Psychiatry Shelf Review
Psychiatry Shelf Review
Psychiatry Shelf Review
1. Psychotic disorder
Psychosis
• Delusion: False, fixed, culturally inappropriate belief that cannot be altered by rational arguments
• Hallucination: Perception without external stimuli
» Auditory: Schizophrenia or other psychotic d/o
» Visual: Organic brain disease, Dementia Drug & Alcohol intoxication & withdrawal
» Olfactory hallucination: Temporal lobe epilepsy
• Disordered thinking
Differential diagnosis
• Brief psychotic d/o (< 1 month)
• Schizophreniform d/o (1 – 6 months)
• Schizophrenia (> 6 months)
• Schizoaffective d/o
• Delusional d/o
• Mood disorder (MDD or Bipolar) with psychosis
• Substance induced pscyhosis
• Delirium, Dementia
• Psychosis due to general medicalc condition
Phase of schizophrenia
• Prodrome – Function, Social withdrawal, Irritable, Depressed
• Psycosis – Hallucinaion, Dellusion, Disorganize speech & behavior
• Residual (episode between pscyhotic exacerbations) – Negative symptoms, social withdrawal
Schizophrenia
• Prevalence: 1%
• Men present earlier
• Strong genetic predisposition
• A/w Dopamine, Serotonin, Norepinephrine
Schizoaffective d/o
• Meet criteria for MDD or Manic or Mixed episode + Schizophrennia
• Mood symptoms (MDD, Manic) only substantial portion of psychotic illness
• Must have dellusion or hallucination for at least 2 week without mood symptoms
Delusional d/o
• Non-bizarre, fixed delusion for at least 1 month
• Delusion: Erotomanic, somatic, persecutory, grandiose
• Not meet criteria for schizophrenia
• MC age > 40 y/o
• Anti psychotic – less effective
Anti-psychotic drug
Typical Atypical
• Dopamine D2 blocker • Dopamine D2 & Serotonin blocker
• Treat positive symptoms > negative symptoms • Treat positive + negative symptoms
• S/E: risk of EPS than Atypical agents • Treat negative symptoms, better than typical
• Low potency agents = Need larger dose, less agents
risk EPS
• High pontency agents = Need small dose, More
risk of EPS
Side effect Side effect
• Extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) – Dystonia, • Risperidone – Hyperprolactinemia
Parkinsonism, Akathisia • Olanzapine – Hyperlipidemia, Weight gain,
• Anticholinergic symptoms – Dry mouth, Glucose intolerance, Hepatotoxicity
Constipation, Blurring vision • Clozapine – Agranulocytosis, Seizure
• Tardive dyskinesia – Darting movement of face, • Ziprasidone – Prolong QTc, Need to take with
tongue, MC woman, can be permanent food
2. Mood disorder
About MDD
• At least 1 major depressive episode
• No mania or hypomania
• Lifetime prevalence: 15%
Types of anti-depressant
Manic episode
• Abnormally & Persistently elevated, expansive or irritable mood for at least 1 week
• Need at least 3 of following
DIG FAST
D – Distractibility
I – Irritability
G – Grandiosity
F – Flight of ideas
A – Goal driven activity
S – Need of sleep
T – Thoughtlessness, Talkative
Mania vs Hypomania
Mania Hypomania
Duration At least 7 days At least 4 days
Impairment Severe None
Hospitalization √ X
Psychotic features √ X
Mood stabilizer
3. Anxiety disorder
OCD
• Obsession
» Recurrent & intrusive thought, that cause marked anxiety
» Failed attempt to suppress thought
» Realize that the thought is product of his mind
• Compulsion
» Repetitive behavior in respond to his obsession
» This is to reduce distress caused by obsession
• Common pattern: Contamination, symmetry, doubt, subsequent checking
• Treatment: SSRI (1st line) + Behavioral therapy (Exposure & response prevention; Relaxation
technique)
Panic d/o
• Panic attack (PA): Brief sudden rush of fear & anxiety (usually < 30 minutes)
• PANICS
P – Palpitation
A – Abdominal distress
N – Numbness, Nausea
I – Intense fear of death
C – Choking, Chills, Chest pain
S – Shortness of breath, Sweating
• Criteria:
» Spontaneous recurrent panic attack, without triggering factor
» PA cause worry about additional attack or avoidance (behavioral changes)
• Differential diagnosis
» Drugs: Stimulants, caffeine, nicotine, hallucinogen, alcohol, opiate, benzodiazepine withdrawal
» Psychiatric illness: Depression, other anxiety d/o
» Medical illness
• Treatment
» Short term: Benzodiazepine (Alprazolam known as Xanax)
» Long term: SSRI, Relaxation training, Cognitive therapy
Agoraphobia
• Definition: Fear of open space (Agora: Public space, Phobia: Fear)
• Usually cause panic disorder (Panic d/o with Agoraphobia)
• Panic d/o + Agoraphobia: Treat panic d/o, resolve agoraphobia
• Panic d/o without agoraphobia: Difficult treatment
Phobia
• Most common psychiatric d/o
• Ego-dystonic – Patient known that the fear is exaggerated
• Specific phobia – exaggerated fear of specific object or situation, treat with systemic desensitization
• Social phobia – exaggerated fear of social situation, in which humiliation can occur, treat with SSRI +
Cognitive therapy
Cluster A: ‘Weird’
• Eccentric, withdrawn, border on psychosis
Cluster B: ‘Wild’
• Emotional, dramatic, often with mood d/o
Anti-social Borderline
• Don’t care safety of other • Desperate attempt to avoid abandonment
• Manipulate other for personal gain • Unstable & intense relationship
• Usually break the law • Recurrent suicidal thought
• May border on psychosis
• Histrionic: Attention seeker, flamboyant,
extroverted, sexually inappropriate
• Narcissistic: Over self-importance, want
admiration from others, manipulate other for
personal gain
Cluster C: ‘Worried’
• Anxious, fearful, shy
• Avoidant: Avoid interpersonal contact because of fear of rejection, but want a companion
• Dependent: Low confident, Excessive need cared from others
• Obsessive-Compulsive: Obsess with orderliness, perfectionism, control
Abuse Dependence
Pattern of substance use cause functional impairment for at least 1 year
Need 1 of following: Need 3 of following:
• Fail to finish task at work, school, home • Fail to finish task at work, school, home
• Use in dangerous situation • Tolerance
• Recurrent criminal history d/t substance use • Withdrawal
• Continue usage despite of social problem due • Actual use exceeds extended use
to use • Continued use despite medical or psychological
problem due to use
• Persistent desire or unsuccessful efforts to cut
#Patient cannot meet criteria for dependence as down on use
such supersedes a diagnosis of abuse • Significant time spent using, getting, recovering
from substance
Delirium tremens
• Onset: After 2 days of alcohol cessation
• Untreated cause high mortality rate
• Key features: Delirium (altered, waning sensorium)
• A/w Hallucination (Visual, Tactile), Psychomotor changes, Autonomic instability
Korsakoff’s syndrome
• Chronic & irreversible
• Impaired recent memory
• Anterograde amnesia
Opiates
• MOA: Stimulate opiate receptor Analgesia, sedation, dependence
• Example: Heroine, Codeine, Morphine, Methadone, Meperidine
Sedative-Hypnotics
• Benzodiazepine: frequency of Cl- channel opening GABA
• Barbiturates: duration of Cl- channel opening GABA
• Intoxication: Drowsy, altered mental status, ataxia (uncoordinated movement), respiratory depression,
nystagmus, coma
• Treatment: Withdrawal – Maintain ABC, Benzodiazepine blocker
6. Cognitive disorder
• Problem with memory, orientation, attention, judgement
• Major category
» Dementia
» Delirium
» Amnestic d/o
Dementia Delirium
Impaired • Memory • Sensory
Onset • Gradual • Acute
Course of symptoms • Stable • Fluctuating
Reversibility X √
Dementia
• Define as Memory impairment, without changes in consciousness
• May have behavioral disturbance ± psychosis
• Must rule out pseudodementia in depression
• Must rule out reversible cause of dementia
» Vit B12, Folate deficiency
» Hyper or hypothyroidism
» Electrolyte imbalance
Alzheimer’s disease
• Most common type of dementia (50%)
• Course: Progressive & linear
• Commonly a/w Personality + Mood changes
• Pathology: Tau protein, Amyloid protein
• Diagnosis: Memory problem + 1 of following
» Aphasia (language difficulty)
» Apraxia: Practiced activity difficulty
» Agnosia: Recognition difficulty
• Treatment
» Memantine (NMDA blocker), Rivastigmine (Cholinesterase blocker) – Treat Alzheimer
» Anti-depressant – Treat depression
» Anti-psychotic (low dose) – Treat behavioral disturbance
Vascular dementia
• Cognitive deficit due to brain infarct
• Clinical criteria same as Alzheimer disease
• Commonly have neurological deficit
• Control vascular risk factor
Delirium
• Fluctuating clinical course
• Psychomotor agitation or retardation
• Commonly have hallucination
• Causes: Drug induced, liver, renal, endocrinal dysfunction, electrolyte abnormality, infection
• 1st thing to do is to identify the cause of delirium
• After identify the causes, treat the causes & delirium
• Treat delirium by giving Low dose antipsychotic to treat agitation
Amnestic disorder
• Memory impairment without cognitive problem a/w dementia
• No altered consciousness
• Always caused by medical condition: Seizure, hypoxia, head trauma, substance abuse
7. Other disorder
Mental retardation
• Significant deficit in intellectual function + age appropriate adaptive skills
• Onset: Childhood < 18 y/o
• Causes: Most common is no clear cause
» Genetic syndrome: Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome
» Prenatal & perinatal exposure
ADHD
• Onset: < 7 y/o
• Behavior inconsistent with age & development
• Symptoms: Inattentiveness, hyperactivity or both for > 6 months
• Treatment: CNS stimulant (Methylphenidate, dextroamphetamine)
Eating disorder
• Anorexia nervosa – Body weight > 15% below normal, Amenorrhea, Obsess with body image
• Bulimia nervosa – Recurrent binge eating & attempts to compensate (vomit, laxative, diuretic, excess
exercise). Obsess with body image
• Treatment: Behavioral therapy, Individual psychotherapy