Reaction to Stressful Event/Bereavement Flashcards
1
Q
ADJUSTMENT DISORDER:
A
- Feeling unable to cope with psychosocial stresses.
- Symptoms significant enough to be out of proportion to the original stressor/cause disturbance to social or occupational functioning
- Symptoms occur within 3/12(DSM-IV), 1/12(ICD-10) of original stressor
- Symptoms usually fully resolve within 6/12 of onset.
- Only diagnose if criteria not met for other specific diagnoses ie mood/psychotic/anxiety disorders/PTSD/normal bereavement reaction.
2
Q
ACUTE STRESS REACTION:
A
- Onset immediately after/within few minutes of traumatic stressor
- Initial dazed state
- Then possible disorientation and narrowing of attention, inability to process external stimuli
- Followed by period of diminished responsiveness or psychomotor agitation
- May have amnesia
- Symptoms normally begin to decline after 24-48h, minimal >3d
3
Q
POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER:
A
- Symptoms develop >1/12 but ≤6/12 of traumatic stressor
- significant distress/functional impairment - Symptoms include:
a) Repetitive re-experiencing of traumatic event:
- Flashbacks: Intrusive, unwanted memories; vivid mental images/dreams of original experience.
- Distress: Caused by internal/external cues resembling stressor
* patients may dissociate and experience original event as though happening at that moment.
- Hallucinations and illusions
b) Avoidance of stimuli associated with stressor, amnesia for aspects of trauma, emotional numbness(feeling detached), social withdrawal
c) Increased arousal
- Insomnia
- Anger outbursts
- Hypervigilance
- Poor concentration
- Exaggerated startle response.
*Patients have high rates of co-morbid substance misuse. Important DDx: Head injury, epilepsy
4
Q
TYPES OF DISSOCIATIVE(CONVERSION) DISORDERS:
A
- Dissociative amnesia
- Not due to normal forgetfulness, organic brain disorders or intoxicaiton. - Dissociative fugue
- Amnesia for personal identity, maintenance of self-care and social interaction
- usually short-lived and may involve seemingly purposeful travel/assuming new identity. - Dissociative stupor
- Severe psychomotor retardation not due to physical or psychiatric disorder. - Dissociative anaesthesia and sensory loss
- Cutaneous/visual
- Does not correspond to dermatomes or known neurological patterns. - Dissociative motor disorders
- Partial/complete paralysis - Dissociative convulsions(psychogenic non-epileptic seizures)
- Tongue-biting, urinary incontinence and serious injury are uncommon
- Absence of epileptic activity on EEG. - Ganser’s syndrome
- Complex disorder with ‘approximate answers’ - Multiple personality disorder(dissociative identity disorder)
5
Q
DISSOCIATION
A
- Disruption in usually integrated functions of consciousness and cognition.
- Memories of past, awareness of identity, thoughts, emotions, movement, sensation and/or control of behaviour become separated from an individual’s personality such that they function independently and are not open to voluntary control.
- ICD-10 diagnosis requires evidence of psychological causation with onset of symptoms.
- Don’t diagnose if evidence of physical or psychiatric disorder that explains symptoms.
6
Q
PARKES’S STAGES OF BEREAVEMENT:
A
- Alarm
- Numbness
- state of being emotionally disconnected. - Pining
- Bereaved is constantly reminded of and pre-occupied with the deceased.
- ‘pangs of grief’, intense anxiety, hypnagogic, hypnopompic, pseudohallucinations, illusions of deceased. - Depression and despair
- Depressed and irritable mood
- Features of depression - Recovery and reorganization
7
Q
BEREAVEMENT AND DEPRESSION
- bereaved are at higher risk of depressive illness
A
Characteristics suggesting development of major depressive episode:
- Guilt
- other than events surrounding death of loved one - Suicidal ideation
- other than feeling ‘better of dead’ or ‘wanting to join the deceased’ - Preoccupation with worthlessness
- Marked psychomotor retardation
- Prolonged and marked functional impairment
- Hallucinatory experiences
8
Q
DDx:
- always screen for PTSD and depression after life-threatening event. Risk of depression increases x6 in 6/12 following stressful event.
A
- Adjustment disorder
- Acute stress reaction
- PTSD
- Normal bereavement
- Dissociative/conversion disorder
- Exacerbation/precipitation of other psychiatric illness:
- Mood disorder
- Anxiety disorders
- Psychotic disorders(esp acute and transient psychotic disorders) - Malingering
9
Q
TRAUMATIC STRESS
A
- outwith range of normal human experience
- magnitude such that experienced as traumatic by most people.
- occurs when person feels that their own/loved one’s physical/psychological integrity is under serious threat