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Mood Disorders

Mood Disorders. Chapter 7. Mood Disorders. Mood Disorders. Major Depressive Disorder; Persistent Depressive Disorder. Mood Disorders. Major Depressive Disorder; Persistent Depressive Disorder Bipolar Affective Disorder. Major Depressive Disorder. Prevalence. Major Depressive Disorder.

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Mood Disorders

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  1. Mood Disorders Chapter 7

  2. Mood Disorders

  3. Mood Disorders • Major Depressive Disorder; Persistent Depressive Disorder

  4. Mood Disorders • Major Depressive Disorder; Persistent Depressive Disorder • Bipolar Affective Disorder

  5. Major Depressive Disorder • Prevalence

  6. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms

  7. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability

  8. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability • Motivational – loss of initiative, drive, spontaneity

  9. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability • Motivational – loss of initiative, drive, spontaneity • Behavioral – less active, less productive, move and speak slowly

  10. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability • Motivational – loss of initiative, drive, spontaneity • Behavioral – less active, less productive, move and speak slowly • Cognitive – self-blame, low self image, pessimism and hopelessness, confusion and distractibility, can’t make decisions

  11. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability • Motivational – loss of initiative, drive, spontaneity • Behavioral – less active, less productive, move and speak slowly • Cognitive – self-blame, low self image, pessimism and hopelessness, confusion and distractibility, can’t make decisions • Physical – many physical ailments, sleep and eat too much or too little

  12. Major Depressive Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – sadness, anhedonia, crying, anxiety, anger, agitation, irritability • Motivational – loss of initiative, drive, spontaneity • Behavioral – less active, less productive, move and speak slowly • Cognitive – self-blame, low self image, pessimism and hopelessness, confusion and distractibility, can’t make decisions • Physical – many physical ailments, sleep and eat too much or too little • Self-injury – cutting, thoughts of death, suicide

  13. Major Depressive Disorder How does cutting and self-harm help? (Helpguide.org) • “It expresses emotional pain or feelings that I’m unable to put into words. It puts a punctuation mark on what I’m feeling on the inside!” • “It’s a way to have control over my body because I can’t control anything else in my life.” • “I usually feel like I have a black hole in the pit of my stomach, at least if I feel pain it’s better than feeling nothing. ” • “I feel relieved and less anxious after I cut. The emotional pain slowly slips away into the physical pain.”

  14. Major Depressive Disorder • Ashley Judd • Billy Joel • Brooke Shields • Buzz Aldrin • Delta Burke • Diana, Princess of Wales • Drew Carey • Emma Thompson • Harrison Ford • Heath Ledger • Hugh Laurie • J. K. Rowling • Jim Carrey • Mark Roget • Olivia Newton-John • Owen Wilson • Pete Wentz • Richard Jeni • Rosie O'Donnell • Sheryl Crow • Terry Bradshaw

  15. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment

  16. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol

  17. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol. Treatment: antidepressants, ECT, brain stimulation

  18. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol. Treatment: antidepressants, ECT, brain stimulation • Psychodynamic view: turn feelings toward oneself in reaction to real or symbolic loss.

  19. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol. Treatment: antidepressants, ECT, brain stimulation • Psychodynamic view: turn feelings toward oneself in reaction to real or symbolic loss. Treatment: uncover and work through losses

  20. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol. Treatment: antidepressants, ECT, brain stimulation • Psychodynamic view: turn feelings toward oneself in reaction to real or symbolic loss. Treatment: uncover and work through losses • Behavioral view: loss of reinforcement, especially social rewards.

  21. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Endogenous depression. Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as low norepinephrine and serotonin; high cortisol. Treatment: antidepressants, ECT, brain stimulation • Psychodynamic view: turn feelings toward oneself in reaction to real or symbolic loss. Treatment: uncover and work through losses • Behavioral view: loss of reinforcement, especially social rewards. Treatment: reintroduce pleasurable activities and reinforce behaviors. Build social skills.

  22. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Cognitive view: • Negative thinking (Beck) – negative interpretations of life/self/future, automatic self-criticisms, ruminate on negative

  23. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Cognitive view: • Negative thinking (Beck) – negative interpretations of life/self/future, automatic self-criticisms, ruminate on negative • Learned helplessness (Seligman) – feel a lack of control over life, attribute negative events to internal, global, stable causes

  24. Major Depressive Disorder

  25. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Cognitive view: • Negative thinking (Beck) – negative interpretations of life/self/future, automatic self-criticisms, ruminate on negative • Learned helplessness (Seligman) – feel a lack of control over life, attribute negative events to internal, global, stable causes • Treatment: Cognitive Therapy – increase activities and improve mood; challenge automatic thinking; identify and change negative thoughts; change unhealthy attitudes

  26. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Cognitive view: • Negative thinking (Beck) – negative interpretations of life/self/future, automatic self-criticisms, ruminate on negative • Learned helplessness (Seligman) – feel a lack of control over life, attribute negative events to internal, global, stable causes • Treatment: Cognitive Therapy – increase activities and improve mood; challenge automatic thinking; identify and change negative thoughts; change unhealthy attitudes • Sociocultural view: lack of social support or conflicted relationships; gender differences; minority populations with constant stressors and lack of access to treatment.

  27. Major Depressive Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Cognitive view: • Negative thinking (Beck) – negative interpretations of life/self/future, automatic self-criticisms, ruminate on negative • Learned helplessness (Seligman) – feel a lack of control over life, attribute negative events to internal, global, stable causes • Treatment: Cognitive Therapy – increase activities and improve mood; challenge automatic thinking; identify and change negative thoughts; change unhealthy attitudes • Sociocultural view: lack of social support or conflicted relationships; gender differences; minority populations with constant stressors and lack of access to treatment. Treatment: Interpersonal therapy, couple therapy, culture-sensitive therapy

  28. Bipolar Disorder

  29. Bipolar Disorder • Symptoms

  30. Bipolar Disorder • Symptoms • Emotional – euphoria, overinflated mood • Motivational – seek stimulation • Behavioral – very active, move and speak quickly, risky/flamboyant • Cognitive – poor judgement, overly optimistic, grandiose • Physical – very energetic, need little sleep

  31. Bipolar Disorder • Virginia Woolf • Axl Rose • Edgar Allen Poe • Charley Pride • Rosemary Clooney • Linda Hamilton • Sting • Robert Downey, Jr. • Kurt Cobain • Margot Kidder • Carrie Fisher • Sylvia Plath • Vivien Leigh • Robin Williams • Jonathan Winters • Dick Cavett • Ben Stiller • Catherine Zeta-Jones • Ludwig Von Beethoven • Vincent Van Gogh • Jean-Claude Van Damme • Mark Twain

  32. Bipolar Disorder • Etiology and treatment

  33. Bipolar Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as genetic abnormalities; high norepinephrine, low serotonin; neuron or brain structure dysfunction.

  34. Bipolar Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as genetic abnormalities; high norepinephrine, low serotonin; neuron or brain structure dysfunction. Treatment: mood stabilizing medications

  35. Bipolar Disorder • Etiology and treatment • Biological view: Strong evidence for inherited characteristics such as genetic abnormalities; high norepinephrine, low serotonin; neuron or brain structure dysfunction. Treatment: mood stabilizing medications • Other supportive treatments to focus on education about the disorder and prevention of further episodes, social skills, problem-solving skills

  36. Quiz

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