1 / 33

Chapter 6: Anxiety Disorders

Chapter 6: Anxiety Disorders. Fall, 2012 Dr. Mary L. Flett, Instructor. Overview. Various forms of anxiety disorders are most common type of abnormal behavior Similarity to mood disorders suggests common causal features stress cognitive factors biological. Symptoms.

bambi
Download Presentation

Chapter 6: Anxiety Disorders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6: Anxiety Disorders Fall, 2012 Dr. Mary L. Flett, Instructor

  2. Overview • Various forms of anxiety disorders are most common type of abnormal behavior • Similarity to mood disorders suggests common causal features • stress • cognitive factors • biological

  3. Symptoms • Definition: Preoccupation with, or persistent avoidance of, thoughts or situations that provoke fear or anxiety • “Anxiety” can refer to a mood or a syndrome • Fear is experienced in the face of real, immediate danger • Anxiety involves a more general (diffuse) emotional reaction our of proportion to the threats from the environment -- anticipatory

  4. Symptoms • Excessive Worry • A relatively uncontrollable sequence of negative, emotional thoughts that are concerned with possible future threats or danger • Worriers emphasize verbal material rather than images • Panic Attack • A sudden, overwhelming experience of terror fright • Largely described in terms of somatic responses (heart attacks, shortness of breath, sweating • Cognitive experiences include feeling as if they are going to die or go crazy • Situational cues (public speaking, driving on freeways)

  5. Symptoms • Phobias • Persistent, irrational, narrowly defined fears associated with a specific object or situation • Avoidance is important component • Agoraphobia (“fear of the marketplace”; fear of open spaces) • Key belief is not being able top escape • Clinicians describe phobia as a “fear of fear” • Individual becomes adept at monitoring self, but makes errors in judgment when identifying what those symptoms mean

  6. Symptoms • Obsessions & Compulsions • Obsessions are repetitive, unwanted, intrusive cognitive events that may take the form of thoughts, images, or impulses that lead to an increase in subjective anxiety • Come from “out of the blue” • Socially unacceptable themes such as sex, violence, disease/contamination

  7. Symptoms • Obsessions & Compulsions • Compulsions are repetitive behaviors or mental acts used to reduce anxiety. They are considered senseless or irrational by the individual, but they cannot be resisted • Associated with diminished control • Two most common forms are cleaning and checking

  8. Diagnosis • Freud was responsible for first extensive clinical descriptions of pathological anxiety states • Grouped under “neurosis”; not psychotic • Freud’s theory is that the ego (the moderator) cannot successfully deal with impulses of the id and the demands of the super ego • Signal anxiety triggers the defenses • If defenses work, then learning occurs and anxiety diminishes • If defenses don’t work, then individual becomes neurotic

  9. Diagnosis • DSM uses descriptive features to distinguish among subtypes • Panic Disorder • Phobic Disorders • Obsessive-Compulsive disorder • Generalized Anxiety Disorder • Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (Acute Stress Disorder) – discuss later in Chapter 7

  10. Diagnosis • Panic Disorder • Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks • Usually not seen first by psychologist; rather referred after many visits to the ER • Two types: with or without Agoraphobia • Agoraphobia includes avoidance and distress • Typical situation includes travel away from home • May require someone to travel with to help deal with distress • Avoidance of a wide variety of situations including social events and common errands

  11. Diagnosis • Specific Phobia • Fear of heights, bugs, snakes, bridges, storms, blood, trains, planes, closed places (closet, elevator) • Must recognize fear is unreasonable • Avoid the situation • Experience distress • Social Phobia • Identical for specific phobia, but includes being afraid of social situations (performance) • Fear of being humiliated or embarrassed (giving a speech, eating in front of people • May be extremely shy

  12. Diagnosis • Generalized Anxiety Disorder • Defined as excessive anxiety and worry resulting in impairment in functioning or significant distress • One of the most controversial • overlaps many of the other anxiety disorders • may be more useful to think of as a trait rather than a pathology

  13. Diagnosis • OCD • Most individuals exhibit both obsessions and compulsions, but some have one or the other • Difficult to define “normal” obsession or compulsion, but is easier to identify when using functional impairment as criteria

  14. Diagnosis: Course & Outcome • Often chronic conditions • Some people do recover • Conclusion: outcome is mixed and unpredictable

  15. Diagnosis: Course & Outcome • Often chronic conditions • Some people do recover • Conclusion: outcome is mixed and unpredictable • Medications do make a difference

  16. Diagnosis: Frequency • Prevalence • More common than any other disorder • Specific phobias most common subtype • Social phobia next common • Panic DO, and GAD affect approximately 3% of population • OCD affects approximately 1%

  17. Diagnosis: Frequency • Comorbidity among anxiety disorders is high • Anxiety and depression frequently go together • Substance dependence is quite high • May increase risk of onset of anxiety • Cause and effect is not clear

  18. Diagnosis: Frequency • Gender Differences • Women 3X more likely to experience anxiety • Social phobia more common among women • No gender difference in OCD – hmmmmm! • May be explained in terms of child-rearing practices or responses to stressful events • May be due to hormone or neurotransmitter activity

  19. Diagnosis: Frequency • Lifespan Issues • Increased anxiety in the later years may be due to loneliness, increased dependency, declining physical & cognitive functioning, & changes in social and economic conditions • Elders with anxiety have most likely had it for a long time • Need to rule out underlying physiological conditions such as COPD, CHF, hearing loss, and dementia

  20. Diagnosis: Frequency • Cross-cultural Comparisons • Westerners typically express anxiety in relation to work performance; Easterners in relation to family or religious issues • Prevalence rate appears to be same across cultures; descriptors are different

  21. Diagnosis: Causes • Adaptive & Maladaptive Fears • What is the evolutionary significance of the fight or flight response? • Survival • When it become maladaptive, then response is pathological • Generalized forms prepare for vague threats • Specific fears evolved in response to certain types of danger

  22. Diagnosis: Causes • Social Factors • Stressful life events • Different types of environmental stressors (family, natural disaster, work) lead to anxiety response • Childhood Adversity/Resilience • Abuse and neglect • Exposure to violence • maternal pre-natal stress • Not all abused children have anxiety

  23. Diagnosis: Causes • Psychological Factors • Learning Process • Specific fears as a learned response (Little Albert) • Fear “modules” (specialized adaptive circuits in brain) • May have natural selection advantage • Preparedness model • Interpret anger in a face • Interpret danger in an unfamiliar environment • Bandura’s Learning Theory • Observational learning of fears

  24. Diagnosis: Causes • Psychological Factors • Cognitive Factors • Perception (locus) of Control • People who believe they are able to control events in the environment are less likely to be anxious than those who feel helpless • Catastrophic Misinterpretation • Body sensations lead to automatic negative thoughts which, in turn, trigger counter productive behaviors, exaggerating the fear response • Doesn’t account for panic attacks while dreaming

  25. Diagnosis: Causes • Psychological Factors • Cognitive Factors • Attention to Threat & Biased Information Processing • Sensitive individuals scan the environment • Threatening information is encoded and reactivated by generalized situations • Problem-solving behaviors do not work • Rehearsal of fearful outcomes leads to triggering of encoded memories • Thought Suppression: OCD • May actually increase symptoms in persons with OCD (rebound effect)

  26. Diagnosis: Causes • Biological Factors • Genetic Factors • Genetic risk factors are neither specific or non-specific • Genetic factors have been identified for GAD, panic disorder & agoraphobia, and specific phobias • Environmental risk factors unique to the individual play a role in anxiety • Environmental risk factors shared by all members of the family do not seem to have an important influence

  27. Diagnosis: Causes • Biological Factors • Neurobiology • Two biological pathways involved in fear conditioning exist in the brain • Evolved fear module (fast) – evolved as an adaptive response • Cortical processing (slow) – evolved as a learned response • Parts of the brain associated with these pathways include • amygdala • thalamus • HPA axis

  28. Diagnosis: Causes • Biological Factors • Neurobiology • Two biological pathways involved in fear conditioning exist in the brain • Evolved fear module (fast) – evolved as an adaptive response • Cortical processing (slow) – evolved as a learned response • Parts of the brain associated with these pathways include • amygdala • thalamus • HPA axis

  29. Diagnosis: Causes • Biological Factors • Neurobiology • Pathways associated with fear conditioning (panic disorder) may be triggered at an inappropriate time • Sensitivity varies among individuals • Subcortical pathway between thalamus and amygdala may be responsible for misinterpretation of stimuli • Multiple pathways are associated with OCD, making it neurologically quite different from other anxiety disorders • basal ganglia, orbital prefrontal cortex, anterior cigulate cortex • Neurotransmitters such as GABA, serotonin are “inhibitory” (dampen response); psychopharma increases availablity thereby decreasing experience of anxiety

  30. Diagnosis: Treatment • Psychological Interventions • Systematic Desensitization & Interoceptive Exposure • Exposure & Response Prevention • Relaxation & Breathing Retraining • Cognitive Therapy

  31. Diagnosis: Treatment • Biological Interventions • Antianxiety (anxiolitics) medications • Tranquilizers • Benzodiazepines • Side effects may be worse than problem • Sedation • Addiction • Azapirones • Buspar • Takes a bit longer; but not addictive

  32. Anxiety Treatment: Overview

  33. Diagnosis: Treatment • Biological Interventions • Antidepressants • SSRIs • Tricyclics • Clomipramine (Anafranil) • Best Practices • Combination of therapy and medication

More Related