Dissociative Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What is a dissociative disorder?

A

Loss of memory, identity, or sense of self (one’s sense of self is the normal integration of one’s thoughts, behaviors, perceptions, feelings, and memory into a unique identity)

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2
Q

What differentiates an amnestic disorder from a dissociative disorder?

A

Dissociative disorders are never due to an underlying medical condition or substance use; onset is instead related to a stressful life event or personal problem

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3
Q

What is the DSM criteria forDissociative Amnesia?

A
  • At least one episode of inability to recall important personal information, usually involving a traumatic or stressful event
  • The amnesia cannot be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
  • Symptoms cause significant distress or impairment in daily functioning and cannot be explained by another disorder, medical condition or substance use
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4
Q

Dissociative amnesia is more common in ___ than ______ and has increase incidence of comorbid…

A
  • Women than men

* Major depression and anxiety disorders

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5
Q

What is the course of dissociative amnesia?

A

Many patients abruptly return to normal after minutes or days

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6
Q

What is the treatment for dissociative amnesia disorder?

A
  • It is important to help patients retrieve lost memories in order to prevent future recurrences
  • Hypnosis or administration of sodium amobarbital or lorazepam during the interview helps patients talk more freely
  • Subsequent psychotherapy is then recommended
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7
Q

What is abreaction?

A

The strong reaction patients often get when retrieving traumatic memories

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8
Q

What is dissociative fugue?

A

Characterized by sudden, unexpected travel away from home, accompanied by the inability to recall parts of one’s past or identity

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9
Q

What are the DSM-IV Criteria for Dissociative Fugue?

A
  • Sudden unexpected travel away from home or work plus inability to recall one’s passt
  • Confusion about personal identity or assumption of new identity
  • Not due to dissociative identity disorder or the physiological effects of a substance or medical disorder
  • Symptoms cause impairment in social or occupational functioning
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10
Q

What are some predisposing factors for dissociative fugue?

A
  • Heavy use of alcohol
  • Major depression
  • History of head trauma
  • Epilepsy
  • Stressful life event
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11
Q

Unlike dissociative amnesia, patients with dissociative fugue are…

A

unaware that they have forgotten anything

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12
Q

Dissociative fugue usually lasts…

A

A few hours to several days (but may last longer)

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13
Q

Treatment of dissociative fugue is similar to that of…

A

Dissociative amnesia

  • Help retrieve lost memories
  • Hypnosis or administration of sodium amobarbital or lorazepam
  • Subsequent psychotherapy
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14
Q

What are the DSM-IV criteria for dissociative identity disorder?

A
  • Prescence of at least 2 or more distinct identities
  • At least two of the identities recurrently take control of the person’s behavior
  • Inability to recall personal information of one personality when the other is dominant
  • Not due to effects of substance or medical condition
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15
Q

What is the average age of diagnosis for dissociative identity disorder? Women account for ___% of patients

A
  • Average age of diagnosis is 30

* Women account for 90% of patients

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16
Q

Most patients with dissociative identity disorder have experienced…

A

trauma, especially childhood physical or sexual abuse

17
Q

What is the course of dissociative identity disorder?Which patients have a poorer prognosis?

A
  • Course is usually chronic with incomplete recovery

* Patients with an earlier onset have a poorer prognosis

18
Q

What are the DSM-IV criteria for Depersonalization disorder?

A
  • Persistent or recurrent experiences of being detached from one’s body or mental processes
  • Reality testing remains intact during episode
  • Causes social/occupational impairment and cannot be accounted for by another mental or physical disorder
19
Q

A diagnosis of depersonalization disorder requires…

A

that episodes be persistent or recurrent (transient symptoms of depersonalizations are common in normal people during times of stress)

20
Q

What is the course of depersonalization disorder?

A

Often chronic with either steady or intermittent course, but may remit without treatment

21
Q

How is depersonalization disorder treated?

A

Anti-anxiety agents or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) to treat associated symptoms of anxiety or major depression