Transcript Chapter 12
Chapter 12:
Mood Disorders:
Depression, Bipolar, and
Adjustment Disorders
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Mood Disorders
Group of psychiatric illnesses in which the
predominant symptom is the dysregulation of
mood or emotion
Occur throughout the life span
Sometimes fatal, with a high risk of suicide
World’s leading cause of disease burden or
years lost to disability
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Mood Disorders: Biologic
Theories
Altered neurotransmission
Depression: Underactivity of neurotransmission
Mania: Overactivity of neurotransmission
Kindling: Neurotransmission altered by stress
Neuroendocrine dysregulation (depression)
Hyperactivity of HPA axis
Disturbed chronobiology
Genetic transmission
First-degree relatives of people with mood
disorders at greater risk
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Mood Disorders:
Ethologic Factors
Evolutionary psychobiology/biology
Mood disorders serve a purpose.
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Mood Disorders:
Psychosocial Factors
Psychoanalytic theory
Cognitive
Depression-related perceived lack of control over events
Life events and stress
Depression related to negative processing of thoughts
Learned helplessness
Depression related to loss
Mania as a defense against depression
Life events cause stress, leading to mood disorders
Personality
Personality characteristics predispose one to mood disorders
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Mood Disorders:
Epidemiology
19.3% of general population
Depression occurs in 21.3% of women
and 12.7% of men
Bipolar onset: Mid- to late 20s
Depression onset: Mid 30s
Depression frequency greater in Caucasians,
Hispanics, and lower socioeconomic groups
Bipolar frequency greater in higher
socioeconomic groups
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Emotional Symptoms of
Depression
Anhedonia
Depressed mood
Irritability
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Cognitive Symptoms of
Depression
Diminished ability to think, concentrate, make
decisions
Preoccupation with death
Excessive focus on worthlessness and guilt
Sometimes delusional
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Behavioral Symptoms of
Depression
Weight loss or gain
Change in appetite
Insomnia or hypersomnia
Psychomotor retardation or agitation
Fatigue
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Social Symptoms of Depression
Withdrawal from family and social interactions
Work problems: organizing, initiating,
completing
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Dysthymia
Chronic, low-level
depression
Poor appetite or
overeating
Insomnia or
hypersomnia
Low energy/fatigue
Low self-esteem
Negative thinking/guilt
Poor concentration/
decision making
Hopelessness
Irritability/anger
Anhedonia/withdrawal
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Emotional Symptoms of Mania
Persistently elevated, expansive mood or
irritable mood
Mood swings: Euphoria anger
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Cognitive Symptoms of Mania
Inflated self-esteem
Grandiosity
Thought flow disturbance
Racing thoughts
Flight of ideas
Impaired judgment
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Behavioral Symptoms of Mania
Increased talkativeness
Increased goal-directed behavior
Agitation
Excessive involvement in activities
Decreased need for rest/sleep
Too busy to eat
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Social Symptoms of Mania
Increased sociability
Intrusive
Interrupts
Disruptive
Highly directive
Loud
Sometimes witty
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Perceptual Symptoms of Mania
Distractible
Hallucinations
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Hypomania
Elevated mood without interference with
social or occupational functioning
Happy, congenial
Easy conversation
Humorous
Productive
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Co-occurring Mood
and Medical Disorders
Mood disorder
As stress response to illness
As physiologic response to pathology
As physiologic response to medication
Exacerbated by medical pathology
Medical disorder
May develop in client with mood disorder
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Mood Disorders:
Assessment
Mental Status
Mood
Affect
Temperament
Emotion
Emotional reactivity
Emotional regulation
Range of affect
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Mood Disorders:
Assessment, cont’d.
Physiologic Disturbances
Appetite
Vital signs
Hydration
Sleep pattern changes
Activity level
Fatigue
Constipation
Weight loss
Sex drive
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Mood Disorders:
Interventions
Family interventions
Group interventions
Psychotherapy
Cognitive
Behavioral
Interpersonal
Psychodynamic
Self-management
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Psychopharmacology
Antidepressants
SSRIs
TCAs
MAOIs
Antipsychotics
Anxiolytics
Sedative-hypnotics
Mood stabilizers
Lithium
Carbamazepine
Valproate
Lamotrigine
Gabapentin
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Biologic Interventions
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Vagal nerve stimulation
Phototherapy
Alternative and complementary therapy
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Adjustment Disorders
Problematic responses to life events
Affecting otherwise mentally healthy people
Transient episodes of dysfunction in response
to specific stressors
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Problematic Responses
Behaviors, feelings, or thoughts that interfere
with functioning or sense of well-being
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Precipitating Events
Divorce
Relocation
Adolescence
Psychologically challenging events
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Subtypes
Adjustment Disorder with:
Depressed mood
Anxiety
Mixed anxiety and depressed mood
Disturbance of conduct
Mixed disturbance of emotions and conduct
Unspecified
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Duration
Acute: symptoms last 6 months or less
Chronic: symptoms persist for 6 months or
more
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Adjustment Disorders:
Etiology
Crisis and stress models
Precipitating factors
Loss
Developmental influences
Cultural, social, psychologic influences
Contributions of nursing research
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Crisis Model
Inability to use former methods or create new
methods in response to a situation
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Loss
Life change often involves loss
Involves overlapping stages
Recognition
Adjustment
Resolution
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Adjustment Disorders:
Assessment
Assess for precipitating stressors
Symptoms:
Sensory-perceptual
Thought disturbances
Feeling disturbances
Behavioral and relational disturbances
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Mood and Adjustment Disorders:
Outcome Identification
Discuss plans for goal achievement.
Analyze coping resources/plans for using
resources.
Describe stressors.
Describe effective ways of managing stress in
past.
Evaluate planned life changes in advance or
potential sources of stress.
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Mood and Adjustment Disorders:
Nursing Interventions
Assess risk of suicide.
Help identify coping strategies.
Support activities to increase socialization.
Help to name thoughts, feelings, concerns.
Teach about disorder.
Engage in therapeutic alliance.
Support progress toward goals.
Collaborate with treatment team.
Help identify symptoms of anxiety.
Help recall successes.
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Additional Treatment Modalities
Medications
Adjunctive
Supportive
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