Anxiety - Burton Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different groups of symptoms in anxiety?

A

Psychological, physical (cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, respiratory, genitourinary), other/general

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2
Q

What are the psychological symptoms of anxiety?

A

Feelings of fear and impending doom, feelings of dizziness and faintness, restlessness, exaggerated startle response, poor concentration, irritability, insomnia and night terrors, depersonalisation and derealisation, globus hystericus (lump in throat).

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3
Q

What are the cardiovascular symptoms of anxiety?

A

Palpitations, tachycardia, chest discomfort.

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4
Q

What are the gastrointestinal symptoms of anxiety?

A

Dry mouth, nausea, abdominal discomfort, frequent or loose motions

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5
Q

What are the respiratory symptoms of anxiety?

A

Tachypnoea, difficulty in catching breath, chest tightness.

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6
Q

What are the genitourinary symptoms of anxiety?

A

Urinary frequency, impotence, amenorrhoea?

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7
Q

What are the other/general symptoms of anxiety?

A

Hot flushes or cold chills, tremor, perspiration, headache and muscle pains, numbness and tingling sensations around the mouth and in the extremities, dizziness, faintness

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8
Q

What is the definition of anxiety?

A

A state consisting of psychological and physical symptoms brought about by a sense of apprehension at a perceived threat.

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9
Q

What age do people usually develop anxiety disorders?

A

Take hold in early adulthood or, less commonly, in middle age.

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10
Q

Which gender does anxiety affect more?

A

Women (but not in social phobia and obsessive-compulsive disorder)

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11
Q

What is the most common type of anxiety?

A

Specific (simple) phobias (followed by social phobias and PTSD)

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12
Q

What are the three types of phobic anxiety disorders?

A

Agoraphobia, social phobia, specific (simple) phobias

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13
Q

What is agoraphobia and what therapies work?

A

Fear of places that are difficult or embarrassing to escape from, typically because they are confined, crowded, or far from home.

Cognitive behavioural techniques such as graded exposure and anxiety management. Relapse is common.

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14
Q

What is social phobia and what therapies work?

A

Fear of being judged by others and of being embarrassed or humiliated in one or more social or performance situations such as holding a conversation or delivering a speech.

May respond to cognitive behavioural techniques such as graded exposure and anxiety management.

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15
Q

What is specific (simple) phobia and what therapies work?

A

Most common. Fear of a specific object, activity, or situation. Unlike other anxiety disorders these begin in childhood.

May respond to cognitive behavioural techniques such as graded exposure and anxiety management, flooding, and modelling.

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16
Q

What is a panic attack?

A

Symptoms of anxiety are so sever that the person fears that they are suffocating, having a heart attack, losing control, or even ‘going crazy’.

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17
Q

What is a panic disorder?

A

Recurrent panic attacks due to developing a fear of the panic attacks themselves.

18
Q

What is generalised anxiety disorder and what therapies work?

A

Long-standing free-floating anxiety that may fluctuate, but that is neither situational nor episodic. Apprehension is present about a number of hypothetical events that are unlikely to happen.

May respond to counselling and cognitive and behavioural techniques.

19
Q

What are the different types of adjustment disorders and reactions to severe stress?

A

Adjustment disorder, abnormal bereavement reaction, acute stress reaction and PTSD

20
Q

What is adjustment disorder and what therapies work?

A

A protracted response to a significant life change or life event such as a change of job, migration, or divorce. Characterised by depressive symptoms and/or anxiety symptoms that are not severe enough to warrant a diagnosis of depression or anxiety.

Supportive psychotherapy is often helpful, but adjustment disorders have a good prognosis and normally resolve within 6 months.

21
Q

What is abnormal bereavement reaction?

A

Unusually intense or unusually prolonged bereavement reaction, that is, if it meets the criteria for a depressive disorder or it lasts for more than six months. Also considered abnormal if delayed, inhibited, or distorted.

22
Q

What is an acute stress reaction?

A

Acute response to traumatic experience which subsides in a matter of hours or days. Symptoms are variable but typically include an initial state of shock together with symptoms of anxiety and depressions.

23
Q

What is PTSD?

A

Protracted and sometimes delayed response to a highly threatening or catastrophic experience.
Common symptoms: anxiety, numbing, detachment, flashbacks, nightmares, partial or complete amnesia for the traumatic even. Symptoms can last for several years.

24
Q

What is obsessive compulsive disorder?

A

Predominantly obsessional thoughts, predominantly compulsive acts, or mixed obsessional thoughts and acts.

25
Q

What are the key features of an obsession?

A

Is a recurrent idea, image, or impulse
Is recognised as being a product of one’s own mind
Is usually perceived as being senseless
Is unsuccessfully resisted
Results in marked anxiety and distress, as well as functional impairment

26
Q

What are the key features of a compulsion?

A

Is a recurrent stereotyped behaviour
Reduces anxiety but is neither useful nor enjoyable
Is usually perceived as being senseless
Is unsuccessfully resisted
Results in marked anxiety and distress, as well as functional impairment

27
Q

What treatments are indicated for OCD?

A

May respond to cognitive behavioural therapies such as exposure and response prevention or to medication in the form of high doses of an SSRI or clomipramine (tricyclic that behaves as an SSRI), with or without augmentation.

28
Q

What are dissociative (conversion) disorders and what is the treatment?

A

A traumatic even leads to a disruption of the usually integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception. They are relatively rare.

Management involves acceptance and support, physical rehabilitation if indicated, and treatment of co-morbid mental disorders. Prognosis is good.

29
Q

What is dissociative amnesia?

A

Loss of memory, most commonly for a traumatic or stressful event.

30
Q

What is dissociative fugue?

A

Sudden, unexpected journey that may last several months. There is memory loss and confusion about personal identity or assumption of another identity. One the fugue ends, memory of it is lost.

31
Q

What is dissociative stupor?

A

Although conscious, the patient is motionless and mute and does not respond to stimulation.

32
Q

What are trance and possession disorders?

A

Temporary replacement of a patient’s identity by a spirit, ghost, deity, other person, animal, or inanimate object that is not accepted by the patient’s culture as a normal part of a collective cultural or religious experience.

33
Q

What is dissociative anaesthesia?

A

Dissociative sensory loss may accompany dissociative motor disorders and is most commonly of ‘glove and stocking’ distribution.

34
Q

What is dissociative convulsions?

A

Seizures that have no organic basis. They are sometimes called ‘pseudo-seizures’ or’psychogenic non-epileptic seizures’.

35
Q

What is Ganser syndrome?

A

A very rare syndrome characterised by vorbeireden or ‘approximate answers’ (9+10=21), absurd statements, confusion, hallucinations, and psychogenic physical symptoms.

36
Q

What is multiple personality disorder?

A

Two or more distinct identities that successively take control of the same shared body, and memory loss of each identity for the other. Very rare (if real at all)

37
Q

What are somatoform disorders and what are the three types?

A

Characterised by physical symptoms that cannot be accounted for by a physical disorder or other mental disorder.

Somatisation disorder, hypochondriacal disorder, persistent somatoform pain disorder.

38
Q

What is somatisation disorder?

A

A long history of multiple, severe physical symptoms that cannot be accounted for by a physical disorder or other mental disorder. More common in women.

39
Q

What is hypochondriacal disorder?

A

A fear or belief of having a serious physical disorder despite medical reassurance to the contrary. In ICD-10 body dysmorphic disorder is included.

40
Q

What is persistent somatoform pain disorder?

A

Chronic pain that cannot be accounted for by a physical disorder or other mental disorder.

41
Q

How do you manage somatoform disorders?

A

Involves acceptance, do not reinforce any false beliefs. Provide him or her with a clear consistent explanation for the symptoms. Investigations kept to minimum and only clinically necessary.