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Anxiety Disorders

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Title: Anxiety Disorders


1
Anxiety Disorders
2
Importance of Anxiety Disorders
  • Associated with considerable suffering and
    impaired functioning
  • Some anxiety sufferers are housebound many are
    unable to work
  • Prevalence
  • Among the most common psychiatric disorders
  • 1 year prevalence 12-17 (one or more anx
    disorder)
  • Leading cause for seeking mental health services
  • Total economic costs
  • ( of psychiatric health care budget)
  • Anxiety disorders (32) gt mood disorders (22)
    gt schizophrenia (21)

3
Approaches to Classification
  • lumpers vs. splitters
  • DSM-III began the process of splitting the
    anxiety disorders into many smaller categories

4
Fundamental Features of Anxiety Disorders
  • Unwanted emotions
  • panic attacks
  • chronic anxiety
  • excessive fear
  • Unwanted thoughts
  • obsessions
  • excessive worries
  • intrusive recollections
  • Unwanted actions
  • avoidance, escape, distraction
  • compulsions

5
Major Anxiety Disorders in DSM-IV
  • Panic disorder
  • Agoraphobia
  • Specific phobia
  • Social phobia (social anxiety disorder)
  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder
  • Acute stress disorder

6
DSM-IV Criteria for Panic Disorder
  • recurrent unexpected panic attacks
  • at least 1 attack followed by at least a month of
    1 or more of the following
  • persistent concern about having additional panic
    attacks
  • worry about implications of the attack
  • significant change in behaviour related to the
    attacks

7
Panic Attack Defining Features
  • Discrete period of intense fear or discomfort
  • abrupt onset
  • peaks within 10 min
  • peak intensity lasts an average of 20 min
  • can occur during waking hours or during sleep
  • four or more symptoms required to define a DSM-IV
    panic attack
  • attacks with fewer than four symptoms are called
    limited symptom panic attacks

8
Panic Attack Symptoms
  • Palpitations
  • Sweating
  • Trembling or shaking
  • Dyspnea
  • Choking sensations
  • Chest pain or discomfort
  • Nausea or GI distress
  • Chills or hot flushes
  • Paresthesias (numbness or tingling)
  • Dizziness or faintness
  • Derealization or depersonalization
  • Fear of losing control or going crazy
  • Fear of dying

9
DSM-IV Criteria for Agoraphobia
  • anxiety about being in places or situations from
    which escape might be difficult
  • or in which help may not be available if panic
    attacks or panic-like symptoms occur
  • the agoraphobic situations are avoided (e.g.,
    travel is restricted) or else endured with marked
    distress

10
Agoraphobia Situations Commonly Feared and
Avoided
  • Travelling
  • Being far from home
  • Enclosed spaces
  • Wide open spaces
  • Supermarket line-ups
  • High places
  • Being alone

11
Specific Phobia
  • Severe, excessive, and persistent fear
  • Exposure to phobic object evokes fear or panic
  • Person typically avoids phobic object
  • Recognizes the fear is unreasonable
  • Subtypes
  • animals
  • natural environment stimuli (e.g., heights,
    water)
  • situations (e.g., enclosed spaces)
  • blood-injection-injury
  • other

12
Social Phobia
  • same basic criteria as specific phobia
  • social or performance situations in which the
    person is exposed to unfamiliar people or to
    possible scrutiny by others
  • person fears acting in a way that will be
    humiliating or embarrassing

13
Social Phobia Examples of Feared Situations
  • giving a speech
  • musical performances
  • playing a musical instrument
  • singing
  • one-to-one conversations
  • authority figures
  • people of the opposite sex
  • eating in a restaurant
  • urinating in a public restroom

14
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • excessive anxiety and worry
  • occurring on most days
  • for at least 6 months
  • person worries about a number of events or
    activities
  • person finds it difficult to control worry

15
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Either obsessions or compulsions
  • Obsessions
  • recurrent, persistent thoughts, impulses, or
    images
  • intrusive, unwanted
  • distressing
  • not simply excessive worries
  • Compulsions
  • repetitive behaviours or mental acts
  • aimed at reducing distress or preventing harm
  • often in response to obsessions

16
Examples of Obsessions
  • violent impulses and images
  • sexual thoughts
  • blasphemous thoughts

17
Examples of Compulsions
  • compulsive cleaning
  • compulsive checking
  • hoarding of possessions
  • ordering and arranging objects

18
Traumatic Stress Disorders
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder
  • Acute stress disorder
  • Discussed in the following lecture

19
Lifetime Prevalence ()
Among people exposed to traumatic events
20
Untreated Course of Anxiety Disorders
  • Often arise in the context of stressful life
    events
  • Typically chronic, but some remit without
    treatment
  • Severity tends to wax and wane, often in response
    to life stressors
  • For a given disorder, different symptoms can
    follow different courses e.g.,
  • panic attacks may decrease in frequency as
    agoraphobia becomes more severe
  • obsessions may decrease in frequency as
    compulsions becomes more severe

21
Gender Differences and Age of Onset
  • Most anxiety disorders Gender ratio (FM) ranges
    from 21 to 31
  • OCD no gender differences
  • Age of onset
  • varies with disorder
  • varies with exposure to stressors
  • trends
  • many anxiety disorders arise in adolescence
  • phobias often arise in childhood

22
Comorbidity
  • Current vs. lifetime comorbidity
  • Anxiety disorders are often comorbid with
  • one another
  • mood disorders
  • substance-use disorders
  • eating disorders
  • personality disorders
  • Why are anxiety disorders so often comorbid with
    other disorders?

23
Relation Between Anxiety and Depression
  • both defined in terms of negative emotional
    experience
  • both triggered by stressful experiences
  • both respond to similar treatment methods (SSRIs,
    cognitive-behaviour therapy)

24
Clark and Watsons Model of Anxiety and Depression
  • two dimensions of mood positive and negative
    affect
  • negative affect
  • high upset low relaxed
  • descriptive adjectives such as angry, guilty,
    afraid, sad, disgusted, or worried
  • positive affect
  • high energetic low tired
  • descriptive adjectives such as delighted,
    interested, enthusiastic, proud

25
Clark and Watsons Model of Anxiety and Depression
  • general distress depressed people and anxious
    people both experience high levels of negative
    affect
  • they are distinguished on the basis of positive
    affect
  • depressed people are low on positive affect
    (e.g., loss of interest fatigue anhedonia)
  • anxious people also experience high levels of
    physiological arousal

26
Clark and Watsons Model
High negative affect
High positive affect
Low positive affect
Low negative affect
27
Environmental and Genetic Factors in Anxiety
Disorders
  • Anxiety disorders appear to arise from
    combination of
  • disorder specific genetic factors
  • disorder specific environmental factors
  • disorder non-specific genetic factors
  • disorder specific environmental factors
  • Genetic factors appear to influence the sorts of
    environment a person chooses
  • e.g., genes for sensation-seeking --gt exposure to
    traumatic events

28
Role of Life Events in Anxiety and Depression
  • people with anxiety disorders have experienced
    more stressful life events
  • DANGER EVENTS lead to anxiety
  • LOSS EVENTS lead to depression

29
Role of Learning
  • Conditioned fear reactions
  • classical (Pavlovian) conditioning
  • operant conditioning (e.g., avoidance learning)
  • role in PTSD, phobias
  • Maladaptive beliefs
  • different mechanism to Pavlovian conditioning?
  • prominent role in panic disorder
  • appear to play a role in other anxiety disorders

30
Classical Conditioning (Pavlov)
  • UCS (meat powder) --gt UCR (salivation)
  • CS (ringing a bell) --gt CR (salivation)
  • original version any neutral stimulus can be
    paired with the UCS and eventually lead to the CR
  • the case of Little Albert

31
Preparedness Version of Learning Theory
  • problems with traditional theory
  • conditioned fear responses are easy to extinguish
  • phobias that develop after trauma are usually
    learned in only one trial (not in labs)
  • why are phobias only associated with certain
    kinds of stimuli?

32
Preparedness Theory of Phobias
  • organisms are biologically prepared to learn
    certain kinds of associations quickly
  • biological constraints on learning
  • cannot use simply any neutral stimulus as the CS
    in classical conditioning
  • organisms wiring shaped by evolutionary
    pressures
  • prepared associations are learned in one trial
    and are very difficult to extinguish

33
Clarks Cognitive Model of Panic Attacks
34
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35
Examples of Links Between Sensations and
Misinterpretations
36
People with panic disorder can catastrophically
misinterpret all sorts of stimuli, including
visual illusions
37
How does the Cognitive Model Explain Unexpected
Panic Attacks?
38
Empirically Supported Treatments for Anxiety
Disorders
  • Drug therapies
  • SSRIs e.g., Prozac
  • High potency benzodiazepines e.g., Xanax
  • Cognitive-behavioural therapies
  • exposure therapy
  • cognitive restructuring
  • Important considerations
  • Patient preference
  • High addiction potential for some drugs (e.g.,
    Xanax)
  • Relapse rates higher for drugs than for CBT

39
Cognitive Symptoms in Anxiety Disorders (Beck)
  • Sensory-Perceptual
  • Mind hazy, cloudy, foggy, dazed.
  • Self-conscious
  • Hypervigilant
  • Thinking Difficulties
  • Cant recall important things
  • Confused
  • Unable to control thinking

40
Cognitive Symptoms in Anxiety Disorders (Beck)
  • Conceptual
  • Cognitive distortions
  • Fear of losing control
  • Fear of negative evaluations
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