unit 12 – abnormal psychology and treatment neurodevelopmental disorders schizophrenic spectrum...

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E D C B A0

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Unit 11 Raw

Unit 12 – Abnormal Psychology and

TreatmentNeurodevelopmental Disorders

Schizophrenic Spectrum DisordersBipolar Disorders

Depressive DisordersAnxiety Disorders

Chronic vs. episodic

• Chronic = long lasting and over time• Episodic = varied lengths of episodes, not consistent

Neurodevelopmental

• ASD• Social communication disorder• Specific Learning Disorder• ADHD• Intellectual disability

Schizophrenia Spectrum

• Disorders based on an error of selective attention•What is selective attention?

Delusions and Hallucinations• Delusions – irrational, unjustifiable, usually paranoid belief• Delusions of grandeur – “I am King Louis XIV!!”• Delusions of persecution – “The government is after me!!”

• Hallucinations – perception of nonexistent, external stimuli• Can be visual or auditory• MOST are auditory

Disorganized Speech• Frequent derailment or incoherent speech• Ex: Word salad

• “The potato snake ate the sun spotted dinosaur cupholder of unique!”

Grossly disorganized or abnormal motor:• Jerky movements, atypical behavior

Negative Symptoms

• Remember negative means TAKING SOMETHING AWAY• Catatonia – flat affect (like no one is home)• All emotion is taken out, person lacks all energy

• Positive symptoms – adding a symptom (i.e. hallucinations or delusions)

Specifiers of Schizophrenia

Paranoid preoccupations with delusions and hallucinations.

Catatonic immobility or excessive purposeless movements.

Disorganized disorganized speech or behavior, inappropriate emotions. Word Salads: scrambled or nonsensical speech.

Undifferentiated symptoms, but doesn't fit above models.

Residual Withdrawal, after hallucinations and delusions have disappeared

Causes of Schizophrenia

• Psychological - triggering experiences, genes predisposed but some react to traumatic triggers by developing schizophrenia. • They vary.

Biochemical Causes• Prenatal: It is also thought to perhaps be triggered or caused by the

introduction of a prenatal virus that affects brain development, possibly in the thalamus. • People conceived in winter months are more apt to develop schizophrenia in

Northern hemisphere, while the reverse is true in the Southern.

• Drug use: Amphetamines and cocaine sometimes intensify symptoms. • Dopamine is also associated with physical movement, disruption of is associated

with schizophrenia.

• Brain anatomy:they have abnormal brain tissue, low frontal lobe activity.• Thalamus: reactions are smaller than normal and are reactive--that may

cause brain overstimulation.

Rule of Thirds

• 1/3 of people who develop schizophrenia only have one episode• 1/3 have reoccurring episodes• 1/3 are chronic with unremitting symptoms.

Genetic Factors

• Definite genetic link: the closer you are genetically to someone with Schizophrenia, the more likely you are to get it.• 1 in 100 people get it.• 1 in 10 of siblings• 1 in 2 identical twins, even if raised apart

Dopamine Hypothesis

• Biochemical: 6 times the normal amount of dopamine receptors that increase brain activity to manic levels. • Thus dopamine blockers reduce symptoms.

Bipolar and related disorders (previous manic depressive)• alternates between hopelessness and lethargy of depression and

over-excited manic state.

• Mania - typically over-talkative; overactive; little or no sleep; highly impulsive, loud, flighty, hard to interrupt sexually less-inhibited. Grandiose optimism and self-esteem. May be very irritable.• High levels of norepinephrine found• Hyper vs. hypo?

• After mania, people fall back to either a normal state or into a depressed state

Bipolar - Causes

• Genetic: tends to run in families, genetic predisposition• Biological: serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine don’t function

properly• Environmental: stress, major life event• Genetic expression

Bipolar 1

• Classic type of bipolar• Individuals experience both

manic and depressive episodes at varying lengths

Bipolar 2• Involves less severe manic episodes, depressive episodes are the

same

Differences?

• Bipolar 1 is more severe than bipolar 2.• They used to be mood disorders, but mania is not based in emotion –

it’s based more in a possible delusional state where the person may take on a new identity.• Florida case

Depressive Disorders (previously mood disorders)

• Disorders related to emotions

Major Depressive Disorder

• two or more weeks of depressed mood, intense feelings of worthlessness and hopelessness; and diminished interest in things that were once considered pleasurable. • People feel like they are in a deep black hole with no way to get out.

The hopeless feeling often prevents them from seeing any reason to try to get out. Very dangerous illness.

Persistent Depressive Disorder

• Also called dysthymia• chronic low level depression lasting for at least 2 years; the feelings

aren't as intense, but they last longer. Difficult to detect because of the lack of intensity but takes a large toll on body and psychology systems.

Premenstrual dysphoric disorder

• Symptoms of menstrual cycles do not improve following menses • PMS is chronic

• Examples?

Anxiety Disorders• Disorders related to autonomic nervous system abnormalities

(possible endocrinology states)

Psychoanalytic repressed feelings during childhood symbolized by trigger.

Behavioral learned fear, which has been reinforced, or social learning, imitating others who has fear like parents. May be generalized from other learned experiences-- one dog to all dogs.

Biological predisposed genetically to be afraid of things that can cause death: snakes, spiders, height, enclosed places, disease.

GAD Persistent symptoms of an excited sympathetic, nervous system: sweating, heart racing, dizziness, shaky accompanied by persistent negative feelings and fear…not triggered by specific events.

Specific Phobia persistent, irrational fear of a specific object of situation – key feature is the presence of a phobic stimulus

Panic Disorder unpredictable, minutes long intense anxiety attack, as if you're going to be killed any second, but no specific, real threat is apparent.

Agoraphobia The individual fears or avoids situations because the thought of escape might be difficult or help may not be available

Social Anxiety Disorder Social phobia – fear/distress over social situations

Separation Anxiety Disorder Consistent fear from separation from home or attachment figures

Selective Mutism Individuals may fail to speak because of fear of negative evaluation