Other Mental Health Flashcards
A young male patient is reported to be more withdrawn from his peers than usual and has dropped out of college and quit his job within the last five months. The parent is concerned that the patient may have schizophrenia because a maternal uncle has the disease. What will the primary care provider do next?
Provide reassurance that classic symptoms of schizophrenia are not present
Refer the patient for inpatient psychiatric treatment
Consider treatment with antipsychotic medications
Ask about the patient’s speech and thinking patterns
In order to diagnose schizophrenia, one or more of the positive signs of delusions, hallucinations, or disorganized speech must be present.
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a chronic, severe, and disabling brain disorder. Schizophrenia interrupts a person’s capacity to accurately perceive reality, to communicate and relate to others, and to complete the usual activities of daily living, especially during acute phases of the illness.
Onset of Schizophrenia
Typically between 16 - 30 years old
Unusual for someone older than 45 to be diagnosed
Schizophrenia Causes
Unknown, but genetic and environment influences play role - suspected that environment is the key with a genetic pre-disposition
Schizophrenia Initial Presentation
“Prodromal Period” occurs before the psychotic presentation
Changes in grades, habits, sleep, mood, reduced attention / drive / motivation
Difficult to discern from normal teenage changes
Schizophrenia Symptoms
Positive Symptoms (added to usual human experience such as hallucinations) Negative Symptoms (decrease or loss of normal function such as withdrawal, no joy) Cognitive Symptoms (Focus loss, impaired verbal skills, loss of problem solving)
Diagnosis of Schizophrenia
No single test. Rule out organic causes
-CB, thyroid, renal, hepatic, infection, tox, alcohol, CT
Diagnosis by Symptom
Generally, positive symptoms must occur for a month and there must be 6 months of interruption of normal life
The more negative symptoms, the more serious the disorder
Treatment of Schizophrenia
In the first episode there is an increased responsiveness to medication adverse effect, so start with low doses
First and Second Gen Antipsychotics
All carry a black box warning on use in elderly cause increase mortality in treatment of dementia psychosis
EPS and TD are concerns, may be less common in second gen (but second gen is very expensive and not any more effective)
First Gen Antipsychotics Tips
Consider also prescribing antiparkinson meds to reduce EPS dystonia
EPS also responds well to IM benadryl and IM benzotropine
Tardive Dyskinesia
Movement disorder that can become irreversible
Atypical antipsychotics may carry a low risk
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
The hallmark symptoms of this hypodopaminergic state include an elevated core body temperature and a modest to severe muscle rigidity. Two or more of the following symptoms are also required for diagnosis: diaphoresis, tachycardia, elevated or labile blood pressure, dysphagia, incontinence, tremor, changes in level of consciousness, mutism, leukocytosis, laboratory evidence of muscle injuries, and hepatic enzyme elevations.