)
systematised delusions = delusions grow and build on each other, into an elaborate delusional system
partial delusions
overvalued ideas
obsessions vs compulsions: Under appearance and behavior
obsessions = recurrent, unwanted intrusive thoguths, images, or impulses which enter the person’s mind despire attempts to resist them
- not a delusions as deep down the thought is known to be irrational
compulsions = repeated, stereotyped, superficially purposeful rituals that the person feels compelled to perform. Can be actions or thoughts
do thoughts keep coming into your head, even though you try to block them out?
some people have tiruals they need to do in a specific way. Do you do anything like that?
Perception: illusions and hallucinations
illusion = mispereception of a real, external stimulus
hallucinations = perception in the absence of an external stimulus
types of hallucinations
Auditory
- first person, second person, third person (schizophrenia)
- schizophrenia = discuss/argue about the person give a running commentary of their actions, or say their thoughts aloud (thought echo)
- most common in psychosis
Visual
- associated with organic conditions (e.g. delirium and dementia)
Touch
- tactile
- deep
Olfactory
Gustatory
Hypnopompic/hypnagogic hallucinations or following bereavment (temporary hallucinations)
perception: depersonalisation and derealisation
depersonalisation = the person feels unreal, detached, numb or emotionally distant
derealisation = the world feels undreal e.g. like a film set
Cognition
thinking and remembering
- TIME AND PLACE AND PERSON
- orientation, attention, concentration, language, memory
- MACE, MMSE
Insight
awareness that others are concerned by their sx and behaviour
agreement that there is a problem
recognition of mental health problems
awareness that symptoms require treatment
Factors influencing risk
Biopsychosocial and PPP for depression
Management of depression BPS + immediate, medium and long term