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Mood and Personality Disorders Joe MacLellan PGY-3 July 28, 2011

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Mood and Personality Disorders. Joe MacLellan PGY-3 July 28, 2011. Thank you. Dr. Colleen Carey Colleen Weir. Outline. Mood Disorders Depressed mood Elevated Mood Personality Disorders Cluster A, B, and C. MDE/MDD Dysthymia. Bipolar disorder I Bipolar disorder II Cyclothymia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mood and Personality Disorders

Mood and Personality Disorders

Joe MacLellanPGY-3

July 28, 2011

Page 2: Mood and Personality Disorders

Thank you

• Dr. Colleen Carey

• Colleen Weir

Page 3: Mood and Personality Disorders

Outline

• Mood Disorders– Depressed mood– Elevated Mood

• Personality Disorders– Cluster A, B, and C

Page 4: Mood and Personality Disorders

Mood Disorders

MDE/MDDDysthymia

Bipolar disorder IBipolar disorder II

Cyclothymia

Page 5: Mood and Personality Disorders

Case 1

45 single F, presents to the ED c/o fatigue and abdominal pain.

• Vitals Normal• Bloodwork is Normal• Abdominal exam is benign

Next step?

Page 6: Mood and Personality Disorders

How do depressed patients present to the ED?

Page 7: Mood and Personality Disorders

1) Suicidal Ideation

2) Depressed

3) Vague complaints

4) Anxiety

Page 8: Mood and Personality Disorders

Major Depressive

Episode

Page 9: Mood and Personality Disorders

MDE Criteria

• At least 5 of SIGECAPS*

• Causes impairment, for >2 weeks

• Not a mixed episode, not substance-induced or caused by a GMC, not bereavement

Page 10: Mood and Personality Disorders

How do adolescents and elderly differ in their

presentation?

Page 11: Mood and Personality Disorders

Adolescents– Misdiagnosed as

ADD– Boredom*– Substance

use/criminal activity– Mood can be irritableGeriatrics

– Cognitive changes (dementia)

Page 12: Mood and Personality Disorders

Should we be prescribing

anti-depressant medication in the

ED?

Page 13: Mood and Personality Disorders

What disorders mimic Major Depression?

Page 14: Mood and Personality Disorders

Mimics

• Medical Conditions

• Medications

• Substance Abuse/Withdrawal

Page 15: Mood and Personality Disorders

How does Dysthymia differ?

Page 16: Mood and Personality Disorders

Dysthymia

• Chronic, low-grade depression

• Responsive to anti-depressants

• Increase risk of MDD

Page 17: Mood and Personality Disorders

Specifiers

• Seasonal Affective

• Postpartum

• With other features: psychotic, atypical, melancholic

Page 18: Mood and Personality Disorders

Treatment

Moderate-Severe:• Anti-depressants• Psychotherapy• ECT

Mild:• Exercise, self-help books• Counseling

Page 19: Mood and Personality Disorders

Who needs to be admitted?

Page 20: Mood and Personality Disorders

Disposition

• Who needs admission?– Risk of suicide/homicide– Lacks capacity to cooperate with treatment– Inadequate psychosocial support– Co-morbid condition requiring admission

• Who can be discharged?

Page 21: Mood and Personality Disorders

Resources

We will come back to this…

Page 22: Mood and Personality Disorders

All the kids are doing it…

Page 23: Mood and Personality Disorders

“Every great movement begins with one man, and that’s me.”

[Did you get out of control?] “Well yeah! I don’t have another gear!”

“I feel more alive. I feel more focused. I feel more energetic. My workouts are really intense.”

Page 24: Mood and Personality Disorders
Page 25: Mood and Personality Disorders

How do manic patients typically present to the ED?

Page 26: Mood and Personality Disorders

Mania presents as

• Dangerous activity

• Trauma

• Gambling

• Binge Drinking

Page 27: Mood and Personality Disorders

Manic Episode

• Elevated mood lasting 1 week

• 3 or more of DIGFAST*

• Not mixed, substance-induced, GMC

• Causes impairment

Page 28: Mood and Personality Disorders

Mimics

• Substance abuse/withdrawal

• Medications

• Delirium

• Hyperthyroid

Page 29: Mood and Personality Disorders

How would you control an aggressive Manic patient

• Initially:– Single room, offering medications

• If necessary:– Haldol/lorazepam– restraints

Page 30: Mood and Personality Disorders

How does Hypomania differ?

Page 31: Mood and Personality Disorders

Hypomania

• Elevated/irritable for 4+ days

• 3 or more of DIGFAST

• BUT…– Not signicant enough to cause marked

impairment or to necessitate hospitalization

Page 32: Mood and Personality Disorders

Bipolar disorder

• Bipolar I– Episode of mania, +/- MDE +/-, hypomania

• Bipolar II– Hypomanic and MDE episodes– NO manic or mixed episodes

Page 33: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cyclothymia

• 2 years of episodes of hypomania and depressive symptoms

• Not meeting criteria for MDE, mania, or mixed episoder

• Not substance-induced, GMC, schizophreniform

Page 34: Mood and Personality Disorders

Treatment• Acute depression:

– SSRI’s

• Acute mania:– Lithium– +/- antipsychotics, benzodiazepines

• Maintenance:– lithium– Educational and psychosocial support

Page 35: Mood and Personality Disorders

Disposition

• Who needs admission?

• Who can be discharged?

Page 36: Mood and Personality Disorders

Resources

We will come back to this…

Page 37: Mood and Personality Disorders

Personality Disorders

Page 38: Mood and Personality Disorders

“an enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly

from the expectations of the individual's culture, is pervasive and inflexible, has

an onset in adolescence or early adulthood, is stable over time, and leads

to distress or impairment”

Page 39: Mood and Personality Disorders

Is this a Personality Disorder?

Page 40: Mood and Personality Disorders

Is this?

Page 41: Mood and Personality Disorders

2 people in this room

have a PD

Page 42: Mood and Personality Disorders

=• Cluster A

• Cluster B

• Cluster C

Page 43: Mood and Personality Disorders

Openness

Agreeableness

ExtraversionConscientiousness

Neuroticism

Page 44: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cluster A

• Schizoid Personality Disorder

• Schizotypal Personality Disorder

• Paranoid Personality Disorder

Page 45: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cluster C

• Dependant Personality Disorder

• Avoidant Personality Disorder

• Obsessive-compulsive Personality Disorder

Page 46: Mood and Personality Disorders

Personality Disorder Party

Jason

Page 47: Mood and Personality Disorders

The Guest List

CrystleKimTylerSkye

JasonAmber

Page 48: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cheat Sheet

• Harold - Schizoid• Kim - Paranoid• Skye - Dependant• Tyler - Schizotypal• Amber - OCPD• Crystle - Avoidant

Page 49: Mood and Personality Disorders

A• These patients rarely seek treatment.

• Treatment largely psychotherapy

• Use clear explanations, establish trust

Page 50: Mood and Personality Disorders

C• Typically present with another

symptom*

• Pharmacotherapy for symptom relief but mainstay is psychotherapy

• Be supportive but set limits

Page 51: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cluster B

Page 52: Mood and Personality Disorders

BorderlinePD

Page 53: Mood and Personality Disorders

How does Borderline PD present to the ED?

Page 54: Mood and Personality Disorders

BPD in the ED

Biological 1. Sequelae of self-harm2. Sequelae of reckless behaviour

Psychological 1. “Depression” (mood instability)2. Suicidal ideation3. Intense anger, agitation in the community4. Stress-related “psychosis”

Social 1. Therapist is unavailable2. Caregiver is unavailable3. Housing crisis4. Financial crisis (day before AISH cheque)5. Seeking admission

Page 55: Mood and Personality Disorders

What is the approach to the Borderline patient

in the ED?

Page 56: Mood and Personality Disorders

1. Medical clearance – untold parasuicidal or suicidal gestures

2. Mental state clearance – look for new features to this presentation (is this “the same old same old”?)

3. Supportive interventions1. Ask the patient what would be helpful2. Nicorette, warm blanket, food3. Recognize and reinforce healthy choices4. Watch your own countertransference (helplessness;

anger)4. Take responsibility for the patient’s treatment, but

not the patient’s behaviours.

Page 57: Mood and Personality Disorders

Tips for Working with BPD

• Be truthful and keep it simple

• Beware of splitting, communicate clearly with other staff

• Elicit expectations from patient

• Goal: have patient take ownership of solution

Page 58: Mood and Personality Disorders

Narcissistic PD• Be careful of overlap with

manic grandiosity

• Illness disrupts their self-image

• Appeal to their narcissism

Page 59: Mood and Personality Disorders

How does Antisocial PD present to the ED?

Page 60: Mood and Personality Disorders

ASPD in the ED

• Facing charges and is now “suicidal”

• Facing charges, now “acting bizarrely”

• Assault

• Intoxicated

• Demanding abusable substances

Page 61: Mood and Personality Disorders

What is the approach to the Antisocial patient

in the ED?

Page 62: Mood and Personality Disorders

1. Medical clearance – untold parasuicidal or suicidal gestures

2. Mental state clearance – look for new features to this presentation (is this “the same old same old”?)

3. Supportive interventions1. Ask the patient what would be helpful2. Nicorette, warm blanket, food3. Recognize and reinforce healthy choices4. Watch your own countertransference (helplessness;

anger)4. Take responsibility for the patient’s treatment, but

not the patient’s behaviours.

Page 63: Mood and Personality Disorders

Tips for working with ASPD

• Be Objective

• Provide a thorough, non-authoritarian approach to investigation

• Set clear approach/plan with patient

Page 64: Mood and Personality Disorders

Histrionic PD

• Vague/loosely connected sx.

• Often under/over investigate

• Sensitive to emotional concerns while avoiding closeness

Page 65: Mood and Personality Disorders

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy

A psychotherapeutic treatment that helps patients understand the thoughts and feelings that influence behaviors

Patients learn how to identify and change maladaptive thought patterns that have a negative influence on behaviour.

Page 66: Mood and Personality Disorders

Resources

• Private (Fee):– Inner solutions– Bridging the gap– Calgary counseling

Page 67: Mood and Personality Disorders

Resources

• Public Access:– Admission, short stay, day program– SCHC and SC

• walk in counseling• Brief therapy

– ERO– DBT program– Access Mental Health– Crisis Line– PAS