Mx of Psych Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Tx of BPAD - Manic phase

A

General:

  • Withdraw any medications with may contribute e.g. steroids, anti-depressants
  • Calm environment
  • Food and fluids

If they are already on mood stabiliser:

  • Optimise their mood stabiliser
  • Add an anti-psychotic

If they are not on any treatment:

  • Give antipsychotic
  • Give BDZ to help sleep
  • Add in mood stabiliser later
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2
Q

Tx of BPAD - Depressive phase

A
  • Tx with mood stablisers
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3
Q

Use of anti-depressants in BPAD patients

A

Must be avoided as they induce mania!

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4
Q

Long-term management of BPAD patients

A
  • Long-term mood stabilisers
  • Psychoeducation
  • Social interventions e.g. family, housing etc
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5
Q

Management of depression

A

Mild depression

  • Watch and wait
  • Conservative management e.g. sleep hygiene
  • Review in 2 weeks

Moderate-severe depression

  • Antidepressants (SSRIs)
  • If they are struggling with sleep and appetite, Mirtazipine is a good option
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6
Q

Management of schizophrenia

A

IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT

  • Start on an atypical antipsychotic (Risperidone)
  • Benzodiazepine to help sleep
  • Psychoeducation

MEDIUM-TERM MANAGEMENT

  • Monitor for side-effects
  • CBT
  • Concordance therapy
  • Social support e.g. housing

LONG-TERM MANAGEMENT

  • Clozapine if needed
  • Antidepressants can help for negative symptoms
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7
Q

When would you prescribe clozapine?

A
  • When there is treatment-resistant scizophrenia

This is defined as:
- Schizophrenia which has not responded to 2 antipsychotics, which have been tried at the therapeutic dose for 6 weeks

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8
Q

GAD - management

A
  • Assess symptoms with Beck Anxiety Inventory
  • Assess severity with GAD-7

Mild anxiety, no functional impairment
- Self-help and psychoeducation

Moderate-severe anxiety

  • CBT or SSRI
  • Review patients <30 years in 1 week, due to risk of increased suicidality
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9
Q

Panic disorder - management

A

Aim: reduce the number of panic attacks, and ease symptoms

Primary care: SSRI or CBT

SSRI ineffective – prescribe TCA e.g. imipramine

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10
Q

Management of OCD

A

Mild - IAPTS (counselling/CBT)

Moderate - CBT or SSRI

Severe - SSRI and CBT

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11
Q

PTSD management

A
  • SSRI and taking therapy (CBT or EMDR)
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12
Q

Personality disorder - mx

A
  • Mainly psychological interventions
  • Psychoeducation
  • CBT
  • DBT is useful in EUPD
  • Medications may be useful
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13
Q

CAMHS disorders - management

A
  • Depression - 3 months CBT, then fluoxetine if needed
  • Anxiety - CBT/psychoeducation, then fluoxetine

School refusal/truancy/conduct disorders

  • Psychotherapy
  • Anger management for child
  • Parenting programmes
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14
Q

Learning disabilities - management

A

ASSESSMENT
Level of intellectual function:
- Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV) or Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)
Level of functional impairment:
- Adaptive Behavioural Assessment System (ABAS II)

ASSESS CAPACITY

MANAGEMENT

  • Coordinated Care Programme
  • They do the functional assessment, provide family with support and prescribe medications
  • Family therapy
  • Art therapy, music therapy etc
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15
Q

Post-partum psychiatry

A
  • Baby blues - resolves
  • PND - may need antidepressants (paroxetine best for breastfeeders)
  • Puerperal psychosis - antipsychotic + admission to MBU
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16
Q

Delirium - management

A

Behavioural + medical management

BEHAVIOURAL

  • Quiet, tranquil area
  • Avoid change
  • Clocks to reorientate patient

MEDICAL

  • Check drug charts + stop any unnecessary drugs
  • Can give low dose BDZ to help sleep
17
Q

Alzheimer’s disease - management

A
  1. Anticholinesterase (donezepil, rivastigmine or galantamine)
  2. Memantine
18
Q

DLB - management

A
  1. Donezepil or rivastigmine

2. Galantamine

19
Q

Paracetamol OD - management

A

< 1h - give activated charcoal, check paracetamol levels at 4h and tx according to nomogram

1-8h - check paracetamol levels and tx according to nomogram

> 8h - give N-acetylecysteine if blood paracetamol levels >75mg/kg and treat according to nomogram

20
Q

Management of alcohol withdrawal symptoms

A

PABRINEX + CHLORDIAZEPOXIDE

21
Q

Management of delirium tremens

A

PABRINEX + LORAZEPAM PO

22
Q

Management of alcohol withdrawal seizures

A

LORAZEPAM (NOT PHENYTOIN!!!)

23
Q

Management of Wernicke’s encephalopathy

A

PARENTERAL THIAMINE FOR 5 DAYS

24
Q

Assessment scales in alcohol dependence

A

AUDIT (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test) - for alcohol misuse

SADQ - Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire

CIWA-Ar (Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment) - for withdrawal symptoms

25
Q

Drugs for people who have achieved success in coming off alcohol

A
  • Naltrexone - blocks pleasurable sensation from alcohol
  • Acamprosate (reduces cravings)
  • Disulfiram (increases unpleasant symptoms e.g. flushing)
26
Q

Management of opioid withdrawal

A
  • Management of symptoms: Loperamide, Metoclopramise, non-opiate painkillers
  • Management of withdrawal symptoms:
    METHADONE - PO, longer but milder withdrawal
    BUPRENORPHINE - sublingual tablet - prevents withdrawal symptoms