Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
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Transcript Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Chapter 4: Generalized
Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Karen Rowa
Heather K. Hood
Martin M. Antony
Diagnosis: Central Features
Excessive worry occurring about a number of
different topics
Symptoms of physiological or psychological
hyperarousal
DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria for
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Excessive anxiety and worry
More days than not for at least 6 months; multiple topics
Difficult to control
Anxiety and worry are associated with ≥ 3 of following:
Restlessness or feeling keyed up or on edge
Being easily fatigued
Difficulty concentrating or mind going blank
Irritability
Muscle tension
Sleep disturbance
Diagnosis: Comborbidity
Worry is a common feature of mood disorders
~80% of people with GAD also had a comorbid mood
disorder
GAD cannot be diagnosed if the worry occurs exclusively
during a mood disorder, PTSD, a psychotic disorder, or
PDD
GAD is highly comorbid with:
Panic disorder with or without agoraphobia (41%), social
phobia (42%)
Diagnosis: Assessment
Comprehensive assessment of GAD should cover:
Beliefs about worry, intolerance of uncertainty, anxiety,
symptoms of hyperarousal, comorbid conditions, goals,
areas of behavioral inactivation, and emotional avoidance
Self-report measures of GAD can help assess for
presence of diagnostic criteria, severity of worry,
and content of worry topics
Symptoms: Worry
GAD worries are indistinguishable in content from
“normal” worries
GAD worries differ from normal worries in that:
Increased frequency and intensity
Perceived inability to control the worry
Distinguishable from cognitions seen in social
anxiety disorder and panic disorder
More future-oriented
Symptoms: Avoidance and
Checking
Many individuals with GAD engage in behaviors
intended to avoid or reduce distress or anxiety
Individuals with GAD endorse similar degrees of
checking behavior compared to individuals with
OCD
Checking in GAD is predominantly interpersonal (e.g.,
seeking reassurance from others)
Symptoms: Functioning
Some individuals with GAD report severe disability
across domains
Particularly romantic relationships
Significantly lower overall quality of life and life
satisfaction in wider range of areas
Self-esteem, work, health, and social relationships
Prognosis
Chronic and relapsing with some fluctuation in course
Probability of full remission at some point over 5 years is ~38%
Probability of partial remission is ~47%
Predictors of a negative clinical course
Comorbid Axis I disorders
Personality disorders
Decreased life satisfaction
Difficult family relationships
GAD onset is equally likely to be before or after a
major depressive episode, indicating that GAD is not
simply a secondary condition
Epidemiology
Current point prevalence = ~1.6%, lifestime prevalence = ~5%
Median point prevalence in primary care settings is 5.8%:
More likely to seek medical attention than individuals with other
disorders
Median age of onset = ~31 years old
Earlier onset associated with higher symptom severity, comorbidity, and
vulnerability to other disorders
Women almost twice as likely to meet diagnostic criteria for GAD
Men have higher rates of comorbid alcohol and substance use
Women have higher rates of comorbid mood and anxiety disorders, and
greater degree of disability
Different cultural groups may demonstrate differences in both the
content of worries and focus of GAD symptoms
Etiology: Problem-Solving Ability
Worrying conceptualized as an attempt to anticipate or
solve real-life problems (i.e., constructive problemfocused coping)
In GAD, the worry process breaks down and becomes
pathological
Individuals with chronic worry do not have deficits in
problem-solving ability. They have…
Less confidence about their problem-solving abilities
A negative problem orientation
Negative problem orientation and intolerance of
uncertainty predicts worry and symptom severity
Etiology- Probability Overestimation
and Catastrophizing
People with GAD exhibit cognitive errors of:
Probability overestimation: Thinking a feared consequence
is more likely to occur than it really is
Catastrophizing: Assuming that an outcome will be much less
manageable than it actually is
Estimates of the cost of one’s worry (i.e., negative
consequences of worrying) correlate with worry
severity
Also catastrophize about positive aspects of their lives
and hypothetical situations
Etiology- Information-Processing
Theories
Greater attention to threatening stimuli,
preferentially encode them, interpret ambiguous
stimuli as threatening, and memory biases for
threatening events
Attentional biases include selective attention
toward, difficulty disengaging from, and attentional
avoidance of threatening stimuli
Attentional bias remains when stimuli are masked;
processing of threat cues may not be at a conscious level
Treatment modifies bias, for example, color-naming
interference is ameliorated by CBT
Etiology: Avoidance Theories
Worry is cognitive avoidance, similar to behavioral
avoidance
Verbal worry distracts from full experience of fear (e.g., feared
imagery, sensations of arousal)
Reduction in distress and arousal in the short term
Worry is negatively reinforced
Instruction to worry in response to an anxiety-
provoking trigger increases threat duration and
decreases perceived control
Opposite effect of imaginal processing or relaxation/distraction
Etiology: Intolerance of
Uncertainty Theory
Tendency to react negatively to uncertain or
ambiguous situations
Sometimes prefer a negative outcome to an uncertain
one
Causes people to feel less capable of effectively solving
problems
Leads to pathological worry instead of problem solving
Intolerance of uncertainty correlated with worry in
GAD and controls
In CBT for GAD, changes in intolerance of uncertainty
preceded changes in time spent worrying
Etiology: Metacognitive Model of
GAD
Metacognition: Thinking about one’s thought
processes
Type 1 worry: Worry triggered by everyday events
(e.g., worries about health, safety, or relationships).
Type 2 worry: Worry about worry
Positive beliefs: Belief that worry is useful
Negative beliefs: Belief that worry is uncontrollable or
dangerous
GAD individuals hold both positive and negative beliefs
More metaworry than individuals with social phobia, panic
disorder, depression, and OCD
Etiology: Metacognitive Model
Negative beliefs
Clusters: Worry disrupts performance, worry
exaggerates the problem, and worry causes
emotional distress
Associated with pathological worry, even when
other kinds of worry and anxiety are controlled
Positive beliefs
Clusters: Worry helps motivation and worry helps
analytical thinking
Uniquely predict pathological worry above and
beyond negative beliefs
Etiology: Emotional Regulation
Model
GAD individuals find it difficult to regulate
emotional experience
Difficulty naming and understanding emotions, difficulty
accepting emotional experience, difficulty regulating
negative emotions
Heightened intensity of emotion strong predictor of
GAD
Differentiates GAD from social anxiety and major
depressive disorder
Etiology: Emotional Regulation
Model
Negative mood states may prevent GAD
individuals from using “stop rules” to know when to
stop worrying
Example of stop rule: “I will think of as many
possible responses as I can to the situation”
When the “as many as I can” is paired with negative
mood, person feels she has not generated as many
responses as possible after reasonable effort, leading to
perseveration
Biological Etiology: GABA Theory
GABA plays inhibitory role in the brain, aiding
inhibition of subcortical circuits stimulated by threat
GABA receptors dense in frontal cortex, hippocampus,
and amygdala
GAD individuals have decreased GABA activity
and less inhibition of these threat-activated
structures
Also, reduced benzodiazepine receptor sensitivity:
important because binding of a benzodiazepine receptor
facilitates GABA binding
Benzodiazepines effective treatment for GAD
Biological Etiology:
Neuroanatomical
Larger amygdala and superior temporal gyrus
volumes, hypometabolisim in the basal ganglia,
and hypermetabolism in the prefrontal cortex
Disrupted connectivity of the amygdala with
cortical and subcortical regions important for
anticipatory anxiety and emotional processing
Activation in the prefrontal cortex regulates activation in
subcortical structures
Problems in circuit may lead to GAD emotional
processing deficits
Biological Etiology- Other
Neurotransmitters Hormones
Neuroephrine (NE): No differences between clinical and
control groups found on baseline levels even though
selective NE reuptake inhibitors are effective treatment
Serotonin (5-HT): Low levels of serotonin and serotonin
receptor dysfunction linked with increased anxiety
Cholecystokinin (CCK): Linked to panic attacks
sometimes seen in GAD. CCK agonist induces panic
attacks in ~71% of participants with GAD, ~14% of control
participants
Cortisol: Levels significantly reduced following SSRI
treatment for GAD, and reduced cortisol associated with
reduced anxiety
Biological Etiology: Physiological
Signs
Chronic worry associated with reduced autonomic
variability during stressful tasks
Lower heart rate variability and decreased
parasympathetic activity during periods of worry and rest
Heart rate variability is associated with symptom severity
in GAD, but not in other anxiety disorders
Autonomic rigidity leads to less adaptive
behavioral and emotional responses to stressful
events
Risk Factors: Stress and Family
Environment
Stressful life events increase risk of onset and
relapse
Men with more than three stressful life events
have 8x greater rate of GAD
GAD individuals experience more unpleasant,
negative, and rejecting family environments with
parent-child boundary problems
Perceived parental alienation and rejection
correlated with GAD symptoms in adolescents
Treatments: CBT
Most commonly used components
Psychoeducation
Relaxation training
Monitoring of cues and triggers for worry
Imaginal exposure
In vivo exposure
Cognitive restructuring
Treatments: CBT Efficacy
CBT superior to wait-list controls and nonspecific
alternative treatments
Effective for symptoms of worry, anxiety, and depression
CBT and pharmacotherapy’s effect sizes are
similar
CBT has advantage in long-term maintenance of
treatment gains, patient acceptability, and tolerability
CBT is also useful in helping individuals discontinue
benzodiazepine medication
Treatments: Recent Advances
in CBT
CBT variants targeting intolerance of uncertainty
and related cognitions
Effective in group and individual formats
Lasting improvements in GAD symptoms
Gains maintained longer than with relaxation therapy
CBT therapy derived from Wells’s metacognitive
model
Lasting improvements in GAD symptoms
Greater reductions than CBT targeting tolerance of
uncertainty
Treatments: Recent Advances
in CBT
CBT augmented with other treatment strategies
(e.g., motivational interviewing) may reduce
treatment resistance and enhance efficacy
Unclear which components of CBT are most useful
and whether new variants are reliably better than
standard CBT
Large percentages of clients continue to experience
significant symptoms at posttreatment and follow-up.
Treatments: Pharmacological
Response of GAD to placebo is particularly high (> 40%)
More difficult to demonstrate significantly better effects for specific
medications
Serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are the first-line
therapy for GAD
CBT and pharmacotherapy similarly effective
Benzodiazepines reduce both somatic and cognitive
symptoms
Potential tolerance, dependence, and withdrawal symptoms
Only recommended for short-term treatment (i.e., less than 4 weeks),
as an adjunct to antidepressant medication, or for severe, treatmentresistant GAD symptoms
Treatments- Alternative
Pharmacological Treatments
Buspirone: Partial agonist of presynaptic serotonin receptors
Moderate effect size
Less well tolerated in clinical practice and less effective than SSRI treatments
Selective Neuroepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors (SNRIs)
Venlafaxine has moderate effect size (similar effects to paroxetine)
Demonstrated effectiveness over longer treatment trials
Concerns about its safety in overdose and cardiac implications
Pregabalin: Analogue of the neurotransmitter GABA
Small to moderate effect sizes (not approved for GAD in United States)
Greater efficacy for treating psychological distress relative to somatic symptoms
Second Generation Antipsychotics
Not effective as augmentation in treatment refractory GAD
Quetiapine effective as monotherapy. Significant side effects limit clinical utility