Psych Ch. 5 Notes
Psych Ch. 5 Notes
Psych Ch. 5 Notes
OVERVIEW
o Anxiety disorders
Generalized anxiety disorder
Panic disorder and agoraphobia
Specific phobias
Social anxiety disorder
Separation anxiety disorder
Selective mutism
o Trauma and stressor related disorders
PTSD
o Obsessive compulsive and related disorders
OCD
Body dysmorphic disorder
FEAR VS ANXIETY
o Fear
Immediate, present oriented
sympathetic nervous system activation
o Anxiety
Apprehensive, future oriented
Somatic symptoms: muscle tension, restlessness, elevated heart rate
o Panic attacks
Specifier- clarifies something about a diagnosis
Abrupt experience of acute fear
Physical symptoms: heart palpitations, chest pain, dizziness, sweating,
chills or heat sensations etc
Cognitive symptoms: fear of losing control, dying, or going crazy
Types: cued and uncued
o Biological contributions
Hyper-sensitive limbic system/ fear response
Behavioral inhibition system (BIS)
o Brainstem activates in face of unexpected events; signals
from the cortex about perceived danger
Fight/flight system (FFS)
Depleted GABA—increased sensitivity to anxiety or a fear
response
o Psychological contributions
Freud- anxiety=psychic reaction to danger
Behaviorists- learned associations (cc/oc)
Modern examples (multiple factors)
Out of control feeling
Anxiety sensitivity (fearful response to internal anxiety cues)
Conditioning
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
o Excessive anxiety and worry occurring more days than not for at least 6 months
o Difficulty controlling the worry
o Physical sxs(symptoms); muscle aches and pains
o Distress/impairment
o Rule out substance use and medical causes
o EPIDEMIOLOGY
5.7% lifetime prevalence (over the lifetime who will meet the criteria for
the disorder)
More women diagnosed than men
More specifically in a western context
Onset—early adulthood
Chronic impairment
o CAUSES
Inherited tendency to become anxious
Threat sensitivity
Less responsiveness- “autonomic restrictions”
Frontal lobe activation- higher thinking of the worry truly immerses you in
the fear and helps to distance you from parts of the phobia making it feel
more real
o TREATMENT
Pharmacological—benzodiazepines
Fast acting, but lead to minor cog / motor impairment
Little research on long term use
Risk for dependence
Psychological—CBT
Exposure to worry process
Coping tools
Similar benefits to drugs; sustained results
Long term effects attributed to this kind of treatment
Specific Phobias
o Prevalence- 8.7% (1 yr); 12.5% (lifetime)
o Demographics- higher rates in women
4:1 female to male
Adolescents- 15.8%
o Onset- usually childhood (except situational—mid 20s)
o DIAGNOSTIC
Marked fear in response to specific situation / event
Avoidance or endurance with extreme distress; impairment
Persistent (~6 months)
Disproportionate to situation
Types—blood-injection-injury (needles, getting blood drawn, seeing
blood; usually see a drop in autonomic responses leads to fainting);
animal (afraid of a dog or snake); natural environment (thunderstorms);
situational (being afraid of an elevator)
Cultural variants: pa-leng (fear of cold or heat loss) / frigo-phobia
(Chinese culture)
o CAUSES (chart in text book)
Generalized biological vulnerability
Specific psychological vulnerability
Generalized psychological vulnerability
Stress due to life events
o TREATMENTS
Psychological interventions
Exposure
o Gradual
o Structured
Less-often: relaxation
Separation anxiety disorder- something will happen that I will not see my mother again or
I will not see my child again; being really anxious and texting parent, if parent doesn’t
text back then scared that they have died
Social anxiety disorder
o Prevalence- 6.8% (year); 12.1% (life)
o Demographics
1:1 female to male
o Onset- usually adolescents
o Diagnosis
Extreme concern about negative valuation
Distress; interference; avoidance
Subtype: performance only
o TREATMENT
Psychological
Challenge maladaptive cognitions about consequences to social
judgement
Exposure (social mishaps; eliminate safety behaviors)
Rehearsal / role-play
Medication
Beta blockers (lower hr/bp- not great results)
SSRI (Paxil, zoloft) some efficacy
D- cycloserine (may enhance exposure treatment via faster
extinction)
Selective mutism
o Rare childhood disorder characterized by a lack of speech
o 1+ month; not first month of school
o Intensive treatment, analog settings strong results
PTSD
o Prevalence- 3.5% (year); 6.8% (life)
o Most people who undergo traumatic events do NOT develop PTSD
o Type of trauma matters
o Proximity to trauma matters
o DIAGNOSIS- with or without dissociative symptoms, at least one month
Exposure to actual / threatened death, serious injury or sexual violence
what counts as exposure?
o Direct experience
o Learning of occurrence
o Witnessing
o Repeated exposure to details (not media)
Reexperiencing symptoms: memories, dreams, dissociative flashbacks,
physiological reactions to reminders/triggers
Avoidance
Negative beliefs, emotions, detachment, anhedonia
Hypervigilance, startle
o TREATMENTS
Cognitive-behavioral treatment
Imaginal exposure to memories of traumatic event
Increase positive coping skills
Increased social support
Highly effective
SSRIs can be helpful to relived heightened anxiety
D-cycloserine (DCS) results mixed
PD / Agoraphobia
o Prevalence 2.7% (1yr); 4.6% (lifetime)
o Onset- 20-24 (median)
o Demographics- highest among White Americans
2:1 Female to male
o DIAGNOSIS PD
Recurrent / unexpected PAs
Persistent worry for at least one month
Worry focused on having PA or consequences
Other clinical features
Sudden / acute rush of fear
Intense physiological symptoms
Catastrophic conditions
Interoceptive avoidance
o AGOROPHOBIA
Marked by fear / anxiety in 2 or more settings
Public transportation, open / enclosed spaces, being outside the
home alone
Avoidance or endurance with distress
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
1. Do you think that Joe’s panic attacks began because the first may have been linked to
something he experienced when he was in Vietnam? Knowing from later discussion that
this is true, why was the plane ride the inciting incident?
2. Joe’s attacks seem to be unrelated to me, first in a confined space, then in public. Is there
a link between them? How was the psychologist able to diagnose him so easily and
quickly?
3. Should Joe come back for follow up later in his life? Would you expect this to be a
persistent problem for him and possibly in new situations?
Psych Ch. Notes Continued
OCD
o Prevalence 1% (year); 1.6% to 2.3% (life)
o Female = male
o Onset- childhood
o DIAGNOSIS
Obsessions- thoughts, images, or urges; intrusive and nonsensical; expect
reality testing will be on track; attempts to resist or eliminate
Compulsions- thoughts or actions provide relief from obsessive
thoughts; presence of obsessions, compulsions or both; must be time
consuming
Types of obsessions-compulsion
Symmetry- just right, most common, think they must do things
repeatedly until just right; results in ordering, repetition
Forbidden thought or behavior- obsession—anxiety; urge to harm;
fear of offending god; compulsion—checking, avoidance, seeking
reassurance
Contamination- obsession with germs and contaminants;
compulsion with washing, gloves and masks
Hoarding- obsession with a fear of throwing things away;
compulsion with saving objects of little value
o TREATMENT
Psychological
Exposure and response/ritual prevention (ERP)
Exposure to cues that would trigger obsessions prevent
compensatory compulsions
Medications
SSRIs ~50-60% effective; high relapse after drug is discontinued
o RELATED DISORDERS
Body dysmorphic disorder
Preoccupation with one or more physical defect/flaw; repetitive
behaviors
Treatments SSRIs; ERP
Hoarding disorder
Problem areas
o Accumulation
o Discarding
o Disordered habituation
Treatment: CBT (promising—limited data)
Trichotillomania- urge to pull body hair
Excoriation- urge to pick skin
Treatment for both is HRT
o Awareness training- when, where, how often, details of
behavior
o Competing response- incompatible, always available,
inconspicuous
Long enough for urge to pass
Help get through urge not avoid it
Exposure therapy
o Creating a fear and avoidance hierarchy- FAH
o Order low-level and high-level scenarios
Treating distorted cognitions
o Identify maladaptive cognitions- patterns of thinking that
are not helpful to ones goals
o Recognize the patterns of thoughts
o Try to relieve the spiral of thoughts by objectively and
logically labeling it