1 / 35

Evaluation and Treatment of Depression and Suicide

This case study explores the evaluation and treatment of depression and suicide in a 51-year-old male welder who is currently out of work due to a hand injury. The patient presents with symptoms of low energy and myalgias, and his wife has been urging him to seek help. The article discusses the prevalence of depression, its impact on medical illnesses, and diagnostic criteria. Treatment options such as pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy are also explored.

duplantis
Download Presentation

Evaluation and Treatment of Depression and Suicide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluation and Treatment of Depression and Suicide Cindy Boyack, MD, FRCPC Maine Medical Center Department of Psychiatry April 12, 2018

  2. Case • 51 yo male, welder, out of work due to work injury (hand injury- recovering well) for past 4 months presents with complaint of low energy, myalgias. His wife made the appointment and has been nagging him for weeks to see the doctor. • His symptoms have been more pronounced over past month, he has been “laying around the house- not like me at all doc”

  3. Depression • Common in Primary Care • Lifetime risk 10-25% for women • Lifetime risk 5-12% for men • 60% recurrence rate after a single episode • Prevalence unrelated to ethnicity, education, or social status (though presentation can differ) • Age of onset often in 20’s, but appears to be trending towards earlier in life.

  4. Depression • 5-10% will subsequently have a manic episode • 15-20 % will have a co-occurring anxiety disorder • Resolve completely in 2/3 of cases, 1/3 only recover partially or not at all • Chronic medical illness or substance use can contribute to onset or exacerbate symptoms

  5. Depression • Multiple studies show depression worsens morbidity for other chronic illnesses such as CAD, diabetes • Individuals with chronic psychiatric disorders generally more likely to have chronic medical illnesses, life expectance 20 years less than general population

  6. Case (cont) • You ask questions for PHQ-2, pt reports he is feeling very guilty about not being the breadwinner of late, and not getting chores done around the house. • You have pt complete a PHQ-9- his score is 16. • What next????

  7. DepressionSymptoms (DSM-V Criteria) • At least five of the following: • Depressed mood most of the day • Diminished pleasure, and interest • Significant wt loss or wt gain, or significant change in appetite • Insomnia or hypersomnia

  8. Depression Symptoms • Psychomotor agitation or retardation • Loss of energy or fatigue • Decreased concentration or memory or indecisiveness • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide

  9. DepressionDiagnostic Criteria • Symptoms cause significant impairment in important areas of functioning • Not due to the direct result of a substance or general medical condition • Not better accounted for by bereavement

  10. Case (cont) • Obtain further history of current sx: • Pt is lethargic, sleeps all the time • Appetite is off some, eats once per day, has lost 5 lbs • Not getting out, doesn’t answer phone • Doing ADL’s and not much else

  11. Case (cont) • More irritable with wife and family • Screen for manic sx is negative • Pt not using illicit substances or ETOH, no longer requiring pain medications • Wishes he could fall asleep and not wake up sometimes, denies active suicidal ideation

  12. Treatment of Depressive Disorders • Pharmacotherapy: • Serotonergic drugs- anxiety and depression • Noradrenergic- depression • Dopaminergic- depression • Gabaergic- anxiety

  13. Treatment of Depression • Pharmacotherapy • Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors • Fluoxetine-20-80mg per day • Paroxetine-20-60mg per day • Fluvoxamine-150-300mg per day • Sertraline-50-200mg per day • Citalopram (40mg) and Escitalopram-(10-20mg) • Side effects-Insomnia, jitteriness, sleepiness, headache, upset stomach, sexual side effects

  14. Pharmacotherapy • Dual Action Antidepressants (norepinephrine and serotonin) • Mirtazapine- 15-60mg per day • Side effects- sedation, weight gain, dizziness, flu like symptoms, dry mouth, constipation • Venlafaxine-150-300mg per day • Side effects-headache, insomnia, somnolence, nausea, dizziness, increase in blood pressure, sexual side effects

  15. Pharmacotherapy • Dual action agents (serotonin and norepinephrine) • Duloxetine 30-60mg per day • Side effects include nausea and vomiting, dry mouth, insomnia, somnolence, dizziness, sexual side effects

  16. Pharmacotherapy • Tricyclic Antidepressants • Imipramine, desipramine, amitryptiline, nortryptiline, clomipramine, doxepin • Side effects- dry mouth, dizziness, somnolence, constipation, blurry vision, urinary hesitancy, CARDIAC, sexual side effects • Bupropion- 300-450mg per day • Side effects-seizures in eating disordered patients, insomnia, jitteriness, dry mouth, headache, nausea

  17. Case (cont) You discuss your diagnosis with pt. He recalls that his mother was probably depressed, never treated. He agrees to take medication. What next???????

  18. Case (continued) • You decide to treat with bupropion, given his low energy and absence of anxiety sx. • Time has run out on this visit • What next????

  19. Psychotherapy • Interpersonal Psychotherapy • Evidence based, manualized, time limited • Psychoeducation, reconnection with supports, cognitive in focus • Variably available in this area

  20. Psychotherapy • Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy • Evidence based, manualized, time limited • Individual and group settings • Effective in depressive and anxiety disorders • Widely available in this area • Bibliotherapy: “Feeling Good, The New Mood Therapy” by David Burns

  21. Psychotherapy • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy- CBT based model gaining popularity in primary care, can be adapted to quick interventions. Focus is on improving function

  22. Psychotherapy • Supportive Psychotherapy • Designed to bolster individual strengths • Problem solving • Stress or crisis management

  23. Combined Therapy • A combination of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy is more effective than either one alone • Now confirmed by multiple studies

  24. Case (continued) • Pt returns for follow-up in 2 weeks. He is tolerating medications well, feels “a little better, more energy, not as snappy with kids • You introduce the possibility of seeing the BHS for further support and possible referral for therapy • Pt says he “isn’t into that touchy-feely stuff.” • What next??????

  25. Brief Interventions You Can Use In Your Office • Education • Call pt’s attention to negative or catastrophic thinking as depressive thoughts, define as symptoms • Encourage exercise • Encourage re-establishing routine

  26. Case (continued) • Pt sets goal to get renovate the bathroom in the next week, run 30 min 5 x per week, change the oil, and put a new carburetor in his truck…… • What next?????

  27. Brief Interventions You Can Use In Your Office • Work with patient to set attainable goals for next week- e.g.: eat twice per day, shower 3/week, get dressed every day, etc • Work with pt to establish simple schedule- which includes down time • Work with patient to reconnect with supports/social contacts • Encourage pt to review above goals daily, and celebrate accomplishments

  28. SuicideRisk Factors • Male>Female 3.5 to1 • Age-peak: middle aged men • Mental Disorder of some type, more likely after initial episodes of illness • Race: Caucasians top list, Native Americans second

  29. SuicideRisk Factors • Previous suicide attempt (esp in males) • Access to firearms (49.8% of all suicides) or other means (drugs, rope, etc) • LGBT-increased suicidal behaviors • Occupation- dentists and physicians highest! • Living alone, divorced separated, widowed

  30. Suicide • Tenth leading cause of death in the US • One half of persons who complete suicide saw a physician within 1 month of suicide. • 44,000 suicides per year • 13.6/100,000- gradual increase over past decades • 90% have diagnosable mental illness

  31. SuicideProtective Factors • Children in the home • Pregnancy • Responsibility to family • Religion/spirituality • Social support • Positive coping skills • Life satisfaction

  32. How to assess suicidal risk? • Screen for and identify risk factors • Assess current contributing factors-e.g. family or life crisis, medical illness • Specific suicidal inquiry • Identify available interventions, family and social supports • Formulate diagnosis that includes assessment of suicidal risk, identify treatment plan • DOCUMENT!

  33. Specific Questions around Suicidal Risk • Sometimes people lose hope when faced with such problems- have you? • What do you think about when you are so down? • Do you ever think of running away, wishing you could just disappear? • Have you ever thought of hurting or killing yourself? • How would you do it? • What would your happen to your family and loved ones? • What has kept you from acting on these thoughts?

  34. SuicideTreatment and Prevention • Screening! • Treat underlying disorders • When to refer for further psychiatric evaluation or hospitalization? • Use of crisis services • Removal of means • Involvement of family, social supports

  35. Contack Dr. Cindy Boyack Maine Medical Center Department of Psychiatry boyacc@mmc.org

More Related