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Psychological Disorders

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Psychological Disorders According to the Law The definition of mental disorders rests on whether: 1- the person is aware of the consequences of his actions – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychological Disorders


1
Psychological Disorders
  • According to the Law
  • The definition of mental disorders rests on
    whether
  • 1- the person is aware of the consequences of his
    actions
  • 2- can control his behavior
  • If not the person may be declared insane.

2
Definitions of Mental DisorderA Harmful
Dysfunction
  • 1- Mental disorders as a violation of cultural
    standards or atypical behavior
  • 2- Mental disorder as maladaptive or harmful
    behavior
  • 3- Mental disorder as a disturbing emotional
    distress.
  • 4- Mental disorder as unjustifiable

3
Psychologists Definition
  • Any behavior or emotional state that
  • 1- causes the individual great suffering or
    worry
  • 2- is self-destructive,
  • 3- is maladaptive and disrupts either the
    persons relationships or the larger community.

4
Understanding Psychological Disorders
  • The Medical Perspective
  • Psychological disorders are sicknesses and can be
    diagnosed, treated, and even cured.
  • The Bio-Psycho-Social Perspective
  • How biological, psychological, and social factors
    interact to produce specific psychological
    disorders.

5
Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders
  • DSM-IV (1994) contains more than 300 mental
    disorders.
  • Provides diagnostic categories
  • Does not provide information on causes
  • Does not provide information on treatment
  • It is organized in 5 axes

6
Axis IClinical Syndromes
  • Anxiety disorders
  • Mood disorders
  • Dissociative disorders
  • Substance abuse disorders
  • Schizophrenia

7
Axis IIDevelopmental and Personality Disorders
  • Ingrained aspects of the clients personality
    that are likely to affect the persons ability to
    be treated, such as self-involvement or
    dependency.

8
Axis IIIPhysical Disorders and Conditions
  • Medical conditions that are relevant to the
    disorder, such as respiratory or digestive
    problems.

9
Axis IVSeverity of Psychosocial Stressors
  • Social and environmental stressors that can make
    the disorder worse, such as job and housing
    troubles or having recently left a network of
    close friends.

10
Axis VGlobal Assessment of Functioning
  • The clients overall level of functioning at
    work, relationships, and leisure time including
    whether the problem was of a recent origin or of
    long duration, and how incapacitating it is.

11
Diagnostic Criteria for Attention-Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Symptoms must persist for at least six months
  • Symptoms must have begun before age seven
  • Symptoms present in at least two situations
  • Disorder impairs functioning
  • Symptoms not explained by another disorder such
    as

12
Diagnostic Criteria for Attention-Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Anxiety
  • Schizophrenia
  • Mania
  • Dissociative Disorder
  • Personality Disorder
  • Developmental Disorder

13
Anxiety Disorders
  • 1- Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • 2- Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
  • 3- Panic Disorder
  • 4- Fears and Phobias
  • 5- Obsession Compulsions

14
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
  • When people are in danger, they produce high
    levels of natural opiates, which can temporarily
    mask pain. They also produce stress hormones.
  • People with PTSD tend to continue producing these
    hormones.
  • Norepinephrine is higher than normal. It
    activates the hippocampus, which is involved with
    memory and long term memory.
  • At high levels, stress hormones can become toxic
    and can damage the brain.

15
Phobias
  • Acrophobia fear of heights
  • Brontophobia fear of thunder
  • Claustrophobia fear of closed places
  • Porphyrophobia fear of the color purple
  • Mysophobia fear of dirt and germs
  • Agoraphobia fear of being away from a safe
    place.
  • Triskaidekaphobia fear of number 13

16
Obsession Compulsions
  • Obsessions
  • Recurrent, persistent, unwished-for thoughts or
    images.
  • Example repetitive thoughts about killing a
    child or becoming contaminated by shaking hands.
  • Compulsions
  • Repetitive, ritualized behavior that the person
    feels must be carried out to avoid disaster.
  • Example hand washing, counting, checking

17
Obsession Compulsions
  • The orbital cortex sends messages of impending
    danger to the caudate nucleus (prepares the body
    to respond to external danger).
  • In people with OCD, the orbital cortex keeps on
    sending false alarms of danger.
  • But the caudate nucleus fails to turn them off.

18
Explaining Anxiety Disorders
  • The Learning Perspective
  • Fear Conditioning
  • Stimulus Generalization
  • Reinforcement
  • Observational Learning
  • The Biological Perspective
  • Evolution
  • Genes
  • Physiology

19
Mood Disorders
  • 1- Depression
  • 2- Mania
  • 3- Bipolar

20
Symptoms of Depression
  • Feeling of despair and hopelessness
  • Exaggerating minor failings and ignoring positive
    events
  • Interpreting losses as signs of personal failures
    and concluding that happiness is not possible.
  • Physical Changes
  • Overeating, insomnia, lack of appetite trouble
    concentrating, feeling tired all the time

21
Mania
  • An abnormally high state of exhilaration
  • Excessive energy
  • Irrational decisions
  • Feeling of excessive hopefulness
  • Speaking rapidly and dramatically
  • Excessive feeling of ambition
  • Inflated self esteem

22
Stages of Mania
  • 1-Hypomania
  • Patients are energetic, extroverted, and
    assertive
  • 2-Mania
  • Loss of judgment
  • 3-Delusion with Paranoid Themes
  • Speech is generally rapid and hyperactive
    behavior may lead to violence.

23
Causes of Mania
  • Excessive production of one or two
    neurotransmitters
  • 1-Norepinephrine
  • 2-Serotonin

24
Bipolar DisorderManic-Depressive
  • When people alternate between episodes of
    depression and one or more episodes of mania.
  • Occurs equally in both sexes.
  • The onset is between 20-30 with a second peak at
    40
  • Those who have rapid cycling may experience more
    episodes of mania and depression that succeed
    each other without a period of remission.

25
People Who Had Bipolar
  • Abraham Lincoln Edgar Allan Poe
  • Van Gough Virginia Wolf
  • Vivian Leigh Walt Whitman
  • Charles Dickens Ernest Hemingway
  • Newton
  • Mark Twain

26
Theories of Depression
  • 1- Biological explanations emphasize genetic and
    brain chemistry.
  • 2- Social explanations emphasize the stressful
    circumstances of peoples lives.
  • 3- Attachment explanations emphasize problems
    with close relationships.
  • 4- Cognitive explanations emphasize particular
    habits of thinking and interpreting events
  • 5- Vulnerability-stress explanations draw on
    all four explanations.

27
Biological Explanation
  • Genes may exert their influence by creating
    biochemical imbalances
  • The low production of the neurotransmitters
    norepinephrine and serotonin may be the cause of
    depression.
  • The brains of depressed people seem less active.
  • The frontal lobes are 7 smaller in severely
    depressed patients.

28
Cognitive Explanations
  • Internality
  • The reason for misery is internal
  • Stability
  • The situation is permanent
  • Lack of Control
  • There is no control over the situation

29
Learned Helplessness
  • Pessimistic Explanatory Style
  • Brooding and Ruminating about Unhappiness

30
Vulnerability-Stress Model of Depression
  • Upsetting Events
  • Loss of loved ones
  • Loss of job
  • Failure
  • Trauma
  • Violence
  • Temporary unhappiness
  • Individual Vulnerability
  • Biological predisposition
  • Low self-esteem
  • Insecure attachment
  • Learned helplessness
  • Negative thinking
  • Pessimism
  • Brooding

31
Personality Disorders
  • 1- Paranoid Personality Disorder
  • 2- Narcissistic Personality Disorder
  • 3- Antisocial Personality Disorder

32
Paranoid Personality Disorder
  • Unfounded suspiciousness
  • Mistrust of other people
  • Irrational jealousy
  • Secretiveness
  • Doubt about the loyalty of others
  • Delusions of being persecuted by others.

33
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
  • Exaggerated sense of self-importance
  • Self-absorption
  • Fantasies of unlimited success power
  • Demand of constant attention admiration
  • Feeling of entitlement of special favors
  • Narcissistic people cant find a good match
    because they expect perfection.

34
Symptoms of Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • 1- They repeatedly break the law.
  • 2- They are deceitful, using lies to con others.
  • 3- They are impulsive and unable to plan ahead.
  • 4- They repeatedly get into fights or assaults.
  • 5- They show reckless disregard to their own
    safety or that of others.
  • 6- They are constantly irresponsible, failing to
    meet their obligations.
  • 7- They lack remorse for actions that harm others.

35
Causes for APD
  • 1- Abnormalities in the brain and central nervous
    system
  • 2- Problems with impulse control
  • 3- Brain damage
  • 4- Vulnerability-stress explanations

36
Emotion
  • You perceive the sensory stimulus.
  • The adrenal gland sends two hormones epinephrine
    and norepinephrine.
  • They activate the sympathetic nervous system.
  • That produces a state of arousal or alertness
    that provides the body with the energy to act
    (the pupils dilate, the heart beats faster, and
    breathing speeds up).

37
Vulnerability Stress Explanation
  • Biological vulnerability
  • Brain damage
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Birth complications
  • Central nervous system abnormalities
  • Stressful Experiences
  • Physical abuse
  • Maternal rejection
  • Lack of contact comfort

38
Dissociative Disorders
  • 1- Amnesia
  • 2- Fugue
  • 3- Dissociative Identity Disorder
  • (Multiple Personality Disorder)

39
Causes of Addiction
  • 1- The Disease Model
  • 2- The Learning Model

40
The Disease ModalThe Disease Concept of
Alcoholismby E. M. Jellinek
  • Alcoholism is a disease over which an individual
    has no control and from which he or she never
    recovers
  • Addiction is due to a persons biochemistry,
    metabolism, and genetic predisposition.
  • Genetic Predisposition
  • Contribute to traits that predispose the person
    to become alcoholic.
  • May affect biochemical processes in the brain
    that make some people more susceptible than
    others.

41
The Learning Model of Addiction
  • 1- Addiction patterns vary according to cultural
    practices and the social environment.
  • 2- Policies of total abstinence tend to increase
    rates of addiction rather than reduce them.
  • 3- Not all addicts have withdrawal symptoms when
    they stop taking a drug.
  • 4- Addiction does not depend on properties of the
    drug alone, but also on the reason for taking it.

42
Active Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • 1- Bizarre delusions (Paranoid/Identity)
  • 2- Hallucinations and heightened sensory
    awareness (auditory, visual, or tactile)
  • 3- Disorganized, incoherent speech
  • 4- Grossly disorganized and inappropriate
    behavior

43
Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Loss of motivation
  • Poverty of speech
  • Making only brief and empty replies
  • Diminished thought and emotionality
  • Emotional flatness
  • Unresponsive facial expressions
  • Poor eye contact

44
Explanation of Schizophrenia
  • 1- Genetic predisposition
  • 2- Structural brain abnormalities
  • 3- Neurotransmitter abnormalities
  • 4- Prenatal abnormalities
  • 5- The Vulnerability-stress approach

45
Genetic PredispositionRisk of Developing
Schizophrenia
  • Identical twinsless than 50
  • Child of 2 schizophrenic parents... 34-46
  • Fraternal twins .less than 20
  • Children with 1 schizophrenic parent 12
  • Siblings .. Less than 10

46
Brain Abnormalities
  • Signs of cerebral damage
  • Decreased brain weight
  • Reduced numbers of neurons in the prefrontal
    cortex
  • Decrease in volume of the limbic regions
  • Abnormalities in the thalamus
  • Enlarged ventricles or spaces in the brain

47
Neurotransmitter Abnormalities
  • Serotonin
  • Glutamate
  • Dopamine

48
Prenatal Abnormalities
  • Malnutrition
  • Infectious virus during prenatal development
  • Mothers exposure to influenza virus during the
    second trimester of pregnancy

49
Vulnerability Stress Explanation
  • Biological Vulnerability
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Birth complications that damage the brain
  • Prenatal damage due to viral infection
  • Stressful Experiences
  • Unstable family life
  • Extreme stress in late adolescence and early
    adulthood.
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