Title: Anxiety Disorders
1Anxiety Disorders
2Lecture content
- Psychology of normal anxiety
- Anxiety disorders - general features
- Specific disorders
- Panic disorder
- Generalised anxiety disorder
- Phobias
- OCD
- PTSD
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4Stress
- Definition Experiencing events that are
perceived as endangering ones physical or
psychological well-being. The events are known as
stressors and the result as the stress response - The response to stressors is influenced by
- Controllability, predictability and challenge to
our limits. - Holmes Life Events Scale
- Different psychological responses to stress
include - Anxiety
- Anger and aggression
- Apathy and depression
- Cognitive impairment
5Definition of anxiety
- A vague unpleasant emotion that is experienced in
anticipation of some future misfortune - A state of apprehension, uncertainty or fear,
resulting from the anticipation of a realistic or
imaginary threatening event or situation - May have emotional, behavioural, cognitive and
physical components
6Structures and neurotransmitters involved in
anxiety
- Structures involved
- Cerebral cortex
- Limbic system- hypothalamus, hippocampus,
amygdala, cingulum - Thalamus, locus ceruleus, raphe nucleus
- Neurotransmitters
- NA, 5HT, GABA
7Fight or flight response
- Physiological response to a stressor
- Mediated through the hypothalamus and LC
- Initial activation of the sympathetic nervous
system - Subsequent activation of the pituitary adrenal
axis - Terminated by negative feedback and para
sympathetic system
8Effects of sympathetic stimulation
- Mediated through noradrenaline and adrenaline
- Increased heart rate and contractility
- Increased respiratory rate
- Sweating
- Increased glucose availability
- Shunting of blood to muscles
- Increased muscle tension
- Enhanced blood clotting
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10Effects of HPA axis stimulation
- Mediated through CRH, ACTH and cortisol
- Promotes breakdown of glycogen to glucose in
liver - Promotes glucose uptake into cells
- CRH also activates locus ceruleus
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12Anxiety as a normal adaptive function
- Evolutionary viewpoint
- Looks at traits in the context of natural
selection and promotion of the species - Primitive environment with many physical dangers
anxiety had a protective function as a warning
system and in helping escape - Anxiety - response to cues of potential danger
- Protection general or specific depending on
nature of threats c.f.. Immune system - Avoidance, aggression, freezing or appeasement
13Anxiety as a normal adaptive function continued
- Preparedness - We are more likely to become
anxious in response to cues that represent
ancient dangers e.g.,snakes, strangers, storms,
blood. - Not flowers, leaves, shallow water
- Not in response to more evolutionary recent
dangers - guns, cars
14Benefits of anxiety
Yerkes-Dodson law Performance improves as a
function of anxiety up to a threshold beyond
which there is a fall off in performance
15Anxiety disorders - terminology
- Neurosis William Cullen
- General deficiency of nervous system
- Psychoneurosis Sigmund Freud 1900
- Unreleased sexual tension - hypochondriasis
- Repressed thoughts - phobias
- ICD10 Neurotic, stress related and somatoform
disorders. - DSM IV Anxiety disorders
16Anxiety disorders
- Anxiety disorders are extremes of normal anxiety
- Occur when normal anxiety system becomes
dysregulated - excessive, inappropriate or
deficient - Common - ECA lifetime prevalence 15 -20
17Shared features of anxiety disorders
- Substantial proportion of aetiology is stress
related. - Reality testing is intact.
- Symptoms are ego dystonic (distressing)
- Disorders are enduring or recurrent.
- Demonstrable organic factors are absent
18Aetiology of anxiety disorders
- Genetic
- Family studies
- Linkage studies
- Neurotransmitter abnormalities
- 5HT, NA, GABA
- HPA axis dysregulation
19Aetiology of anxiety disorders
- Psycho-analytic theories - unconscious defence
mechanisms - Phobia - displacement
- OCD - reaction formation, undoing
- PTSD - denial, repression
- Cognitive theories
- Selective attention and catastrophic thinking
- Behaviour - learned behaviour
20Anxiety disorders - aetiology
- Social factors
- Early life adversity
- Stressful events especially those involving
threat - Lack of support network
- Personality factors
- Some personality traits predispose to certain
anxiety disorders avoidant, perfectionist
21Panic Disorder
- Recurrent attacks of severe anxiety
- Physical symptoms
- Palpitations, chest pain, choking sensation,
dizziness, breathlessness, tingling in the hands
and feet, sweating, faintness. - Emotional and behavioural symptoms
- Fear of dying, losing control, going mad
- Feeling of unreality - depersonalisation
- Need to exit situation
22Panic Disorder continued
- Sudden in onset
- Not predictable or confined to a given situation
- Concern about future attacks and secondary
avoidance - Otherwise relatively free of anxiety between
attacks - ICD10 criteria - several severe attacks within a
month
23Panic disorder - differential
- Panic attacks as part of a phobic disorder
- distinction between panic disorder and
agoraphobia controversial - Depression
- PTSD
- Substance abuse
- Physical disorders e.g., phaeochromocytoma
24Panic disorder - epidemiology
- ECA - 1 of population
- More prevalent in females
- Ages 25 - 44
- 20 have another anxiety disorder
- Positive family history of panic disorder in 25
25Panic disorder - pharmacological treatment
- Assess and tx comorbid problems
- SSRIs - paroxetine, citalopram - can initially
worsen panic attacks - Benzodiazepines - good short term relief but high
risk of dependency - alprazolam - TCAs - imipramine, clomipramine
- MAOIs - especially in mixed panic depressive
states but use limited by ADR - High rate of relapse on cessation of tx
26Panic Disorder The Cognitive Perspective
Tendency to interpret a range of bodily
sensations in a catastropic fashion. Selective
attention to internal cues and avoidance compound
the problem.
27Panic disorder - psychological treatments
- Behavioural therapy
- exposure and response prevention
- relaxation techniques
- Cognitive behaviour therapy
- education
- recognition and change of negative thoughts
28Generalised Anxiety Disorder
- Anxiety is generalised and persistent
- Free-floating anxiety not situational.
- ICD10 - symptoms present most days for weeks
- Motor tension
- Muscle tension, twitching and shaking,
restlessness, . - Apprehension
- Feeling on edge,unable to cope, poor
concentration, insomnia, irritability - Autonomic over-activity
- Lightheadedness, sweating, tachycardia, dry
mouth, epigastric discomfort
29GAD - epidemiology
- One year prevalence 3 - 8
- Females more likely 21
- Age of onset 20 - 35
- 50 have another psychiatric diagnosis
30GAD - differential
- Other anxiety disorders
- Depression
- Substance abuse
- Schizophrenia
- Physical conditions
- hyperthyroidism, angina
- Early dementia
31GAD - Management
- Biological
- Benzodiazepines - short-term tx
- SSRIs -
- Venlafaxime
- MAOIs
- Psychological
- Anxiety management - based on CBT principle
32Phobias
- Anxiety evoked by specific circumstances or
situations. Fear is out of proportion to the
situation and is beyond voluntary control. - Agoraphobia
- Social phobia
- Specific phobias
- Plus or minus panic disorder
- Avoidance is a characteristic feature
- Strong association with depression
33Agoraphobia
- Fear of open spaces, crowds or public places.
- Fear of travelling by public transport
- Fear that it may be difficult to get to a place
of safety (home) - Situations where an immediately available exit is
lacking are avoided.
34Agoraphobia - symptoms
- Autonomic symptoms - faintness, palpitations,
SOB, sweating - Panic attacks marker of severity
- Psychological symptoms - fear, dread
- Behavioural symptoms - avoidance to the extent
that the person becomes house bound - Cognitive symptoms - I might have died
35Agoraphobia - epidemiology (similar to panic
disorder)
- Predominantly females 75
- Age of onset 15 to 35
- Risk factors
- Stressful life events
- Family history 20 relative with agoraphobia
- Domestic instability family or marital
difficulties - History of childhood fears or enuresis
- Overprotective family members
- Differential diagnosis
- Depression, schizophrenia, dementia
36Agoraphobia - Management and Prognosis
- Behaviour therapy - graded exposure and
systematic desensitisation - CBT
- Family therapy
- Self help books
- Pharmacotherapy - as for panic disorder
37Social Phobia
- Fear of scrutiny by others in relatively small
groups - Fear of acting in a way that will be embarrassing
or humiliating or appear ridiculous - Feared social situation associated with intense
anxiety and distress - blushing,
tremor,butterflies - Leads to avoidance of social situations that
involve e.g., eating, public speaking - isolation - Differential diagnosis
- Body dysmorphic disorder, panic disorder,
depression, paranoid psychosis
38Social phobia - epidemiology
- Roughly equal sex incidence
- Onset in adolescence
- Prevalence - 1-2
- Often co-morbid depression or alcohol and
substance abuse
39Social phobia - management
- Assess and treat co-morbid conditions
- Pharmacotherapy
- Behavioural and CBT techniques
40Specific phobias
- Anxiety provoked only in response to a specific
stimulus or situation - Panic attacks can occur
- Degree of disability is related to ease or
difficulty of avoiding the feared object - Feared object usually something that posed a
threat at some time in history - animals, storms,
heights, darkness, blood - Behavioural approach most useful
41Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
- Repetitive unwanted obsessions or compulsive acts
- Obsession is recurrent and intrusive thought,
feeling, idea, image or impulses - Usually distressing e.g., contamination, obscene,
violent - Sometimes futile e.g., quasi-philosophical
- Indecision between two alternatives
- Resisted but this causes tension
- Recognised as the persons own thoughts
42OCD continued
- Compulsions are stereotyped behaviours repeated
again and again - Cleaning, checking, tidying, counting,
- Sometimes marked indecision or slowness
- Not enjoyable or useful
- May be thought of as protective in some way and
can reduce anxiety - Autonomic symptoms present
- Close links with depression
43OCD epidemiology
- Lifetime prevalence 1 -2
- Equal sex incidence
- Age of onset 20 - usually abrupt
- Often delay of years in seeking tx
- Course chronic and fluctuating
- Often co-morbid anxiety disorders, (social phobia
25), depression (67), eating disorders
44OCD - Management
- Behaviour therapy
- Exposure and response prevention
- Paradoxical injunctions
- CBT - less useful
- Pharmacotherapy
- SSRIs, Clomipramine
- Augmentation with quetiapine or risperidone
- Clonazepam
45OCD
- Psychosurgery - indicated rarely for severe
intractable cases - Outcome 60 respond to SSRIs but relapse is
common on cessation of tx - Predictors of poor outcome are male sex, early
onset and obsessional slowness
46Disorders arising as a reaction to stress
- Acute stress reaction
- Post traumatic stress disorder
- Adjustment disorders - mild transient response to
stress precipitated by life events within the
normal range - Clear-cut stressor or trauma without which
disorder would not occur
47Acute stress reaction
- Overwhelming traumatic experience involving
threat to life, physical integrity or social
position of individual or a loved one - RTA, battle, rape, multiple bereavement
- Daze, disorientation, mixed picture
- Withdrawn or agitated
- Autonomic symptoms
- Onset within minutes, resolves 48-72 hrs
48Post traumatic stress disorder PTSD
- Delayed or protracted response to trauma ( often
involving threat to life) - Onset usually within 6 months of event
- Core symptom is reliving the event
- Flashbacks, nightmares, waking dreams
- Emotional numbness and detachment
- Avoidance of activities, situations that remind
person of trauma
49PTSD continued
- Autonomic hyper arousal
- Hypervigilance, increased startle, insomnia
- Mood disorder - anxiety or depression
- Abuse of alcohol or drugs
50PTSD - Mx
- SSRIs, Serotinergic TCAS
- Behavioural tx
- CBT
- Family tx
- Debriefing - no clear evidence base
51PTSD - outcome
- Symptoms fluctuate over time
- Most intense at times of stress
- 30 complete recovery
- 10 do badly
- Predictors of poor outcome - Hx of childhood
trauma, borderline or ontisocial personality
traits, poor support network, heavy alcohol intake
52Dissociative and somatoform disorders
- Disorders in which person presents with physical
symptoms for which there is no medical
explanation - Psychological explanation or cause often present
- Diagnosis of exclusion
- Liaison psychiatry
53Summary
- Anxiety disorders are common
- They are distressing and cause loss of function
- They occur commonly with other co-morbid
psychiatric disorders - They are amenable to pharmacological and
psychological treatment
54Any questions ?