Mental Status PPT
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Transcript Mental Status PPT
Ten Leading Causes of
Disability in the World
Type of Disability
Cost (in
DALYs)
Cumulative %
of Cost
Unipolar major depression
42,972
10.3
Tuberculosis
19,673
14.9
Road traffic accidents
19,625
19.6
Alcohol use
14,848
23.2
Self-inflicted injuries
14,645
26.7
Manic-depressive (bipolar) illness
13,189
29.8
War
13,134
32.9
Violence
12,955
36.0
Schizophrenia
12,542
39.0
Iron deficiency anemia
12,511
42.0
Note: DALYs=disability-adjusted life-years.
Two Major Traditions
in Psychiatry
Biomedical
Psychodynamic
Purposes of Diagnosis
in Psychiatry
Simplify
our thinking
Facilitate communication
Predict outcome
Decide on treatment
Aid search for etiology
Overview DSM
Childhood
Mood
Disorders
Disorders
Anxiety Disorders
Delirium,
Somatoform
Dementia
Disorders
Substance Induced
Personality
Disorders
Disorders
Schizophrenia and
Other Psychotic
Disorders
Overview DSM
Factitious
Eating
Disorders
Disorders
Sleep Disorders
Dissociative
Impulse-Control
Disorders
Disorders
Sexual and Gender Adjustment
Identity Disorders
Disorders
MENTAL STATUS EXAM
APPEARANCE
provides many clues to
patient’s mental state. Observe carefully.
Look at type and condition of clothing,
hygiene, apparent health, any mannerisms,
unusual actions, signs of intoxication or
withdrawal, signs of hallucinating.
PSYCHOMOTOR ACTIVITY: may be
agitated, normal, slowed and provides clues
to overall mental state.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM
ATTITUDE:
How the patient relates to
the examiner provides important clues.
Attitude may be summarized in one or
several words such as guarded,
suspicious, hostile, friendly,
ingratiating, manipulative, seductive,
cooperative, threatening,
flattering…reflecting much about the
patient’s ability to function and relate.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
SPEECH
Evaluate
tone, rate and volume of
speech.
Look for the rapid, pressured speech
of mania, the slowed speech of the
profoundly depressed person. Other
important variations from normal are
seen in anxiety and in intoxicated
states.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
MOOD AND AFFECT
Mood
is the prevailing subjective
emotional state, primarily how the
patient says he/she feels.
Affect is how the mood is
expressed and refers primarily to
the observable facial expression.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
DESCRIPTION OF MOOD
EUTHYMIC
HAPPY
SAD
EUPHORIC
IRRITABLE
ELATED
ANXIOUS
ANGRY
Often,
the most
clear and colorful
means of
describing mood
is to use the
patient’s own
words
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
ASSESSING AFFECT
Look for how appropriate the affect is and
whether it corresponds to the topic under
discussion. A full range of emotional expression
is normal. Note any incongruent between affect
and topic at hand. Look for lability of affect.
Blunted or flat affect is static regardless of topic at
hand.
In mood disorders the affect is confined to either
mania or depression and does not have full
range.
ASSESSMENT OF
SUICIDE
The
interviewer must develop an
estimate of suicide risk with each
patient by determining:
Extent of current suicidality
Presence of risk factors for suicide
Presence of psychiatric diagnosis
associated with risk for suicide
SUICIDALITY AT TIME
OF INTERVIEW
Passive
wish to die versus wanting
to kill self
Extent of specific plan
Does the person have the means?
How lethal is the plan?
Suicide note
Arrangements made?
ASSESS FOR SUICIDE
RISK FACTORS
History
of violence
Family history of suicide
History of prior attempts
Male
Single, divorced or separated
History of certain types of trauma
IS PSYCHIATRIC DISORDER
PRESENT THAT IS ASSOCIATED
WITH SUICIDE?
MOOD
DISORDER
SCHIZOPHRENIA
PANIC DISORDER
SUBSTANCE ABUSE OR
DEPENDENCE
SOME TYPES OF PERSONALITY
DISORDERS
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
THOUGHT PRODUCTION
A patient’s thinking is mostly assessed by observing
their verbal communication and judging their level
of interest in the world around them.
Poverty of thought is seen in schizophrenia and
depression.
Racing thoughts or “flights of ideas” are seen in
mania.
Thought blocking is an abrupt cessation of
conversation, after which the person is unable to
recall the topic.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
THOUGHT PROCESS
THE
MANNER IN WHICH
THOUGHTS ARE ASSOCIATED,
THE TRAIN OF THOUGHT
Normal is goal-directed with
coherence
Abnormal may manifest in
different ways
DISORDERS OF
THOUGHT PROCESS
CIRCUMSTANTIALITY
TANGENTIALITY
LOOSE
ASSOCIATIONS
VERBIGERATION
WORD SALAD
NEOLOGISMS
CLANG ASSOCIATIONS
ECHOLALIA
DISORDERS OF THOUGHT
CONTENT: PREOCCUPATION
PHOBIA:
irrational fear or dread,
results in avoidance behaviors and
anxiety
OBSESSION: disturbing, intrusive
thought
COMPULSION: irresistible urge to
perform usually meaningless activity,
often is ritualistic
DISORDER OF THOUGHT
CONTENT: DELUSIONS
DELUSION
= a fixed, false belief
that does not have basis in reality,
not a part of religion or culture.
The patient holding a delusion
cannot be talked out of it, even
with evidence to the contrary.
DELUSIONS
Mood
congruent delusions: themes are
consistent with depression, such as
centered around sin, nihilism, poverty,
decay or consistent with mania, such as
delusions about holding special powers
Contrast these with MOOD
INCONGRUENT DELUSIONS….
DELUSIONS THAT ARE
NOT MOOD CONGRUENT
Delusions
of reference: outside events
refer to the self
Delusions of control: outside forces are
controlling oneself in some way
Schneider’s first-rank symptoms of
schizophrenia -- may also occur in
psychotic mood disorders and delirium
SCHNEIDERIAN FIRST
RANK SYMPTOMS
Thought
insertion
Thought withdrawal
Thought broadcasting
Passivity feelings
Delusional perception
Auditory hallucinations
PERCEPTUAL DISTURBANCE
Illusions
are misperceptions of
existing stimuli
Hallucinations occur in the absence
of sensory stimuli
Can involve any of the five senses
but the type can provide clues as to
diagnosis -- hallucinations are a
symptom only
HALLUCINATIONS
AUDITORY:
seen in psychotic disorders
such as schizophrenia, mania, psychotic
depression
VISUAL: seen in medical, toxic disorders
TACTILE: substance-withdrawal
delirium
OLEFACTORY AND GUSTATORY: seen
as prodrome of complex partial seizure
COGNITIVE
FUNCTIONING
Level
of consciousness varies from
lethargy to various levels of
alertness
Orientation -- check for this to
person, place, time, situation
Concentration/attention -- test by
serial 7’s or serial 3’s
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
MEMORY ASSESSMENT
SIMPLE MEMORY TESTS CAN ASSESS
RETROGRADE AND ANTEROGRADE MEMORY
FUNCTION
Remote memory is for events in the distant past,
often the last memory system affected in dementia
Recent memory is for the last few months
Immediate recall requires attention more than
memory
Short-term memory is tested with remembering
three objects immediately and after 5 minutes
MENTAL STATUS EXAM
Make
a estimate of the patient’s level of
intelligence
Insight -- how aware is the person of
their situation
Judgment -- how able is the person to
stay out of harm, provide for self,
handle finances
History and interview should provide
ample opportunity to assess
CONDUCT OF THE MENTAL
STATUS EXAMINATION
In
open-ended, unstructured interviewing,
assess appearance, orientation, level of
consciousness, behavior, attitude, speech,
thought form and content, affect.
Direct, focused questioning and exploration
will be required to assess mood, suicidal and
homicidal ideation, perceptual disturbance,
cognitive functioning.