PSY1011 - Psychological Disorders Lecture
PSY1011 - Psychological Disorders Lecture
Psychological Disorders
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Variation
• What is pathology?
• E.g., European settlers arrived to colonise Australia, they did not recognise
examples of people suffering from what they classified as ‘insanity’ among the
Aboriginal population.
• Lack of recognition among Aboriginal communities lays in the spiritual beliefs
that underpinned those societies.
Mental Illness: Nothing but a cultural construction?
• Labelling Theory
• Turns people into ‘patients’, whose subsequent actions are
interpreted as part of their ‘craziness’
• Self Fulfilling prophecy?
But there is some consistency and importance...
• Reflection:
• Can we treat or diagnose patients without
understanding — or sharing — their cultural
backgrounds?
Learning Objective 2:
Define mental health, mental health
problems and mental disorders.
What do these terms mean?
• Mental Health
• A state of emotional and social wellbeing in which individuals realise
their own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work
productively and can contribute to their community
• Mental Health Problems
• wide range of emotional and behavioural abnormalities that
affect people throughout their lives.
• I.e., cognitive impairment, anxiety, depressive
symptoms, etc.
• Mental Disorder
• Clinically recognisable set of symptoms and behaviours,
which usually need treatments (including hospitalisation at
times) to be alleviated
• Serious departure from normal functioning
Mental Disorder
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Prevalence
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Suicide
• Suicide
• In 2020, there were 3139 deaths by suicide in Australia
• Approx. 75% Male
• Leading cause of death for Australians aged 15-44
• However, the most prevalent in older adults groups (+65yo)
• Language
• ‘suicide attempt’ and ‘died by suicide’ rather than ‘suicide
attempt’ and ‘died by suicide’ and ‘took their own life’
• Prevention: 4 steps (Black Dog Institute)
• Ask (i.e., ‘Are you thinking about suicide?’)
• Listen and Stay
• Get Help (i.e., 000, or Lifeline)
• Follow up (check in)
Learning Objective 3:
Differentiate between the contemporary
approaches to psychopathology.
Contemporary Conceptualisations
• Neuroses
• problems in living, such as phobias, constant self-doubt and
repetitive interpersonal problems such as trouble with authority
figures.
• Personality Disorders
• enduring maladaptive patterns of thought, feeling and
behaviour that lead to chronic disturbances in interpersonal and
occupational functioning
• Psychosis
• gross disturbances involving a loss of touch with reality.
• Three questions:
• What does the patient wish for and fear?
• unconscious conflicts among wishes and fears and efforts to
resolve them
• Behavioural
• Assesses the conditions under which symptoms such as
depression and anxiety arise and tries to discover the
stimuli that elicit them.
• Cognitive
• focuses on irrational beliefs and maladaptive cognitive
processes that maintain dysfunctional behaviours and
emotions.
Biological Approach
• Unfortunately…
• Biological only based research has been largely
unsuccessful
• No consistent biological markers that consistently
account for psychopathology. Only ‘risk’
Biological Approach
• Neural Circuits
• Looks for the roots of mental disorders in the brain's circuitry
• I.e., normal anxiety occurs through activation of neural circuits
involving, among other structures, the amygdala and frontal
lobes
Thus…
• One might expect pathological anxiety to involve heightened or
easily triggered activation of those circuits
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Ancient Greece (500 BC – 500 AD)
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Middle Ages and Renaissance (5th-17th Century)
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Enlightenment (17th-18th Century)
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19th Century
Kraepelin dichotomy:
– Manic depression (now: depression, bipolar disorder)
– Dementia praecox (‘premature dementia’; now: schizophrenia)
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Classifying Disorders
DSM-5
– Current version published in 2013
– Attempts to classify all mental disorders
– Three sections
1. Context and how to use the manual
2. Classification system of all current disorders
3. Other potential disorders that have not yet been classified
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Classifying Disorders
ICD-11
– Developed by WHO
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Classifications/ Disorders
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Depressive Disorders &
Bipolar and Related Disorders
Depressive Disorders
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Bipolar and Related Disorders
Bipolar I Disorder
– Manic episode is a distinct elevated/irritable period with increased
energy lasting at least a week (unless hospitalised first), with 3+:
Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
Decreased need for sleep
More talkative than normal
Flight of ideas/racing thoughts
Distractability
Increase in goal-directed activity
Excessive involvement in risky activities/behaviours
– Must also meet criteria for at least one major depressive episode
– Can also experience hypomanic episodes, provided at least one
was manic
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Bipolar and Related Disorders
Bipolar II Disorder
– Hypomanic episode is a distinct elevated/irritable period with
increased energy lasting at least 4 consecutive days, with 3+:
Inflated self-esteem
Decreased need for sleep
More talkative than normal
Flight of ideas/racing thoughts
Distractibility
Increase in goal-directed activity
Excessive involvement in risky activities/behaviours
– Must also meet criteria for at least one major depressive episode
– These changes need to be observable by others
– Must never have been a manic episode (otherwise it becomes
Bipolar I Disorder)
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Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety Disorders
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Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5407545/
Anxiety Disorders
Specific Phobia
– Marked fear or anxiety for an object or situation in which the fear is
almost always immediate, intense, and disproportional to any real
danger. It also needs to be persistent (6+ months) and cause
impairment to functioning
Social Anxiety Disorder (Social Phobia)
– Marked fear/anxiety about one or more social situations in which
the individual is fearful of being exposed to scrutiny by others, be
negatively evaluated, intensely experienced, and disproportionate
to any actual threat posed
Panic Disorder
– Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks which evoke an abrupt surge
of intense fear/anxiety, reaching a peak within 10 minutes. At least
one attack must be followed by fear of future attacks or
maladaptive behavioural change.
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Anxiety Disorders
Agoraphobia
– Marked fear/anxiety about 2+ of the following situations: public
transport, open spaces, enclosed spaces, standing in line/crowds,
and being outside of home alone. Person worries escape will be
difficult and the fear is disproportional to any real threat.
Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
– Excessive anxiety/worry for more than 6 months about any number
of issues, and has difficulty controlling this worry. Accompanied by
3+ of the following symptoms: restlessness, easily fatigued,
difficulty concentrating, irritability, muscle tension, sleep
disturbance.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
– Requires presence of obsessions (i.e. persistent & unwanted
thoughts, urges or images), compulsions (i.e. repetitive behaviours
or mental acts), or both. They must be time consuming, or cause
significant distress or impairment.
– Important to clarify level of insight into disorder (good, poor, absent)
as well as any history or presence of tics
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Trauma-and Stressor-Related Disorders
Trauma-and Stressor-Related Disorders
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Trauma-and Stressor-Related Disorders
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Trauma-and Stressor-Related Disorders
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Schizophrenia Spectrum and
Other Psychotic Disorders
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia
– Prevalence rates are anywhere from 0.7-1.5% of the population.
– Was first described by Eugen Bleuler (1911-1950) who identified
the disorder as schizophrenia
schizo – split and phrenun - mind
Brain/Biochemical/Genetic Findings
– Brain abnormalities (less activity in frontal lobes [hypofrontality] &
basal ganglia; large cerebral ventricles; increase in size of sulci)
– Neurotransmitter differences (over activity of dopamine at
synapses)
– Treated with antipsychotic medications, focusing on symptoms
– Genetic influences (suggestion that genetic influences produce a
vulnerability so that it is more common if there is a family history.)
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Schizophrenia
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Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia
– 2+ of the following symptoms present for a significant period during
a 1-month timeframe:
Delusions
Hallucinations
Disorganised speech
Grossly disorganised or catatonic behaviour
Negative symptoms
– Significant portion of time since onset, level of functioning is
markedly impaired
– Continuous signs of disturbance for at least 6 months
– Alternative disorders (e.g. schizoaffective disorder) ruled out
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Personality Disorders
Personality Disorders
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Personality Disorders
Cluster A:
– Paranoid: pervasive distrust and suspiciousness of others
– Schizoid: detachment from social relationships and restricted range of
emotions in interpersonal settings
– Schizotypal: interpersonal deficits marked by discomfort and reduced
capacity for intimate relationships & cognitive or perceptual distortions
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Personality Disorders
Cluster B:
– Antisocial: disregard for others and violation of their rights
– Borderline: marked impulsivity and instability in relationships, self-image
and affects
– Histrionic: excessive emotionality and attention seeking
– Narcissistic: grandiosity, need for admiration, lack of empathy
Cluster C:
– Avoidant: social inhibition, feelings of inadequacy, hypersensitivity to
negative evaluation
– Dependent: excessive need to be taken care of, leading to submissive
and clinging behaviours and fear of separation
– Obsessive-Compulsive: preoccupation with orderliness, perfectionism,
and mental and interpersonal control at the expense of flexibility,
openness, and efficiency
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Diagnostics, issues, what does
the future hold?
Issues with Nosological Diagnosis
Comorbidity
– For approx. 50% of people that meet the criteria for one disorder
will meet the criteria for a second, and so on
Diagnostic Stability
– For example, a high proportion of anxiety disorders transition to a
different anxiety disorder over a six-year period
Relatively Poor integrator reliability
– Sometimes one clinician will make a particular diagnosis and another
clinician (with the same consumer at the same time) will make a different
diagnosis
Inherent symptom level heterogeneity
– e.g., 227 unique possible symptom combinations that fulfil the criteria
for a diagnosis of major depressive disorder
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Dimensional Approach
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Thank you!
PSY1011:
Psychological Disorders