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PSYC 304 Psychopathology Anxiety Disorders

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Demonstrate problem of separating normality from pathology ... 4. Dimensions and Aetiology of Anxiety. what makes people vulnerable to anxiety? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PSYC 304 Psychopathology Anxiety Disorders


1
PSYC 304 Psychopathology Anxiety Disorders
  • Graham Lindegger
  • Room 36A
  • School of Psychology
  • (033) 260 5335
  • Lindegger_at_ukzn.ac.za

2
1. Introduction and Definition
  • central phenomenon
  • typical ego-dystonic condition
  • aims in looking at anxiety
  • Demonstrate problem of separating normality from
    pathology
  • Problems in valid and reliable definition
  • Problem of classification
  • Demonstrate theoretical controversies

3
1. Introduction and definition contd
Hypothetical scenario
  • Imagine a hypothetical scenario
  • A person presents with anxiety
  • May mean very different phenomena
  • Undermines validity reliability
  • Different definitions focus on different aspects
    (cognitive, physiological, behavioural)

4
1. Introduction and definition contd multiple
meanings of anxiety
  • "Anxiety can be regarded as an
    intrapsychic phenomenon, as a behavioural
    response, as an intervening variable
    modifying behavioural styles, as a
    central concomitant to specific physiological
    patterns etc, depending on one's viewpoint"
    (Spielberger).

5
1. Introduction and definition sample of
definitions
  • apprehension cued off by any threat to some
    value which an individual holds as essential to
    their existence (Rollo May, 1960).
  • "a hypersensitive alarm system....sensitive to
    any stimuli that might be taken as indicating
    imminent disaster or harm" (Beck, 1975)

6
Introduction definition contdA working
definition
  • My definition
  • state of apprehension, reflected in cognitive
    preoccupations with threat, and frequently
    accompanied by physiological arousal and
    disorganized behaviour or the personality-based
    predisposition to this state of apprehension

7
1. Introduction definition contdCommon
denominators
  • Triad of anxiety
  • Cognitive state of preoccupation with impending
    threat
  • Physiological ANS arousal
  • Behavioural avoidance or disorganization
  • Different elements more important in different
    types of anxiety

8
2. Problems in Classification 2.1. Introduction
  • Lack of reliable criteria to define
  • Desjairlais complicated by cultural
    considerations
  • Great inconsistency in use
  • experience or emotion
  • personality trait
  • clinical symptom or syndrome
  • compare hypothetical groups

9
2.2. Anxiety as emotion
  • Fundamental and universal emotion
  • Psycho-physiological response mediating
    adjustment to environment
  • Adaptative or survival oriented
  • Triggered by apparent threat to survival
  • Complex threats to human existence
  • So when is this a disorder?

10
2.3. Anxiety as personality trait
  • An enduring disposition to respond to situations
    of threat.
  • Anxiousness.
  • Lay notion of worrier
  • Spielberger distinction
  • State anxiety
  • Trait anxiety

11
2.3. Anxiety as personality trait contd
  • STATE ANXIETY refers to the "subjective feelings
    of tension and apprehension, and the heightened
    activity of the ANS that are experienced in
    situations perceived as threatening". (Anxiety
    as emotion)
  • Primarily cognitive and physiological.

12
2.3. Anxiety as personality trait contd
  • TRAIT ANXIETY the personality trait of anxiety,
    refers to "the relatively stable individual
    differences in anxiety proneness that are
    manifested in behaviour, and in the frequency
    with which an individual experiences anxiety
    (state elevations) over time".
  • Primarily cognitive and behavioural.

13
2.4. Normal vs. pathological anxiety.
  • Normality debate How do we separate normal from
    clinical anxiety requiring treatment?
  • How does the normality debate get applied to
    anxiety and its disorders?
  • Link with original hypothetical example

14
2.4. Normal vs. pathological anxiety.(Malcolm
Laders classification)
15
2.4. Normal vs. pathological anxiety.
  • How do we make the distinction?
  • Wakefield dysfunction harm
  • But anxiety as state (or trait) is adaptive and
    functional.
  • Anxiety is clinical when
  • fails to perform as adaptive function
    dysfunctional
  • causes harm (DSM impairment or distress)

16
2.4. Normal vs. pathological anxietyDSMs
approach
  • DSM quantitative and qualitative criteria
  • Quantitative so extreme that disrupts
    functioning (dysfunctional), causing harm
  • Specifies regarding symptoms number, length of
    time experienced, frequency
  • Example panic attacks and panic disorder -
    disturbed emotion of anxiety

17
2.4. Normal vs. pathological anxietyDSMs
approach
  • Qualitative criteria
  • Not only about severity
  • Also about forms of anxiety not triggered by
    apparently threatening stimuli
  • Therefore not adaptive or functional
  • Example Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • What if culturally normative?

18
3. CLINICAL ANXIETY3.1. Anxiety as a symptom
  • Anxiety as symptom vs syndrome
  • Signs (objective) and symptoms (subjective)
  • Symptom is a manifestation of underlying disorder
  • Ego-dystonic disorders
  • Examples depression, organic disorders

19
3.2. Anxiety as clinical syndrome
  • Meaning of syndrome
  • Pattern of symptoms in which a dysfunctional and
    harmful form of the emotion of anxiety is
    dominant feature
  • Combination of symptoms cognitive, physiological
    and/or behavioural

20
3.2. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdDSM-IV
classification
  • predominant, manifest, ego-dystonic disturbance
  • - panic disorder
  • - generalized anxiety disorder
  • - social phobia
  • - post-traumatic stress disorder
  • (Desjarlais sees as problematic)
  • underlying mechanism
  • - obsessive compulsive disorder

21
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia
  • a) Description of social phobia.
  • the most prevalent psychological disorder
  • exact presentation varies by culture
  • but is a socially and culturally common
    phenomenon

22
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia
  • DSM criteria
  • Marked fear of social or performance situations
  • Exposed to unfamiliar people or scrutiny
  • Fear will act in embarrassing or humiliating way
  • Exposure to these situations evokes emotion of
    anxiety or panic attacks
  • Person realizes fear is excessive
  • Feared situations are avoided

23
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia contd
  • b) Human emotion vs. disorder
  • can be seen as an adaptive reaction to fear of
    social cues of threat - especially seen in angry
    or threatening faces or voices - humans are
    hardwired
  • so when is it a disorder rather than common
    emotion?

24
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia contd
  • applying Wakefields argument for abnormality
  • when occurs without any obvious threat e.g. being
    watched eating - dysfunctional and maladaptive
    doesnt enhance survival (person knows that)
  • and creates harm e.g. inability to eat, urinate
    or ride on trains

25
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia contd
  • c) What are the pathways to social phobia?
  • biological vulnerability
  • - to arousal
  • - or to be socially inhibited
  • learned as a result of particular experience e.g.
    public humiliation (conditioning)

26
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia contd
  • B D distinguish true alarm and false alarm
  • true alarm there is a threat to the person
    trigger
  • - but how generalized into disorder?
    (dysfunction)
  • - hyperarousal (biological vulnerability)
  • - classical conditioning to other stimuli
  • - excess cognitive sensitivity to social threat
    cognitive vulnerability

27
3.3. Anxiety as clinical syndrome contdSocial
Phobia contd
  • false alarm
  • misinterpretation of social cues as threatening
  • primarily as a function of overdeveloped
    cognitive schemas around criticism or
    disapproval cognitive vulnerability
  • lack of demonstrable external threat

28
4. Dimensions and Aetiology of Anxiety
  • what makes people vulnerable to anxiety?
  • what is the causation of each anxiety disorder?
  • why does one develop specific disorders?
  • dimensions cognitive, physiological, behavioural
    in answer to each
  • Barlow integrative perspective vs
    controversies

29
4. Panic Disorder Causation
  • What causes panic disorder? Controversy
  • Biological theories
  • - neurotransmitter dysfunction accounts for
    spontaneous panic attacks
  • - especially in locus cereleus
  • - respiratory dysfunction hyperventilation
  • - are these cause or effect?

30
4. Panic Disorder Causation
  • Cognitive theories
  • - Clark and Salkovskis cognitive
    misinterpretation of physiological cues as
    catastrophic and life threatening
  • - Again, cause or effect?
  • Cyclical interaction and feedback
  • Behavioural avoidance short-term relief,
    long-term exacerbation

31
  • 4.1. Cognitive dimension.
  • Beck "hypersensitive alarm systems...sensitive
    to any stimuli that might be taken as indicating
    imminent disaster or harm"
  • Vulnerability mode
  • Dysfunction
  • hypersensitive to danger cues
  • hyposensitive to safety cues
  • Questions arising
  • are these necessary/sufficient?
  • Are these primary/secondary?

32
  • 4.2. Physiological dimension.
  • Apparent in anxiety disorders
  • - manifest form
  • - blocking avoidance
  • - secondary symptoms
  • Mechanisms
  • - diagram of NS, especially ANS (Bootzin OHT
    6 12)
  • Link with SxS panic disorder
  • - mediated through CNS - OHP (Bootzin OHT)

33
  • range of specific theories
  • - mainly neurotransmitters (see Bootzin)
  • - example panic disorder
  • gt facilitated by adrenalin
  • gt hyperdynamic beta adrenergic model
  • gt dysfunction of locus ceruleus (OHT)
  • gt benzodiazepines
  • - genetic transmission of
  • questions
  • - primary or secondary
  • - mechanisms, causes, vulnerabilities

34
  • 4.3. Behavioural dimension.
  • manifested in two considerations
  • - distinct behavioural features most commonly
    in form of avoidance
  • gt OCD panic-disorder c agoraphobia
  • realization of importance of B'al/learning
    principles
  • - classical conditioning of ANS responses
  • - recognized as esp NB in maintenance
  • e.g. avoidance in PD

35
  • 4.4. Integration of dimensions and theories.
  • OHT vicious cycle of panic disorder (Barlow T
    28 OHT)
  • OHT integrated model of panic disorder (Barlow T
    22 OHT)

36
Lader's Classification of Types of Anxiety
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