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When did eating disorders begin to be included in the DSM?
DSM-IV
Bulimia Nervousa
Binge eating and then compensating for the binge, one of the most common psychological disorders on university campuses
Purging techniques
Self-induced vomiting, laxatives, fasting, excessive exercise
Medical consequences of purging
Salivary gland enlarged, eroded dental enamel
Anorexia Nervousa
Nervous loss of appetite, proud of their diets and extraordinary control, intense fear of obesity and relentlessly pursue thinness
Medical consequences of Anorexia
Cessation of menstruation, dry skin, brittle hair and nails, intolerance to cold temperatures, cardiovascular problems
Binge-eating disorders (BED)
Individuals who experience marked behaviours from binge-eating but do not engage in extreme compensatory behaviours, greater likelihood to occur in men, often found in weight loss programs
Statistic on Bulimia
Only declared a distinct psychological disorder in the 1970s, 90-95% of individuals are women, age of onset is 16-19, chronic if untreated
Statistics on Anorexia
90-95% of individuals are women, onset can begin as early as 15, chronic, more resistant to treatment than bulimia
Causes of eating disorders- Social dimension
Looking good is more important than being healthy, competitive environments, standards are increasingly difficult, increases in dieting, attitudes
Causes of eating disorders: biological dimensions
Seems to have a genetic component, low serotonin activity, role of exercise
Causes of eating disorders: psychological dimensions
Diminished sense of personal control and confidence in their own abilities, display more perfectionist attitudes (control), difficulty tolerating any negative emotions
Treatment of eating disorders - drug treatment
Generally not as effective in anorexia, drugs used for mood and anxiety disorders are typically also effective in people with Bulimia
Treatment of eating disorders - psychosocial treatment
Developing a better self-identity, family interactions, communication, CBT, CBT-E
behavioural therapy, self-help procedures
The physiology of stress
Activating effect on our sympathetic nervous system, increase in activity, stress hormones, HPA axis
Stress - Sapolsky and Baboons
Subordinate animals, unlike dominant animals, continually secrete cortisol, probably because their lives are so stressful; most important factor in regulating stress seems to be a sense of control
Self efficacy (Bandura)
Sense of control and confidence that we can cope with stress or challenges
The immune system and physical disorders
Stress has a large influence on whether your exposure to colds results in a cold, humans under stress show clearly increased rates of infectious disease
AIDS/HIV & stress- factors that increase the progression of the disease
Depression, high levels of stress, low social support
AIDS/HIV & stress- treatment options
Medication, psychosocial stress-reduction, group therapy
Cancer & stress - treatment options
Mindfulness based stress reduction, problem solving skills, distraction, breathing techniques
Cardiovascular problems and stress
Hypertension (high blood pressure), coronary heart disease
Pain
The subjective experience
Pain behaviours
Overt manifestations of the pain experience
Suffering
Emotional component of pain
Gender differences in pain
Men and women experience different types of pain, endogenous opioid system is more powerful men
Chronic fatigue syndrome
Attributed to extremely stressful environments
Psychosocial treatment for physical disorders
Biofeedback, relaxation and meditation, stress-reduction program, drugs
Poly-substance use
Using multiple substances
Psychoactive substances
Alter mood, behaviour or both
Levels of involvement: use
Ingestion in moderate amounts that do not significantly interfere with functioning
Levels of involvement: Intoxication
Physiological reaction to ingested substances; impaired judgement, mood changes, lowered motor ability
Levels of involvement: disorder
Amount of substance ingested is a problem; dependence, tolerance, withdrawal
6 Categories of substances
Depressants, stimulants, opiates, hallucinogens, other, gambling disorder
Depressants
Behavioural sedation and relaxation, decrease central nervous system activity
Alcohol related disorders
Apparent stimulation is the initial effect, despite being a depressant; inhibitory parts of the brain are slowed; motor coordination is impaired, reaction time is slow, confusion and ability to make judgement is reduced, vision and hearing are affected
Withdrawal delirium
Condition that can produce frightening hallucinations and body tremors
Sedative, hypnotic, anxiolytic related disorders
Sedative (calming), Hypnotic (sleep inducing), Anxiolytic (anxiety reducing)
Stimulants
Elevate mood, make an individual more active and alert; most commonly consumed of all the psychoactive drugs
Amphetamines
Manufactured in labs, designer drug, stimulates the nervous system by enhancing the activity of norepinephrine and dopamine
Cocaine
Effects are short lived, paranoia is common, can be snorted or injected
Tobacco related disorders
No intoxication patterns, high withdrawal symptoms, stimulates the central nervous system
Caffeine-related disorders
Most common of the psychoactive substances, gentle stimulant, in small doses can elevate your mood and decrease fatigue
Opiates
Natural chemicals that come from the opium poppy that has a narcotic effect, reduces pain and euphoria, examples- morphine and oxycodone
Hallucinogens
Alter sensory perception and can produce delusions, paranoia and hallucinations
Cannabis
Heightened sensory experiences, medical uses, mood swings, talk of decriminalization
LSD
Sometimes referred to as acid, produced synthetically in labs
Inhalants
Highest use is in adolescents, these drugs are rapidly absorbed into the bloodstream, example - hairspray, spray paint, gas
Steroids
Derived from testosterone, have legit medical uses, can improve physical abilities
Gambling disorder
Ingestion of given substance and then unable to resist the urge to gamble
Causes of addiction: biological
Genetics, reward centers in the brain, sensitization
Causes of addiction: psychological
Positive and negative reinforcement
Causes of addiction: cognitive
Expectancy effect, cravings, conditioning
Causes of addiction: social
Exposure, parents behaviour and monitoring
Causes of addiction: cultural
Economic conditions, social pressures
Treatment for addiction: motivational enhancement therapy
Used to help individuals with substance use disorders increase their motivation to change and move toward a stage where they are ready to work on modifying their problematic substance use
Treatment for addiction: biological
Agonist substitution, hard reduction, averse treatment, medication
Treatment for addiction: psychosocial
Inpatient facilities, programs like AA, controlled use, component treatment, relapse prevention
Harm reduction
Recognize that the substance use occurs in society and seeks to minimize the harm associated with it, an example of this is safe injection sites
Somatic symptom disorder
Fear of having a serious illness or acquiring a serious illness
Possible causes of somatic symptom disorder
Developing a maladaptive understanding of health threats; triggering events
Treatments for somatic symptom disorder
Drugs (benzodiazepines, SSRIs); Psychotherapy (CBT, therapeutic reassurance)
Conversion Disorder (Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder)
Physical malfunctioning cause by psychological rather than organic causes
Possible causes of conversion disorder
The original threat is over but the paralysis continues, often associated with lower education and SES
Treatment for conversion disorder
Try to identify the source of the trauma or current stressor, use CBT
Dissociative amnesia
Two types: general and localised. Usually occurs in adulthood and continues on to old age
Dissoviatative identity disorder (DID)
Multiple personalities, changes in physiological markers, FMRI differences
Possible causes of dissociative identity disorder
Usually starts with an imaginary friend, strong history of child abuse, could be a sub-type of PTSD
Treatment of dissociative identity disorder
Difficult to treat, recruit help from loved ones, explore stressors, hypnosis
5 factor model of personality
Extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, openness to experience
Personality disorder clusters: Cluster A
Odd or eccentric cluster
Personality disorder clusters: cluster B
Dramatic, emotional, or erratic cluster
Personality disorder clusters: cluster C
Anxious or fearful cluster
Cluster A: Paranoid personality disorder
Excessive mistrust and suspicion of others without any justification
Causes: genes, early mistreatment or traumatic event, maladaptive schemas
Treatment: establishing a meaningful therapeutic alliance, cognitive therapy
Cluster A: schizoid personality disorder
Magnified preference for isolation, pattern of detachment from social relationships, limited range of emotions in interpersonal situations
Causes: genetics, abuse or neglect, overlap with Autism
Treatment: demonstrate value of social relationships, social skills training, role playing
Cluster A: Schizotypal personality disorder
Socially isolated, tend to be suspicious and have odd beliefs, magical thinking
Causes: genes (have similar genes as an individual with schizophrenia but are expressed differently), gene-environment interaction, abnormalities in semantic association abilities
Treatment: Antipsychotic medication, community treatment, social skills treatment, CBT
Cluster B: Antisocial personality disorder
History of failing to comply with social norms, tend to be irresponsible, impulsive and deceitful, called conduct disorder in children (Childhood onset- before 10, adolescents onset- after 10)
Causes: Genes, gene-environment interaction, cognitive deficits, difference in executive functioning , underarousal, fearlessness, cortical immaturity, family influence, role of stress
Treatment: CBT, parent training
Cleckly criteria
Superficial charm and good intelligence, absence of delusions and other signs of irrational thinking, absence of nervousness, unreliable, untruthfulness and insincerity, lack of remorse or shame, inadequately motivated antisocial behaviour, poor judgement and failure to learn by experience, pathological egocentricity and incapacity for love, general poverty in major affective reactions, specific loss of insight, unresponsiveness in general interpersonal relations, fantastic and uninviting behaviour, suicide is rarely carried out, sex life impersonal, trivial and poorly integrated, failure to follow any life plan
Underarousal hypothesis
Suggests that people with this disorder have abnormally low levels of cortical arousal
Fearlessness hypothesis
This is evidenced by lower galvanic skin response to things that evoke fear
Cluster B: borderline personality disorder
Moods and relationships are unstable, low self-image, high suicide risk, one of the most common personality disorders
Causes: genetic, comorbid with mood disorders, thought processes, influence of early trauma
Treatment: medication, DBT
Cluster B: histrionic personality disorder
Overly dramatic, exaggerated emotions, tend to be vain and self-centred, seek reassurance and approval constantly, higher diagnosis among women
Causes: relationship with antisocial personality disorder
Treatment: modify behaviours, therapy focused on interpersonal relationships
Cluster B: Narcissistic personality disorder
People who think highly of themselves and believe they deserve better treatment, exaggerated sense of self-importance and preoccupied with receiving attention
Causes: Socialization, failure of empathetic mirroring by parents, increasing prevalence in Western culture
Treatment: Therapy aimed at their grandiosity, hypersensitivity to evaluation, and lack of empathy, cognitive therapy aimed at replacing attitudes, coping strategies
Cluster C: avoidant personality disorder
Extremely sensitive to the opinions of others, low self-esteem, fear of rejection, limited relationships and very dependent on those they do have relationships with
Causes: predisposed personality characteristics, rejection by parents, childhood experiences, social anxiety, behavioural inhibition
Treatment: behavioural intervention techniques, social skills training, systematic desensitization, behavioural rehearsal
Cluster C: dependent personality disorder
Interpersonal dependent behaviour motivated by anxiety, sometimes agree with others in order to not be rejected even if they have another opinion
Causes: socialization, disruptions in childhood, genetic influences
Treatment: therapy to increase confidence in patients ability to be independent
Cluster C: obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Fixation on things being done the right way, tend to have poor interpersonal relationships, related to OCD
Causes: Moderate genetic contribution, predisposed to favoring structure in their life
Treatment: Therapy aimed at relaxation, cognitive reappraisal, CBT