Abnormal Psychology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Abnormal Psychology

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Agoraphobia. Specific Phobias. Social Phobia. General characteristics ... Agoraphobia. Agoraphobia without panic. Panic and the Brain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abnormal Psychology


1
  • Abnormal Psychology

WEB
2
Anxiety as a Normal and an Abnormal Response
  • Some amount of anxiety is normal and is
    associated with optimal levels of functioning.
  • Only when anxiety begins to interfere with social
    or occupational functioning is it considered
    abnormal.

3
The Bell Curve
4
Phobic Disorders
  • Phobias
  • Specific phobias
  • Social phobia
  • Agoraphobia

5
Specific Phobias
6
Social Phobia
  • General characteristics
  • Fear of being in social situations in
    which one will be
    embarrassed or humiliated

7
Panic Disorder With and Without Agoraphobia
  • Panic disorder
  • Panic versus anxiety
  • Agoraphobia
  • Agoraphobia without panic

8
Panic and the Brain
9
Panic Disorder The Cognitive Theory of Panic
10
Treating Anxiety Disorders
  • Medications
  • Behavioral and cognitive-behavioral treatments

11
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • General characteristics
  • Prevalence and age of onset
  • Comorbidity with other disorders

12
Generalized Anxiety DisorderBiological Causal
Factors
  • Genetic factors
  • A functional deficiency of GABA
  • Neurobiological differences between anxiety and
    panic

13
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Obsessions- repetitive unwanted ideas that the
    person recognizes are irrational
  • Compulsions- repetitive, often ritualized
    behavior whose behavior serves to diminish
    anxiety caused by obsessions

14
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Critical Component
  • Symptoms occurs AFTER a traumatic stressor

15
Symptoms Categories
  • Intrusive
  • distressing recollections
  • dreams
  • flashbacks
  • psychological trigger reactions
  • physiological trigger reactions

16
Symptoms Categories
  • Avoidance
  • avoid thoughts, feelings or discussions
  • avoid activities, places
  • memory blocks
  • anhedonia (without pleasure)
  • numb
  • alexithymia (emotions unknown)
  • feeling of doom

17
Symptom Categories
  • Hyperarousal Symptoms
  • sleep disturbance
  • anger problems
  • concentration
  • startle response
  • on guard hypervigilence

18
Mood Disorders
  • Major Depressive Disorder
  • Bipolar I and Bipolar II
  • Cyclothymia
  • Hypomania
  • Dysthymia
  • Schizoaffective disorder

19
Categories of Personality Disorders
  • Cluster A
  • Paranoid
  • Schizoid
  • Schizotypal

20
Personality Disorders
  • Paranoid personality disorder
  • Schizoid personality disorder
  • Schizotypal personality disorder
  • Histrionic personality disorder

21
Categories of Personality Disorders
  • Cluster B
  • Histrionic
  • Narcissistic
  • Antisocial
  • Borderline

22
Categories of Personality Disorders
  • Cluster C
  • Avoidant
  • Dependent
  • Obsessive-compulsive

23
The Clinical Picture in Schizophrenia
  • Positive symptoms
  • Delusions fixed firm beliefs with no basis in
    reality
  • Most common are grandiose, persecutory and
    referential
  • Hallucinations disturbances in perception
  • Can occur in any of the five senses
  • Most common are auditory and visual

24
The Clinical Picture in Schizophrenia
  • Formal Thought Disorder (a positive symptom)
  • Disturbances in speech that reflect underlying
    problems in cognition or thinking
  • Most common forms are tangentiality and
    circumstantiality
  • Less common are neologisms, word salad and clang
    associations

25
The Clinical Picture in Schizophrenia
  • Negative symptoms (Nancy Andreasen)
  • Avolition
  • Anhedonia
  • Alogia
  • Flat Affect
  • Asociality

26
The Classic Subtypes of Schizophrenia
  • Undifferentiated type
  • Catatonic type
  • Disorganized type
  • Paranoid type

27
Graph of HS drug use
28
Substance-Related Disorders Methods of taking
substances
? 7 sec inhaling
? 20 sec IV
? 4 min snort or Intramuscular injection
? 30 min oral
29
When is addiction addiction?
  • What is substance use?
  • What is substance abuse?
  • What is substance dependence?
  • Where is the line???????

30
DSM-IV Criteria
  • Substance Abuse
  • leads to impairment or distress
  • one of these within 1 yr
  • failure to full fill role obligations
  • physically hazardous
  • legal problems
  • persistent social problems
  • Substance Dependence
  • leads to impairment or distress
  • 3 of the following
  • tolerance
  • withdrawal
  • delirium tremens (DTs)
  • take more than intended
  • persistent desire
  • fail to control use
  • lots of time spent obtaining, using, or
    recovering from
  • use in place of activities
  • continuing despite physical or psychological
    problems

31
Solomons Opponent Process Theory of Addiction
  • Basic Premise- People take, abuse and become
    dependent on drugs because of the effect of these
    drugs
  • The Clements Corollary- noone ever becomes
    addicted to thorazine
  • A State- the initial pleasant effect
  • B State-unpleasant effects occurring as a result
    of drug withdrawal

32
The Clinical Picture of Alcohol Abuse and
Dependence
  • Alcohols effects on the brain
  • Physical effects of chronic alcohol use
  • Psychosocial effects of abuse and dependence

33
Alcohol (ETOH)
  • Short-term effects
  • absorbed from the stomach into the blood
  • metabolized by the liver (1 oz/hr)
  • it is a drug
  • acts within brain to
  • stimulate GABA receptors
  • reduces tension
  • ? dopamine/serotonin levels
  • pleasurable aspects of intoxication
  • inhibits glutamate receptors
  • diminishes cognitive abilities
  • Long-term effects
  • reduced food intake
  • ETOH no nutrient value
  • impairs food digestion
  • results in vitamin deficiency
  • B-complex
  • can lead to brain damage/amnesia
  • kills brain cells
  • leads to loss of gray matter from the temporal
    lobes
  • Korsakoffs Syndrome
  • suppresses the immune system

34
Alcohol (ETOH)
  • A drink
  • 1 oz. Spirits 1 glass wine 1 beer
  • DWI (Driving while intoxicated)
  • takes approximately 2-4 drinks over one hour
  • lighter weight, empty stomach will require less
  • legal blood alcohol limit (.10)
  • DUI (Driving under the influence)
  • The CAGE

35
Alcohol Addiction Treatment
  • Admitting the problem
  • a prerequisite for therapy (video clip)
  • Inpatient Hospital treatment
  • expensive does not lead to better results
  • may be necessary for safe detoxification
  • Aversion therapy
  • Antabuse - drug that creates nausea
  • uses operant conditioning principles
  • Controlled drinking training
  • Self-Help groups
  • Alcoholics Anonymous
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