AP_Chapter_16_psychological_disorders[1][1]
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Transcript AP_Chapter_16_psychological_disorders[1][1]
Psychological Disorders
CHAPTER 16
I. General Information
A. Definitions
a. Atypical: not typical
b. Disturbing: to trouble emotionally or
mentally
c. Maladaptive: inadequate adaptation
d. Unjustifiable: Impossible to excuse,
pardon, or justify
B. DSM-IV
Axis I: Is a Clinical Syndrome present? (page 645)
Axis II: Is a Personality Disorder or Mental Retardation
present?
Axis III: Is a General Medical Condition, such as
diabetes, hypertension, or arthritis, also present?
Axis IV: Are Psychosocial or Environmental Problems,
such as school or housing issues, also present?
Axis V: What is the Global Assessment of this person’s
functioning?
II. Anxiety Disorders
A. Panic Disorders
1. Characteristics: person experiences
sudden episodes (usually lasting a few
minutes) of intense dread/fear
2. Non-specific: No particular trigger
B. Phobia Disorders
1. Phobia: irrational fear that disrupts
behavior.
2. Specific: only the phobia triggers
response
C. Generalized Anxiety
1. Generalized Anxiety disorder: person
is continually tense, apprehensive, and in
a state of autonomic nervous system
arousal
2. Very few people seek treatment
because they think it is just a part of their
personality
D. Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder
1. Obsession: repetitive thoughts
2. Compulsions: repetitive behaviors
3. OCD: anxiety disorder characterized
by unwanted repetitive thoughts &/or
actions
4. Causes: anxiety, stress, genetic
factors
(autism? Link in strep throat?)
E. Stress Disorders
1. PTSD: characterized by haunting
memories, nightmares, social withdrawal,
jumpy anxiety, &/or insomnia that lingers
for four weeks or more after a traumatic
experience
2. Acute Stress Disorder: development of
severe anxiety, dissociative, and other
symptoms that occurs within one month
after exposure to an extreme traumatic
stressor
III. Somatoform Disorders
A. Conversion Disorders
1. Definition: physical symptoms that
resemble those of a neurological disorder
develop. The symptoms are triggered by
mental factors such as conflicts or other
stresses.
2. US Naval Academy: entered with 20/20
vision, many leave with blurred vision.
B. Hypochondria
1. Definition: preoccupying fear of having
a serious illness
2. Causes: no known causes , but…
could be a form of OCD.
3. Faking it??? True hypochondriacs are
not faking it.
IV. Dissociative Disorders
A. Dissociative Amnesia (psychogenic)
Definition: person blocks out certain
information, usually associated with a
stressful or traumatic event, leaving him or
her unable to remember important personal
information.
B. Fugue
1. Definition: People with dissociative
fugue temporarily lose their sense of
personal identity and impulsively wander
or travel away from their homes or places
of work.
2. Cause: linked to severe stress, which
might be the result of traumatic events—
such as war, abuse, accidents, disasters
or extreme violence—that the person has
experienced or witnessed.
C. Dissociative Identity
1. Definition: two or more distinct identities that
alternately control the person’s behavior, with memory
impairment across the different personality states.
2. Roles: Each personality has its own voice and
mannerisms, and the original one typically denies any
awareness of the other(s)
3. Causes:
an innate ability to dissociate easily
repeated episodes of severe physical or sexual
abuse in childhood
V. Mood Disorders
A. Major Depression
1. Definition: two or more weeks of
significantly depressed moods, feelings
of worthlessness, and diminished interest
or pleasure in most activities.
B. Mania
1. Definition: mood disorder marked by a
hyperactive , wildly optimistic state.
C. Bipolar Disorder (manic
disorder)
1. Definition: person alternates between
the hopelessness and lethargy of
depression and the overexcited state of
mania.
2. Causes: possibly genetics or stress
VI. Schizophrenia
**Disorganized thoughts**
A. Types
1. Paranoid: delusions or hallucinations often
of persecution or grandiosity
2. Catatonic: Immobility, extreme negativism,
&/or parrotlike repeating of another’s speech or
movements
3. Disorganized: disorganized speech or
behavior, flat or inappropriate emotion
4. Undifferentiated or Residual: withdrawal
after delusions or hallucinations disappear
B. Perspectives on
Schizophrenia
1. Psychological: stress induced,
possible bad family circumstances.
2. Biological: Ventricles are larger (more
fluid, less brain tissue)
3. Multifactorial: Biological predisposition
and stressful situation triggers it.
MRI scans of 28-year-old male identical
twins showing the enlarged brain ventricles
in the twin with schizophrenia (right)
compared to his well brother (left).
VII. Personality Disorders
A. Antisocial: exhibits a lack of
conscience from wrongdoing, even
toward friends & family. (usually a man)
B. Borderline: switch moods
quickly/abruptly.
C. Dependent: Require others approval
for everything. Afraid of abandonment.
VIII.
Diathesis: Stress Model: explains all
disorders as the cause being a mixture of
biological predisposition and stress
induced.