PSYCHIATRIC NURSING (Lecture Series) MOOD DISORDERS Lecture No. 4 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

PSYCHIATRIC NURSING (Lecture Series) MOOD DISORDERS Lecture No. 4

Description:

PSYCHIATRIC NURSING (Lecture Series) MOOD DISORDERS Lecture No. 4 ARNEL MARIA SALGADO y BA AGA School of Nursing Faculty of Medical Sciences University College ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1098
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: Jeya8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PSYCHIATRIC NURSING (Lecture Series) MOOD DISORDERS Lecture No. 4


1
PSYCHIATRIC NURSING(Lecture Series)MOOD
DISORDERSLecture No. 4
  • ARNEL MARIA SALGADO y BAÑAGA
  • School of Nursing Faculty of Medical Sciences
  • University College Sedaya International

2
I. Overview / Classification
  • Mood
  • A prolonged emotional state that affects a
    persons life and personality
  • Change of mood is normal and expected life
    occurrence
  • Mood can easily be influenced by experience like
    watching a movie.
  • Affect
  • Individuals PRESENT feeling and mood
  • Cue is always presented by an individual for
    their mood
  • They demonstrate mood, thoughts and feelings as
    behavior

3
  • C. When there are no changes in mood or the
    change is too pronounced or interferes with daily
    living, working, attention in school, or regular
    involvement in social activities, the individual
    has a mood disorder
  • D. The Mood Disorders are characterized by
    changes in mood that range from depression to
    elation.
  • The DSM-IV describes MD as a person experiencing
    a loss of interest in life and a depressed mood
    that moves from mild to severe and lasts at least
    2 weeks.
  • Dysthymic Disorder
  • A MD classified as chronic
  • Depressed mood fluctuates with Normal Mood
  • The sx in DD are less severe than in major
    Depression

4
MOOD RANGE
DEPRESSED MANIC
Severe Moderate Mild
Normal
Hypomanic Euphoric
BIPOLAR
Cyclothymic Disorder
Unipolar Disorder (Major Depression)
Dysthymic Disorder
5
  • 3. Bipolar Disorder (manic-depressive disorder)
  • Moods alternating between depression and elation
  • The categories of BD are the following
  • Bipolar I there is occurrence of one or more
    manic episodes and one or more depressive
    episodes
  • Bipolar II less severe and has one or more
    hypomanic episodes and one or more depressive
    episodes
  • Mixed (rapidly alternating moods)
  • 4. Cyclothymic Disorder
  • a. Also a mood disorder
  • b. Client demonstrates a range of mood changes
    between moderate
  • depression and hypomania
  • c. The disorder last for at least 2 years
  • d. There is usually no sign of normal range in
    clients with cyclothymic
  • disorder

6
  • 5. SAD (Seasonal Affective Disorder)
  • Client exhibits a depressed mood that occurs in
    season
  • Summer usually is when the client has a normal
    behavior
  • There is a direct correlation with light and the
    production of melatonin in clients with SAD
  • 6. Schizoaffective Disorder
  • a. A combination of the signs of schizophrenia
    and those of mood
  • disorders.
  • b. Symptoms
  • 1. Delusions
  • 2. Hallucinations
  • 3. Diusorganized speech
  • 4. Disorganized behavior

7
  • 5. Negative symptoms (anergia lack of
    activity anhedonia-
  • loss of pleasure social abehavior attention
    deficits
  • avolition blunted affect)
  • 6. Other symptoms include communication
    difficulties,
  • difficulty with abstractions, passive social
    withdrawal, poor grooming and hygiene, poor
    rapport, poverty of speech)
  • 7. Major depressive symptoms or manic symptoms
    or mixed
  • symptoms
  • 7. Co-occuring Disorders
  • a. Person who suffer from mood disorders may
    also suffer from a
  • physical and psychological co-morbid
    disorder.
  • b. Physical disorders can include pain,
    physical illness, stroke,
  • dementia, diabetes, coronary artery disease,
    cancer, chronic
  • fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia

8
  • c. Psychiatric Disorders can include alcohol
    and drug disorders, anxiety
  • disorders, eating disorders, obssessive
    compulsive disorders,
  • somatization disorders and personality
    disorders.
  • 8. Suicide And Mood Disorders
  • a. 15 of the population who experience major
    depressive
  • disorders die by SUICIDE.
  • b. Those who die are aged 55 and above
  • c. Individuals with severe depressive disorder
    are admitted
  • to nursing homes and majority of them are more
  • like to commit suicide on their year of
    admission.
  • 9. Most of the individuals with Mood Disorders go
    undiagnosed or misdiagnosed because their
    symptoms are seen as part of medical disorder and
    not explored as mood disorder or psychological
    Disorder

9
II. Etiology
  • Biological causative Theories of Depressive
    Disorders
  • Alteration in neurological functioning
  • Correlation between CNSs neurotransmitter and
    depressive disorders (1990s)
  • The following bionetic amines are identified as
    relevant to depressions are dopamine serotonin
    norepinephrine
  • Also indicated are the dysregulations of
    acethyulcholine and the gamma-amninobutyric acid
    (GABA)
  • Changes in these neurotransmitters can affect the
    MOOD.
  • 2. Genetic Predisposition

10
  • Endocrine or Hormonal Change
  • Strongly affect an individuals mood and emotions
  • Thyrone secretion affects also the mood
  • Strong correlation between hypothalmic
    pituitary-adrenal (HPA) and MOOD.
  • 4. Circadian Rhythms
  • a. Changes in circadian rhythm affect the mood

11
  • B. Psychological Theories
  • 1. These are derived from the psychoanalytic,
    cognitive,
  • interpersonal and behavioral perspectives
  • 2. Psychoanalytic Perspective
  • Freud believed depression occurs because of an
    ego or object loss in early life.
  • He also believed the loss had a profound effect
    on the development of mental difficulties in
    later life
  • Freud explained depression as anger turned
    inward.
  • The loss of a person or object was usually the
    trigger of the depression
  • Psychoanalysis helps (to gain insight of
    thoughts, feelings and actions)
  • Insight can help anybody to regain the mental
    health state.

12
  • 3. Cognitive Perspective
  • Cognitive theorists believe that depression is
    the outcome when the individual perceives all
    stressful situations as negative
  • The person sees situations in a negative light
    because of early life experiences of loss of
    significant people in his life and spends most of
    life believing that life is negative.
  • Cognitive therapy aims to help individuals to
    learn how to perceive the worlds in a positive
    light and teach them how to relearn thinking and
    decision making based on positive rather than
    negative processing.
  • The process of relearning is slow but has an
    outcome that helps the individual change his
    moment-to-moment thinking from a negative frame
    or reference to positive outlook.
  • In essence, the client expels negative
    perceptions and distortions and replaces them
    with positive experiences and tools

13
  • 4. Behavioral Perspective
  • Emphasis Individual develops depression when
    feelings of helplessness, unworthiness and
    powerlessness are the norm during the
    developmental years
  • 5. Sociological Perspective
  • Emphasis Variations of the learned theory
    include stress theory and
  • antipsychiatric theory
  • Stress theorists believe that the individual
    becomes depressed because of an inability to
    incorporate life experiences, perceptions, social
    support, biopsychosocial powerlessness and
    occurrences of stress into life
  • In contrast, antipsychiatric theorist believe
    that depression is not an abnormal state but
    rather a reaction to oppression and socioeconomic
    inequality

14
III. ASSESSMENT
  • Intake Assessment
  • The assessment Documentation
  • Focused on Psychological Assessment Tools
  • Psychometric Assessment Tools
  • Beck Depression Inventory
  • Geriatric Depression Scale
  • Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS)

15
IV. Nursing Diagnosis / Analysis
  • High risk for Violence, self-directed related to
    depressed mood, feeling of worthlessness,
    hopelessness and suicide ideation or plan.
  • High risk for violence, directed at others
    related to poor impulse control and labile
    affect.
  • Ineffective individual coping related to lack of
    energy, inability to concentrate or make
    decisions.
  • Nutrition, altered, less /more than body
    requirements related to inappropriate nutritional
    intake to meet metabolic needs lack of interest
    in eating/food or choosing nutritional foods
    aversion to eating dysfunctional eating pattern
  • Sleep pattern disturbance related to biochemical
    alterations (decrease serotonin) or psychological
    stress, lack of recognition of fatigue/need to
    sleep, hyperactivity
  • Spiritual distress related to a sense of purpose
    or joy in life lack of connectedness to others
    misperceived shame and guilt.

16
V. Planning and Implementation
  • Specific Treatment Modalities
  • ECT
  • Antidepressant Medications
  • Mood Stabilizers Medications
  • Group and Individual Therapies
  • Cognitive, behavioral, interpersonal,
    psychodynamic, family and group therapy
  • Phototherapy
  • Nursing Modalities

17
PHOTOTHERAPY
18
VI. Evaluation / Outcomes
  • Outcome criteria for clients suffering from mood
    disorders include long and short term behaviors
    and responses that indicate improved functioning.
  • These are based on nursing diagnosis and are
    achieved through the implementation of specific
    nursing interventions.
  • Outcome criteria provide the nurse with
    direction for evaluating the clients response to
    treatment and nursing care.
  • Short-and-long term goals
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com