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ANXIETY DISORDERS

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AGORAPHOBIA 'fear of marketplace (or places ... Agoraphobia: comfort or security. Specific Phobia: cued fear; ... not for GAD, agoraphobia, animal phobias, or ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANXIETY DISORDERS


1
ANXIETY DISORDERS
2
OVERVIEW
  • Symptoms of anxiety disorders
  • Co-morbidity with other disorders
  • Diagnostic Criteria
  • Gender Differences
  • Genetic Studies

3
Cont
  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • Panic Disorder
  • Phobias Social
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

4
ANXIETY DISORDERS
  • Panic Disorder with or without Agoraphobia
  • Agoraphobia
  • Specific Phobia
  • Social Phobia
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
  • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) (NEXT CLASS)
  • Acute Stress Disorder
  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)

5
PANIC ATTACKS
  • Discrete period of intense fear or discomfort in
    which 4 or more of the following symptoms occur
    and peak within 10 minutes
  • Accelerated heart rate
  • Sweating
  • Trembling or shaking
  • Shortness of breath

6
Cont
  • Feeling of choking
  • Chest pain or discomfort
  • Nausea or abdominal distress
  • Dizzy, unsteady, lightheaded, or faint
  • Feelings of unreality or depersonalization
  • Fear of losing control
  • Fear of dying
  • Numbness
  • Chills or hot flushes

7
ANXIETY
  • Fear real, immediate danger
  • Anxiety general or diffuse emotional reation
    out of proportion
  • Worry uncomfortable sequence of negative,
    emotional thoughts/images future threats

8
PHOBIAS
  • Persistent and irrational
  • Very specific object and/or situation
  • Avoidance
  • or experiences intense anxiety
  • Can cause serious impairments in occupational and
    social activities

9
AGORAPHOBIA
  • fear of marketplace (or places of assembly)
  • More intense with distance from familiar place or
    signals of safety
  • Panic attacks
  • fear of fear
  • Aware of internal bodily sensations that may
    signal onset of attach

10
OCD
  • Obsessions repetitive, unwanted, intrusive
    cognitive events
  • intrusiveness diminished control
  • Compulsions
  • cleaning checking
  • ensure safety of self and others

11
CO-MORBIDITY
  • Various symptoms overlap greatly
  • 50 with one anxiety disorder meet criteria for
    another
  • Mood Disorders
  • panic disorders with or without agoraphobia
  • agoraphobia
  • OCD

12
Cont
  • Substance Abuse
  • 40 patients with substance abuse also meet
    criteria for at least one anxiety disorder
  • Patients with agoraphobia self-medication?
  • What about GAD?

13
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA
  • Panic Attack worry about additional attacks
  • Agoraphobia comfort or security
  • Specific Phobia cued fear unreasonable
  • Social Phobia performance
  • GAD excessive worry that is difficult to control
  • OCD must recognize that OC are unreasonable

14
GENDER DIFFERENCES
  • Women are more likely to suffer from anxiety
    disorders
  • No differences in
  • Social phobias
  • OCD

15
GENETIC STUDIES
  • Family studies
  • twice as common in first-degree relatives
  • high rate of panic disorder in first-degree
    relatives
  • patients with panic disorder or GAD relatives
    have high risk of panic disorder, but not GAD
  • OCD high rates of anxiety disorders, but not
    necessarily OCD

16
Cont
  • Twin Studies
  • MZ panic disorder, all phobias, OCD
  • not for GAD, agoraphobia, animal phobias, or
    social phobia
  • Conclusion genetic predisposition for anxiety
    disorders
  • Environmental cues for specific disorders?

17
GAD Overview
  • GABA/Benzodiazepine
  • Norepinephrine
  • Serotonin
  • CCK
  • CRH HPA Axis
  • Autonomic Functions
  • Neuroimaging
  • Pharmacotherapy

18
GABA/Benzodiazepine
  • Benzodiazepine affects action of GABA at GABA
    receptors also binds to GABA receptors
  • produce inhibitory postsynaptic potentials
  • anxiolytic ex. Valium
  • lower number of binding sites for BZ
  • BZs increase in number of receptors
  • reduced sensitivity of receptors

19
NOREPINEPHRINE
  • sympathetic nervous system fight flight
  • decreased receptor sensitivity
  • reduced binding sites/receptor
  • ...however not all studies show abnormalities
  • challenges to show receptor sensitivities changes
  • long-term adaptation?

20
SEROTONIN
  • overactivity of serotonin initially decrease
    then overcompensation
  • stimulating postsynaptic receptors anxiety
  • agonists hostility anxiety in GAD
  • reduced serotonin in CSF

21
CCK
  • animal models CCK agonists antagonists
  • may interact with other systems
  • serotonin
  • locus coeruleus activity
  • CCK-like compound (pentagastrin) panic attacks
  • panic attacks and GAD?

22
CRH HPA Axis
  • CRH brain regions anxiety fear
  • ex. amygdala
  • activates locus coeruleus norepinephrine
  • links between stress anxiety?
  • dexamethasone suppression test
  • little evidence of link

23
AUTONOMIC FUNCTION
  • reduced skin conductance, increased respiration,
    increased blood pressure, and reduced heart rate
    variability
  • diminished flexibility?
  • links to stress?
  • prolonged time for recovery
  • reduced heart rate variability

24
NEUROIMAGING
  • PET Study elevated metabolism in occipital,
    temporal, and frontal lobes
  • reduced basal ganglia metabolism
  • increased cerebellar metabolism
  • after BZ treatment cortical lobes, limbic
    system, and basal ganglia
  • control group anxiety scores related to activity
    in limbic system basal ganglia

25
PHARMATHERAPY
  • 1. Benzodiazepines
  • most effective for autonomic symptoms
  • 2. Azapirones
  • serotonin partial agonist
  • fewer withdrawal symptoms
  • 3. Antidepressants
  • drug of choice

26
PANIC DISORDER OVERVIEW
  • Neuroanatomy
  • Serotonin
  • Norepinephrine
  • GABA/Benzodiazepine

27
NEUROANATOMY
  • earliest neuroanatomical circuit Gray 1988
  • septohippocampal brain circuit brain stem,
    limbic system, prefrontal cortex
  • drugs brain stem
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy prefrontal cortex

28
NEUROIMAGING
  • PET studies exaggerated asymmetry
  • internally cued alarm systems
  • SPECT studies also exaggerated asymmetry
  • hippocampus frontal cortex

29
SEROTONIN
  • rostral serotonin system
  • enhanced or diminished?
  • Medial vs. Dorsal Raphe Nuclei
  • Medial limbic system prefrontal cortex
    modulation of fear anxiety?
  • Dorsal many areas cognitive motor components?

30
Cont...
  • Medial RN Dorsal RN
  • SSRIs highly effective by enhancing serotonin
    levels
  • unclear how serotonin is abnormal

Locus Coeruleus
31
NOREPINEPHRINE
  • role of locus coeruleus
  • outputs to amygdala, BNST, entorhinal cortex,
    PVN, PAG, lateral hypothalamus
  • input from medulla
  • input mediated by glutamate, CRH, and substance P
  • contains numerous GABA receptors

32
Serotonin Norepinephrine?
  • SSRI decreases NE global improvement
  • increasing NE increases symptoms
  • no correlations between serotonin
    norepinephrine metabolites
  • but correlation in healthy volunteers

33
GABA/Benzodiazepine
  • therapeutic effects
  • BZ challenge study reduced sensitivity of
    receptors
  • BZ-R antagonists anxiogenic
  • creates panic in patients, but not in healthy
    volunteers
  • altered set point?

34
Cont...
  • reduced BZ binding in occipital, temporal, and
    frontal cortices
  • PET generalized reduction in binding
  • orbitofrontal cortex and right insula
  • specific effects in amygdala
  • basolateral nucleus vs central nucleus

35
BEYOND LC/NE...
  • LC activity inconsistent results
  • high NE metabolites causes panic attacks, but
    only in subgroup
  • very variable results with agonists antagonists
  • role in arousal and anticipatory anxiety?
  • indirect role in some symptoms?

36
SOCIAL PHOBIA OVERVIEW
  • Autonomic Nervous System
  • Respiratory Function
  • Neuroimaging
  • Neuroendocrine Function
  • Social Dominance as a model
  • Serotonin
  • Dopamine

37
Cont...
  • Non-generalized vs generalized
  • also known as social anxiety disorder

38
AUTONOMIC NS
  • excessive heart rate in certain situations
  • public speaking non-generalized vs generalized
  • higher levels of NE before and after behavioral
    challenge
  • not replicated sympathetic vs parasympathetic
    nervous systems?
  • little research has been done

39
RESPIRATION
  • CO2 sensitivity is social phobia
  • patients are sensitive to panic-provoking effects
    of CO2
  • patients with GAD, OCD, and animal
    specific-phobias

40
NEUROIMAGING
  • MRI abnormal cell membrane composition
  • SPECT dopamine binding is reduced in basal
    ganglia in generalized social phobia
  • high rates in Parkinsons patients

41
NEUROENDOCRINE
  • normal dexamethasone suppression and cortisol
    levels
  • shy children
  • elevated levels of cortisol
  • not into adulthood no relation to social phobia

42
SOCIAL DOMINANCE
  • animal model
  • social status in baboons altered HPA axis
  • subordinate baboons hypercortisolemia
  • not model of social phobia, but consequences of
    being socially phobic
  • IGF-1 lower stature linked to social phobia

43
Cont Social Affiliation
  • roles of oxytocin vasopressin
  • Pathways from the hypothalamus to VTA may be
    critical for integrating social information with
    reward pathways..
  • social phobia is not rewarding?
  • Evaluating risks and benefits of social
    affiliation?
  • But look at symptoms

44
SEROTONIN
  • neuroendocrine challenges
  • only effects on serotonin system
  • serotonin agonist increase in cortisol
  • social dominance serotonin agonist increases
    social status
  • responsive to SSRIs

45
DOPAMINE
  • MOAIs are effective, but not tricyclics
  • PET abnormalities in dopamine system
  • D2-receptor binding in putamen is related to
    avoidant personality traits

46
OCD OVERVIEW
  • Neuroimaging
  • Glutamate Serotonin

47
NEUROIMAGING
  • abnormalities in striatum
  • increased OCD behaviors are present in patients
    with basal ganglia disorders
  • increased activity in caudate nucleus related to
    severity of illness
  • conflicted findings

48
Cont...
  • MRI some studies show changes in caudate nuclei
    volumes
  • related to different methodologies
  • children vs adult OCD patients
  • abnormalities in all pediatric patients
  • reduced striatal volumes related to symptom
    severity

49
Cont...
  • striatal-prefrontal cortex pathways
  • impairment in ability to inhibit
    context-inappropriate emotional responses
  • lesions of anterior cingulate cortex
  • MRI no generalized differences, but specific
    differences in orbitofrontal cortex

50
Cont...
  • Thalamus
  • partial thalamotomy
  • increased metabolic rates regional cerebral
    blood flow
  • response to treatment
  • increased thalamic volumes maturation rates

51
Conclusion.
  • Abnormalities in prefrontal cortex - striatal -
    thalamic circuitry
  • specific reversal by treatment with SSRIs
    normalization of thalamus

52
SEROTONIN GLUTAMATE
  • interaction between these neurotransmitters
  • caudate nucleus glutamate
  • inhibition of serotonin by glutamate
  • reduction in caudate glutamatergic concentrations
    related to severity
  • higher relative levels are related to treatment
    response (SSRIs)

53
PRESENTATION FORMAT
  • before presentations symptoms, prevalence
    epidemiology, etc.
  • one person 15 minutes
  • two people 30 minutes
  • hand in
  • list of 10 references
  • three questions for exam

54
AUTISM SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • a good review article on neurobiology of autism
    background
  • primary sources different types of experiments
    being done
  • ex. With NTs levels being measured, receptors

55
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
  • review of neurobiology neuroanatomy not too
    many details
  • drugs used to treat several examples
  • comorbidity how underlying neurobiological
    deficits are the same between disorders

56
DRUG ADDICTION
  • describe neural circuit for dependence
  • tolerance, sensitization, and withdrawal take an
    example of a drug
  • specific drugs how it affects behavior
  • classical conditioning describe generally and
    then how heroin can be conditioned

57
GENERAL POINTS
  • Do not just list studies integration
  • can give some details on specific studies
    regarding methodology if interesting
  • Remember goal is to teach how these factors
    affect BEHAVIOR and SYMPTOMS.
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