Organic Mental Disorders Flashcards
What are functional psychiatric disorders characterised by?
Disturbance in the functioning of the brain
What are organic mental disorders characterised by?
Demonstrable organic brain damage or mental disorder arising in the context of demonstrable physical disease
What are organic mental disorders?
a group of disorders that have a recognised organic explanation
Types of brain disorder
Primary (e.g. tumour/MS/parkinsons)
Secondary (e.g. due to endocrine disorder, substance misuse)
Acute/subacute
Chronic
Common features of an organic mental disorder
Cognitive impairment - disorientation - impaired attention/concentration - memory (anterograde +/- retrograde amnesia) - language (expressive and receptive dysphasia) - judgement - insight Behavioural abnormalities - agitation / aggression - slowing - psychomotor retardation - abnormal social conduct mood changes - low mood - anxiety - mania Psychotic features - hallucinations, commonly visual - delusions (often persecutory)
What causes a acute/subacute organic mental disorder?
Delirium
organic mood disorder
organic psychotic disorder
What is delirium?
Transient organic mental syndrome of acute or subacute onset which is characterised by global cognitive impairment
Acute organic confusional state
What causes chronic organic mental disorder?
Dementia
Amnesic syndrome
Organic personality change
Presenting features of delirium
Impaired attention / concentration
anterograde memory impairment
disorientation in time, place or person
fluctuating levels of arousal (often nocturnal exacerbations)
disordered sleep/wake cycle
increased/decreased psychomotor activity
disorganised thinking as indicated by rambling, irrelevant or incoherent speech
perceptual distortions, leading to misidentification, illusions and hallucinations
Changes in mood such as anxiety, depression and lability
Causes of delirium
Infections medications alcohol/drug withdrawal drug abuse e.g. TCAs metabolic vitamin deficiencies endocrinopathies neurological causes toxins/industrial exposures SLE cerebral vasculitis Paraneoplastic syndromes
What is dementia?
A syndrome which is characterised by a global cognitive impairment which is chronic in nature. The underlying brain pathology is variable and usually but not always progressive
Types of dementia
Alzheimer Vascular Lewy body fronto-temporal due to other brain disorders - huntingtons chorea - head injury - parkinsons
Presentation of amnesic/koraskoffs syndrome
Preserved global intellectual abilities anterograde amnesia retrograde amnesia (temporal gradient) preserved registration / working memory (e.g. digit span) preserved procedural (implicit) memory
Causes of amnesic/koraskoffs syndrome
Hippocampal damage
- HSV encephalitis
- anoxia
- surgical removal of temporal lobes
- bilateral posterior cerebral artery occlusion
- closed head injury
- early alzhimers disease
Diencephalic damage
- koraskoffs syndrome (alcohol and non alcoholic)
- 3rd ventricle tumour and cysts
- bilateral thalamic infarction - post subarachnoid haemorrhage, especially from anterior communicating artery aneurysms
What is koraskoffs syndrome?
A chronic memory disorder caused by severe deficiency of thiamine (vitamin B-1)