Title: Psychopathology
1Psychopathology
2Mental Disorder
- What is a disorder?
- A behavioral or psychological syndrome associated
with - Present distress (e.g., painful symptom) OR
- Disability (i.e, impairment in one or more
important areas of functioning) OR - Significant increased risk of suffering death,
pain, disability, or important loss of freedom
3DSM
- Diagnostic Statistical Manual Fourth Ed.
(DSM-IV) - Standard instructions (criteria) for diagnosing
mental disorders - Categorical (disorder present or absent) not
dimensional model - Each disorder a distinct entity
4DSM Diagnoses
- Polythetic or prototypical approach
- List of symptoms
- If person exhibits enough get the diagnosis
- Results in a heterogeneous population
5Major Depression
- 5 (or more) of the following present in during
the same 2-week period and represent a change in
previous functioning at least one symptom is
depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasures - Depressed mood most of the day nearly every day
- Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all,
or almost all, activities MODNED - Significant weight loss when not dieting or
weight gain, or decrease or increase in appetite
NED - Insomnia or hypersomnia NED
- Psychomotor agitation or retardation NED
- Fatigue or loss of energy NED
- Feelings of worthlessness or excessive guilt NED
- Diminished ability to think or concentrate, or
indecisiveness NED - Recurrent thoughts of death, suicidal ideation,
or suicide attempt - Symptoms not due to Mixed episode or Bereavement
6Mental Disorders
- There are 100s of disorders in the DSM
- Only about 20 are rigorously studied and treated
- Review major mental disorders
- Life time prevalence rate for some disorders
(collapsed across gender) are in parentheses
7Mood Disorders
- Major Depression (17.1)
- Sad, depressed mood, anhedonia,
- Dysthymia (6.4)
- Subthreshold depression that lasts at least 2
years - Bipolar or Manic Depression
- Characterizes episodes of mania (1.6)
- Cycle of manic and depressive episodes
8Anxiety Disorders
- Characterized by persistent, uncontrollable
feelings of worry, apprehension and dread - Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD 5.1)
- Chronic, uncontrollable, diffuse feelings of
worry, apprehension - Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
- Obsessive thoughts to perform some action and
anxiety if dont perform action
9Anxiety Disorders
- Simple phobia (11.3)
- Fear of specific stimulus, e.g., spiders, snakes,
heights, flying - Social phobia (13.3)
- Fear of evaluation of others and social
humiliation - Panic Disorder (3.5)
- Recurrent panic attacks
- Agraphobia w/o panic disorder (5.3)
- Fear of open or public spaces
- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
- Anxiety syndrome in response to a traumatic event
10Substance Use Disorders
- Excessive use, hazardous use, tolerance, and
characteristic withdrawal symptoms for a
psychoactive substance - Nicotine
- Alcohol (14.1)
- Marijuana
- Other drug (7.5)
11Antisocial Behavior Disorders
- Persistent pattern of behavior that violates the
rights of others - Conduct Disorder (CD)
- Antisocial behavior before age 15
- Antisocial Personality Disorder (ASPD 3.5)
- Antisocial behavior that persists into adulthood
(after age 18)
12Eating Disorders
- Anorexia
- Failure to maintain a body weight that is 85 of
ideal body weight - Bulimia
- Episodes of binging and purging
13Psychotic disorders
- Schizophrenia spectrum disorders Characterized by
thought disorder and bizarre behavior - Hallucinations
- Delusions
- Disorganized speech
- Disorganized behavior
- Negative symptoms
14Other Disorders
- Organic Disorders
- Dementia, delirium
- Somatoform Disorders
- Hypochondriasis, somatization, body dysmorphic,
conversion - Childhood Disorders
- ADHD, autism, equivalents to adult dx
15Organization of Mental Disorders
- DSM-IV utilizes a medical model and
conceptualizes mental disorders as individual
disease states - Alternative organization
- Common mental disorders
- Common uncommon mental disorders
- Organic or Neurological disorders
16Common Mental Disorders
- high lifetime prevalence gt1 to 30 for meeting
criteria of a diagnosis - depression, anxiety, substance, and antisocial
behavior disorders - Think of these disorders and their symptoms as
extremes of normal human emotions, thoughts, and
behaviors - e.g., low mood, feelings of worry or dread,
consume psychoactive substances, and breaking
rules and societal norms are typical of normal
human experience
17Common Uncommon Mental Disorders
- Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder
(manic-depression) - relatively low prevalence rate 1, but very
severe disorders - both typically require hospitalization at some
point and continual monitoring - account for a disproportionate amount of mental
health services
18Common Uncommon Mental Disorders
- Though debatable, the florid psychotic episodes
and manic episodes that characterize these
disorders are typically not part of normal human
experience - Therefore, may be best to consider these
disorders more as categories rather than extremes
of normal behavior
19Organic or Neurological Disorders
- Includes
- Demenita or senility (e.g., Alzheimers disease)
- Autism
- Mental Retardation
- The cause of these disorders is most likely the
direct consequence of brain dysfunction or a
problem in brain development - the brain either is no longer able to perform the
normal functions of a human brain (dementia), or
the brain was never able to perform these
functions adequately due to problems in its
development (autism, most forms of mental
retardation).
20National Comorbidity Survey (NCS)
- Congressionally mandated survey to determine the
lifetime and 12-month prevalence rates for 14 DSM
disorders - Survey data was collected from 1990 to 1992
21NCS
- Administered structured clinical interview to a
nationally representative sample - N 8098
- Age 15-54
- 48 coterminous states
- Sample matched U.S. census data
- Sex
- Race (white, black, hispanic, other)
- Education
- Marital status
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25Summary of Prevalence
- Nearly half the population with meet criteria for
major mental disorder at some point in the life - Women gt Affective Anxiety dx
- Men gt Substance use ASPD
- A minority of persons (14) account for a
majority of diagnoses (54) and mental health
care
26(No Transcript)
27Demographic Correlates
- Age
- younger gt ASPD Substance use
- Race
- Blacks lt Affective, Substance use, any dx
- Income
- Lowest income gt all dx lower incomes gt Anxiety
ASPD - Education
- Lower education gt ASPD, Anxiety, Substance
- Urban vs. Rural
- No increased risks
- Region
- Lowest in South, greater in West Northeast
28Personality Mental Disorders
- Personality traits may be risk factors for
certain mental disorders - e.g., high Stress Reaction risk for anxiety and
depression - Look at Personality Profiles of four types of
mental disorders - Affective Major Depression, Dysthymia
- Anxiety Panic, GAD, OCD, Social Simple Phobia
- Substance Alcohol Drug
- Antisocial Behavior
29Personality Mental Disorders
- Also look at pure and comorbid cases
- pure only have the one disorder of interest
- comorbid have the disorder of interest but also
meet criteria for other disorders
30Personality Mental Disorders
- Why important?
- Is the personality profile due to disorder of
interest or the comorbid disorder? - However, most people who meet criteria for one
disorder also meet criteria for another, so
pure cases may not be representative
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36Personality Predicts Mental Disorders
- Personality at age 18 predicts mental disorders
at age 21 - After controlling for disorders at age 18
- Anxiety Affective disorders
- NEM
- Substance use Antisocial Behavior
- NEM low CON
37Personality Mental Disorders
- pure cases less extreme personality differences
- Personality more important for severe cases
- Affective Anxiety Disorders
- High NEM (stress reaction)
- Substance Antisocial Behavior Disorders
- High NEM (aggression)
- Low CON
- Suggests a two-factor model of common mental
disorders
38Comorbidity
- Vast majority of people that meet criteria for
one disorder also meet criteria for another
disorders e.g., - Anxiety depression
- Substance abuse antisocial behavior
- Rates of comorbidity are higher than would be
expected by chance
39Comorbidity Psychometric Model of
Psychopathology
- Disorders co-occurrence in systematic ways
- Comorbidity as covariance (correlation)
- Suggests a meaningful structure to the relations
among disorders - Can the comorbidity be explained by a few general
factors? - Disorders co-occur due to a common process or
risk factors
40Structure of Common Mental Disorders
- Examine the patterns of comorbidity for 10 common
mental disorders - Affective
- Anxiety
- Substance Use
- Antisocial Behavior
- Test a 1, 2, and 4-factor model in the Dunedin
sample
41Age 18
42Structure of Mental Disorders
- Two factor model
- Fit better than a 1- or 4-factor model
- Correlated factors indicates both are associated
with psychological distress - Both high NEM
- EXT also low CON
43Structure of Mental Disorders
- Internalizing
- Unipolar mood anxiety disorders
- Psychological distress focused inward
- Hi NEM (stress reaction)
- Externalizing
- Substance and antisocial behavior disorders
- Psychological distress focused outward
- Hi NEM (aggression), lo CON
44Structure of Common Mental Disorders
- Similar to the General factor for intellectual
ability, there are two general factors for common
mental disorders - Just as subtests from the WAIS all measure
General intelligence, specific disorders and
symptoms are different expressions of the
Internalizing and Externalizing vulnerability
factors
45INT-EXT model
- The factors represent what the different
disorders have in common - Factors are the latent vulnerability to all the
disorders - Represent a core psychopathological process
- Different disorders are different expressions of
the same core process
46Age 21
47(No Transcript)
48INT-EXT model
- High rank-order stability for both INT (r .69)
and EXT (r .86) from age 18 to 21 - Findings have been replicated in the NCS,
nationally representative sample of the
Netherlands, and in a multi-national study
49Cross-Cultural INT-EXT
- Investigation examined 7 disorders in 14
countries - U.S., France, Germany, Greece, Italy,
Netherlands, Turkey, U. K. - Nigeria, India, China, Japan
- Brazil, Chile
50(No Transcript)
51Cross-Cultural INT-EXT
- For all countries, an INT factor could be
differentiated from hazardous use of alcohol - Mean observed symptom levels for differed by
region - Asian lt Western Europe US lt Latin America
52Cross-Cultural INT-EXT
- Suggests a common structure to abnormal behavior
- Cultural or context can effect the expression and
mean level of expression - Increase or decrease mean
- Cultural expression of underlying vulnerability
53Heritability of Schizophrenia Bipolar
- Severe and persistent mental illness tends to be
more heritable than common mental disorders
54Schizophrenia risks (Gottesman, 1994)
55(No Transcript)
56(No Transcript)
57Biometric model fitting for Operational Diagnoses
(lifetime ever) Liability models(England strong
diagnosis)
58Heritability of Common Mental Disorders
- Affective Anxiety dx
- h2 .25 to .40, no c2
- Substance use ASB dx
- h2 .35 to .60
- c2 .20 to .35 for childhood ASB
59Sources of Comorbidity
- Why are certain disorders comorbid?
- Common genetic or environmental factors?
60Sources of Comorbidity
- Mostly due to common genetic risk factors
- Genetic correlation between MD and GAD 1.0
- Big genetic correlations among EXT disorders
61Sources of Comorbidity
- Heritability of INT and EXT
- What is the heritability of the general
vulnerability to common mental disorders? - EXT Minnesota Twin Family Study
- INT-EXT Virginia Twin Registry
62(No Transcript)
63Non-heritable (19)
Heritable (81)
Externalizing Psychopathology
.47
.78
.58
.71
.63
Adult Antisocial
Conduct Disorder
Alcohol Dependence
Drug Dependence
(Low) Constraint
E
A
E
E
E
C
E
64Sources of Comorbidity EXT
- EXT factor is the genetic vulnerability to the
different specific disorders - Disorders co-occur due to common genetic risks
- Non-shared environmental factors shape the
particular expression of the common vulnerability
65Ac1
Ac2
.54
.53
.33
.56
.37
.58
.65
Major Depression
GAD
Phobia
Adult Antisocial
Child Antisocial
Alcohol Dep
Drug Dep
A
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
C
A
66Source of Comorbidity
- For both INT and EXT, the primary source of
comorbidity are common genetic risk factors - EXT tends to be slightly more heritable and
stable across time than INT - Specific genetic and environmental risk factors
for different disorders - Specific factors shape the expression of the
common risk factor
67Family Transmission of EXT
- Why do family members resemble each other for EXT
disorders? - What do parents pass on to the next generation?
- General risk or specific risk factors?
- Genetic or Environmental risk factors?
- Why are siblings similar for EXT disorders?
- Same or different transmission as parents to
children?
68(No Transcript)
69(No Transcript)
70Family Transmission of EXT
- Parents pass on a general vulnerability to a
spectrum of disorders - No specific risk factors
- Primarily genetic risk is whats passed on
- Specific environmental factors increase sibling
resemblance
71Developmental Course
- What is the course of mental disorders?
- How persistent are the disorders?
- What is the risk for adult disorders given a
history of disorders? - Dunedin sample at age 26
- Look at the participants current and history of
mental disorders - Longitudinal, no retrospective bias
72(No Transcript)
73(No Transcript)
74Developmental Course
- At age 26, almost everyone (82-100) meeting
criteria for a diagnosis had done so at an
earlier age - Developmental histories do not differ much by
treatment users, intensive mental health
services, and non-treatment seekers - About 50 of persons with dx at age 26 had a
diagnosis by age 15
75(No Transcript)
76(No Transcript)
77Link between Adolescent (age 11 to 15) Disorders
and Diagnosis at age 26
- Anxiety
- Anxiety, Depression, ADHD, CD/ODD
- Depression
- Depression, Anxiety, CD/ODD
- Substance Use
- CD/ODD
78Link between Adolescent (age 11 to 15) Disorders
and Diagnosis at age 26
- ASPD
- CD/ODD
- Mania
- CD/ODD, Depression
- Schizophrenia spectrum
- Anxiety, Depression, ADHD,CD/ODD
- Eating Disorders
- CD/ODD
79Developmental Course
- Homotypic continuity
- Adults with a diagnosis usually had the same
diagnosis in childhood-adolescence - Most adult disorders preceded by a variety of
disorders - CD/ODD a precursor for every adult disorder
80Adolescent Problem Behaviors and Adult Mental
Disorders
- Are problem behaviors in adolescence harbingers
of adult mental disorders? - Yes, in particular problem behaviors with an
EARLY ONSET - Examine the relation between adolescent problem
behavior and EXT in the MTFS sample
81Problem Behaviors in 17-Year-Old Adolescents
82Correlations Among Adolescent Problem Behaviors
83Adolescent Problem Behavior Index
84Age 20 Diagnoses of EXT Disorders
- Nic Lifetime Nicotine Dependence at 20
- Alc Lifetime Alcohol Abuse or Dependence at 20
- Drug Lifetime Illicit Drug Abuse or Dependence
at 20 - AAB Lifetime Adult Antisocial Behavior at 20
85Mean of Age 20 Diagnoses as a Function
Adolescent Problem Behaviors
Number of Problem Behaviors
86Even more important than whether is how early an
adolescent engages in problem behavior
87Alcoholism and Age at First Drink(N27,616
Grant Dawson, 1997)
Rate of Alcoholism
Age at First Drink
88Age at First Drink (AFD)
- Specific vs. General effect
- Also associated with ASPD, Drug Dependence,
Nicotine Dependence, Educational
Underachievement, reduced P3 amplitude (McGue et
al. 2001) - Heritable vs. Environmental basis
- Relationship between AFD and alcoholism risk
appears to be predominantly genetically mediated
(Prescott Kendler, 1999)
89- Generality of the AFD effect suggests that other
adolescent problem behaviors may represent risk
factor for adult pathology when expressed early - Is risk impact genetically or environmentally
mediated?
90Early vs. Late Adolescent Problem Index
91Mean of Age 20 Diagnoses in Males as a Function
of Ever vs Early Problem Behavior
92Mean of Age 20 Diagnoses in Females as a
Function of Ever vs Early Problem Behavior
93Correlation of Problem Index with Indicators of
EXT
(CONST) Constraint has been reverse scored
94Generality of Adolescent Problem Behavior effects
on Adult EXT Disorders
- Each adolescent problem behavior is predicts
homotypic outcome - Early drinking predicts adult Alc Dep
- Smoking predicts adult Nic Dep
- Each adolescent problem behavior also predicts
each EXT disorder - Smoking predicts Alc Dep
- Sexual intercourse predicts Drug Dep
95Biometric Analysis of the Early and Ever Indexes
96Does this mean that Early problem behavior
indexes environmental risk for adult
psychopathology?
971.00
1.00
C
C
.20
E
A
E
A
.41
.07
.18
.41
.17
.76
Early
EXT
.69
1.0
.72
.70
.78
Early
ALC
DRUG
AAB
NIC
.23
.29
.12
.36
.15
.36
.07
.32
A
A
A
A
E
E
E
E
98Decomposition of Early-EXT Correlation
- Estimated correlation of .59 is apportioned as
- Genetic 61.8
- Shared Environment 29.4
- Nonshared Environment 8.7
99Conclusions
- Adolescent problem behavior, especially when
expressed early, is a potent predictor of
early-onset adult psychopathology - Adolescent problem behavior, especially when
expressed early, is strongly environmentally
influenced - Nonetheless, the association between early
problem behavior and adult psychopathology is
primarily genetically mediated