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ANXIETY DISORDERS

Learn about anxiety disorders, including panic disorder, specific phobias, social phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and acute stress disorder. Explore the symptoms, epidemiology, and medical conditions that can mimic panic attacks. Discover treatment options such as benzodiazepines, SSRIs, and cognitive-behavioral therapy.

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ANXIETY DISORDERS

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  1. ANXIETY DISORDERS Yard. Doç. Dr. Berfu Akbaş

  2. A diffuse, unpleasant, vague sensation of apprehension, often accompanied by autonomic symptoms; palpitations, perspiration, headache, tightness in the chest, mild stomach discomfort, restlessness, dizziness, diarrhea, tremors, urinary frequency, hesitancy. • Normal Anxiety : advantageous response to a threatening situation • Pathological Anxiety: inappropriate response to a given stimulus. • Fear: A response to a known, external, definite threat

  3. Epidemiology: • women life-time prevalence: % 30.5 • Men : % 17.7 • Autonomic Nervous System • Neurotransmitters: • Norepinephrine, serotonin, GABA • Neuroanatomy:Locus cereleus, raphe nuclei, limbic system, temporal lobes • Genetics:

  4. Anxiety Disorders • PanicDisorder • SpecificPhobia • SocialPhobia • PosttraumaticStressDisorder ( PTSD ) • AcuteStressDisorder • GeneralizedAnxietyDisorder

  5. PANIC DISORDER • Epidemiology: PD:1.5-5%,PA: 3-5.6% A: 0.6-6% • DSM 5 CRITERIA FOR PANIC DISORDER • 1- Recurrentunexpectedpanicattacks • 2- Persistentconcernabouthavingadditionalattacks • 3- Worryaboutitsconsequences ( goingcrazy..) • 4- Significantchange in behaviour • 5- Panicattacksare not dueto a substanceor a medicalconditionoranothermentaldisorder

  6. PANIC ATTACK • 4 or more of the following symtoms: • * palpitations • * sweating • * trembling or shaking • * shortness of breath • * feeling of choking • * chest pain • * nausea or abdominal discomfort • * feeling dizzy, lightheaded, faint • * derealization- depersonalization • * fear of losing control or going crazy • * fear of dying • * numbness or tingling sensations • * chills or hot flushes

  7. MEDİCAL CONDITIONS THAT CAN MIMIC A PANIC ATTACK • Angina pectoris • Arrithmias • COPD • Temporal lobe epilepsy • Pulmonary Embolism • Asthma • Hyperthyroidism • Hypoglycemia • Pheochromacytoma

  8. COURSE AND PROGNOSIS • Onset: early adulthood • %30-40→long term symptom free • %50→mild symptoms • %10-20→significant symptoms • %40-80→depression develops • %20-40→alcohol adn substance dependance TREATMENT: • Benzodiazepines ( alprazolam, lorazepam ) • SSRI’s ( paroxetine, sertraline, citalopram ) • Cognitive behaviour therapy

  9. SPECIFIC PHOBIAS

  10. SPECIFIC PHOBIA • A phobia is defined as an irrationalfearthatproducesconsciousavoidance of thefearredsubject, activityorsituation. • 5-10% ( mostcommonanxietydisorder ) • Earlybeginning • Animals ( ailurophobia-cats, cynophobia-dogs) • Natural enviroment( storms,acrophobia-height) • Blood-injection-injury • Situational ( elevators, airoplane ) • Other ( mysophobia-germs,nasophobia-illness, death) • Treatment: • Exposuretherapy • benzodiazepines

  11. SOCIAL PHOBIA • 3-13%, teens • hyperactivation of the amygdala and insula in fMRI • A marked fear of social or performance situations in which the person is exposed to unfamiliar people. The individual fears that he will act in a way that will be humiliating or embarrassing. • Exposure to the feared social situation provokes anxiety which may take the form of panic attack • The person recognizes that the fear is excessive or unreasonable. • The feared social or performance situations are avoided • Treatment: • SSRI’s, benzodiazepines • Behavioral and cognitive therapy

  12. GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER • Prevalance: ~ % 5 • More likely to occur in people with «behavioral inhibition» • Excessive anxiety and worry about a number of events or activities. • Anxiety and worry is associated with at least 3 of the followings: restlessness, being easily fatiqued, difficulty in concentrating, irritability, muscle tenion, sleep disturbance. • Treatment: • Cognitive and behavioral therapy • SSRI’s, benzodiazepines

  13. POSTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER • Develops after a person sees, is involved in or hears of an extreme traumatic stressor. The persons response involves intense fear, helplessness or horror. • The event is persistantly reexperienced as images, flashbacks, thoughts, dreams. • Intense psychological distress at exposure to cues that symbolize or resemble the event • Persistance avoidance of the stimuli and numbing of general responsiveness • Sleep disturbances, irritability, hypervigilance, difficulty concentrating, exaggerated startle response • 1 week-30 years

  14. ACUTE STRESS DISORDER • Develops after a person sees, is involved in or hears of an extreme traumatic stressor. The persons response involves intense fear, helplessness or horror • A subjective sense of numbing, detachment, absence of emotions • Derealization, depersonalization, • Dissociative amnesia • The event is persistantly reexperienced as images, flashbacks, thoughts, dreams • Sleep disturbances, irritability, hypervigilance, difficulty concentrating, exaggerated startle response

  15. Pharmacotherapy • Benzodiazepines: GABA A agonist • SSRI’s • TCI’s • MAO inhibitors • B- adrenergic receptor antagonists ( propranolol • Antihistaminics • Buspirone ( HT1a agonist) • Ca channel blockers

  16. ANXIETY DISORDER DUE TO A GENERAL MEDICAL CONDITION • Thyroid disorders ( hyper-hypothyroidism ) • Hypoglycemia • Neurological Disorders ( MS, epilepsy, CVD, Parkinson) • Anemia • Cardiomyopathies, hypoxia, cardiac arrytmias • SLE, RA, PAN • ALCOHOL – DRUG WITHDRAWAL • caffeine

  17. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

  18. Facts and Figures • Prevalence • Originally believed to be rare • >0.1% • Recent evidence suggests 1-3% Onset / Characteristics: • Males:, high prevalence of checking • Females:, high prevalence of washing

  19. OCD Diagnosis (1): DSM IV • Obsessions defined by all of the following: • Recurrent and persistent thoughts, impulses or images experience at some time during the disturbance, as intrusive and inappropriate and that cause marked anxiety or distress. • The thoughts/impulses/images are not simply excessive worries about real life problems. • The person attempts to ignore or suppress such thoughts/impulses/images, or neutralize them with some other thought or action. • The person recognizes that the obsessional thoughts/impulses/images are a product of their own mind (not imposed from without).

  20. OCD Diagnosis (2): DSM IV • Compulsions defined by: • Repetitive behaviors or mental acts that the person feels driven to perform in response to an obsession, or according to rules which must be applied rigidly • The behaviors or mental acts are aimed at preventing or reducing distress or preventing some dreaded event or situation; however, these behaviors or mental acts either are not connected in a realistic way with what they are designed to neutralize or prevent, or are clearly excessive • Not better accounted for by other diagnosis

  21. What is an Obsession? • Involuntary intrusive cognition • Types • Doubts (74%) • Thinking (34%) • Fears (26%) • Impulses (17%) • Images (7%) • Other (2%)

  22. Themes in Obsessions • Obsessions often have common themes • Contamination, dirt, disease, illness (46%) • Violence and aggression (29%) • Moral and religious topics (11%) • Symmetry and sequence (27%) • Sex (10%) • Other (22%) • The themes often reflect contemporary concerns (the devil, germs, AIDS)

  23. Causes of OCD • Elevated activity in the Frontal Lobe and Basal Ganglia • Activity is not typical in people without mental illness • PET (Positron emission Tomography) scan used in brain imaging

  24. Pharmacotherapy • SSRI’s • First line, no major difference in class • Higher doses than for MDD (ex. 80 mg fluoxetine) • 10-12 weeks before switching • Clomipramine • first FDA approved, most serotonin specific of TCA’s, side effects • Augmentation, no to Li, atypical antipsychotics, e.g. risperidone (5HT2A blockade suggests there’s more to it than just “low serotonin”)

  25. Treatment Refractory • Psychosurgery • For patient’s who have failed meds and therapy • Response rate approx. 50% • Four surgical prodecures • Cingulotomy, subcaudate tractotomy, limbic leukotomy, capsulotomy • Interrupt signals from OFC to basal ganglia • Gamma Knife • Anterior limb of internal capsule

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