Transcript Document

Anxiety Disorders
Diagnostic criteria and common
symptomologies
Diagnoses
• Panic Attack
• Agoraphobia
• Panic disorder without
Agoraphobia
• Panic disorder with
Agoraphobia
• Agoraphobia without
History of Panic Disorder
• Specific Phobia
• Social Phobia
• Obsessive-Compulsive
(OCD)
• Posttraumatic Stress
(PTSD)
• Acute Stress Disorder
• Generalized Anxiety
Disorder
• Anxiety disorder due to a
general medical condition
• Substance-Induced AD
• Anxiety Disorder NOS
Panic Attack
• Discrete period in which there is the sudden
onset of intense apprehension, fearfulness,
or terror, often associated with feelings of
impending doom. During these attacks,
symptoms such as shortness of breath,
palpitations, chest pain or discomfort,
choking or smothering sensations, and fear
of “going crazy” or losing control are
present.
Agoraphobia
• Anxiety about or avoidance of, places or situations
from which escape might be difficult (or
embarrassing) or in which help may not be
available in the event of having a Panic Attack or
panic-like symptoms. Fears typically involve
characteristic clusters of situations that include
being outside the home alone; being in a crowd or
standing in a line; being on a bridge; and traveling
in a bus, train, or automobile.
Specific Phobias
• Animal Type - fear is cued by
animals or insects and generally
has a childhood onset.
• Natural Environment Type fear is cued by objects in the
natural environment, such as
storms, heights, or water;
generally has a childhood onset.
• Blood-injection-injury Type fear is cued by seeing blood or
an injury or by receiving an
injection or other invasive
medical procedure; highly
familial and often characterized
by a strong vasovagal response.
• Situational Type - fear is cued
by a specific situation such as
public transportation, tunnels,
bridges, elevators, flying,
driving, or enclosed places; has
a bimodal age-at-onset
distribution, with one peak in
childhood and another peak in
the mid-20’s.
Social Phobia (Social Anxiety Disorder)
• Characterized by clinically significant
anxiety provoked by exposure to certain
types of social or performance situations,
often leading to avoidance behavior.
• Exposure to the social or performance
situation almost invariably provokes an
immediate anxiety response.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
• Characterized by obsessions (which cause
marked anxiety or distress) and/or by
compulsions (which serve to neutralize
anxiety).
• Obsessions or compulsions are severe
enough to be time consuming (i.e., they take
more than 1 hour a day) or cause marked
distress or significant impairment.
OCD (cont’d)
• Obsessions ~ persistent ideas, thoughts, impulses, or images that are
experienced as intrusive and inappropriate and that cause marked anxiety
or distress.
• Most common obsessions are repeated thoughts about contamination (e.g.,
becoming contaminated by shaking hands), repeated doubts (e.g.,
wondering whether one has performed some act such as having hurt
someone in a traffic accident or having left a door unlocked), a need to
have things in a particular order (e.g., intense distress when objects are
disordered or asymmetrical), aggressive or horrific impulses (e.g., to hurt
one’s child or to shout an obscenity in church), and sexual imagery (e.g., a
recurrent pornographic image.)
• * The thoughts, impulses, or images are not simply excessive worries
about real-life problems (e.g., concerns about current ongoing difficulties
in life, such as financial, work, or school problems) and are unlikely to be
related to a real-life problem.
OCD (cont’d)
• Compulsions ~ repetitive behaviors (e.g., hand-washing, ordering,
checking) or mental acts (e.g., praying, counting, repeating words
silently) the goal of which is to prevent or reduce anxiety or distress,
not to provide pleasure or gratification. In most cases, the person feels
driven to perform the compulsion to reduce the stress that accompanies
an obsession or to prevent some dreaded event or situation.
• At some point during the course of the disorder, the person has
recognized that the obsessions or compulsions are excessive or
unreasonable. Note : This does not apply to children.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD)
• PTSD is characterized by the re-experiencing of
an extremely traumatic event accompanied by
symptoms of increased arousal and by avoidance
of stimuli associated with the trauma.
PTSD (Diagnostic criteria)
•
1.
2.
The person has been exposed
to a traumatic event in which
both of the following were
present:
The person experienced,
witnessed, or was confronted
with an event or events that
involved actual or threatened
death or serious injury, or a
threat to the physical integrity
of self or others
The person’s response
involved intense fear,
helplessness, or horror.
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•
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The traumatic event is
persistently re-experienced in one
(or more) of the following ways:
Recurrent and intrusive
distressing recollections of the
event, including images,
thoughts, or perceptions.
Recurrent distressing dreams of
the event.
Acting or feeling as if the
traumatic event were recurring
(includes a sense of reliving the
experience, illusions,
hallucinations, and dissociative
flashback episodes, including
those that occur on awakening or
when intoxicated).
Acute Stress Disorder
• Acute Stress Disorder is characterized by
symptoms similar to those of Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder that occur immediately in
the aftermath of an extremely traumatic
event.
Acute Stress Disorder
•
•
•
First two criteria for PTSD is
applicable to acute stress disorder
as well.
Marked avoidance of stimuli that
arouse recollections of the trauma
(e.g., thoughts, feelings,
conversations, activities, places,
people).
Marked symptoms of anxiety or
increased arousal (e.g., difficulty
sleeping, irritability, poor
concentration, hyper-vigilance,
exaggerated startle response, motor
restlessness).
•
•
•
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•
•
Subjective sense of numbing,
detachment, or absence of
emotional responsiveness
Reduction in awareness of his or
her surroundings
Derealization
Depersonalization
Dissociative amnesia (e.g., inability
to recall an important aspect of the
trauma).
The event is relived in the same
manner as described for PTSD
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
• Generalized Anxiety Disorder is
characterized by at least 6 months of
persistent and excessive anxiety and worry.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
(Diagnostic Criteria)
•
•
•
Excessive anxiety and worry
(apprehensive expectation),
occurring more days than not for at
least 6 months, about a number of
events or activities (such as work
or school performance)
The person finds it difficult to
control the worry.
The anxiety and worry are
associated with three (or more) of
the following six symptoms (with
at least some symptoms present for
more days than not for the past 6
months).
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Restlessness
Being easily fatigued
Difficulty concentrating or mind
going blank
Irritability
Muscle tension
Sleep disturbance (difficulty
falling or staying asleep, or
restless unsatisfying sleep)