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Title: Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 7e


1
Stress Disorders
  • Chapter 6

2
Stress, Coping, and the Anxiety Response
  • The state of stress has two components
  • Stressor event that creates demands
  • Stress response persons reactions to the
    demands
  • Influenced by how we appraise both the event and
    our capacity to react to the event effectively
  • People who sense that they have the ability and
    resources to cope are more likely to take
    stressors in stride and respond constructively

3
Stress, Coping, and the Anxiety Response
  • When we appraise a stressor as threatening, the
    natural reaction is fear
  • Fear is a package of responses that are
    physical, emotional, and cognitive
  • Stress reactions, and the fear they produce, are
    often at play in psychological disorders
  • People who experience a large number of stressful
    events are particularly vulnerable to the onset
    of anxiety and other psychological disorders

4
Stress, Coping, and the Anxiety Response
  • Stress also plays a more central role in certain
    psychological disorders, including
  • Acute stress disorder
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • Technically, DSM-IV-TR lists these patterns as
    anxiety disorders
  • as well as certain physical disorders, called
    psychophysiological disorders
  • These disorders are listed in the DSM-IV-TR under
    psychological factors affecting medical
    condition

5
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or-Flight Response
  • The features of arousal and fear are set in
    motion by the hypothalamus
  • Two important systems are activated
  • Autonomic nervous system (ANS)
  • An extensive network of nerve fibers that connect
    the central nervous system (the brain and spinal
    cord) to all other organs of the body
  • Endocrine system
  • A network of glands throughout the body that
    release hormones

6
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or-Flight Response
  • There are two pathways, or routes, by which the
    ANS and the endocrine system produce arousal and
    fear reactions
  • Sympathetic nervous system pathway
  • Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal pathway

7
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or-Flight Response
  • When we face a dangerous situation, the
    hypothalamus first excites the sympathetic
    nervous system, which stimulates key organs
    either directly or indirectly
  • When the perceived danger passes, the
    parasympathetic nervous system helps return body
    processes to normal

8
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9
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or- Flight Response
  • The second pathway is the hypothalamic-pituitary-a
    drenal (HPA) pathway
  • When confronted by stressors, the hypothalamus
    signals the pituitary gland, which stimulates the
    adrenal cortex to release corticosteroids
    stress hormones into the bloodstream

10
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11
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or-Flight Response
  • The reactions on display in these two pathways
    are collectively referred to as the
    fight-or-flight response
  • Each person has a particular pattern of autonomic
    and endocrine functioning and so a particular way
    of experiencing arousal and fear

12
Stress and Arousal The Fight-or-Flight Response
  • People differ in
  • Their general level of arousal and anxiety
  • Called trait anxiety
  • Some people are usually somewhat tense others
    are usually relaxed
  • Differences appear soon after birth
  • Their sense of which situations are threatening
  • Called state anxiety
  • Situation-based (example fear of flying)

13
The Psychological Stress Disorders
  • During and immediately after trauma, we may
    temporarily experience levels of arousal,
    anxiety, and depression
  • For some, symptoms persist well after the trauma
  • These people may be suffering from
  • Acute stress disorder
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • The precipitating event usually involves actual
    or threatened serious injury to self or others
  • The situations that cause these disorders would
    be traumatic to anyone (unlike other anxiety
    disorders)

14
The Psychological Stress Disorders
  • Acute stress disorder
  • Symptoms begin within four weeks of event and
    last for less than one month
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • Symptoms may begin either shortly after the
    event, or months or years afterward
  • As many as 80 of all cases of acute stress
    disorder develop into PTSD

15
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16
What Triggers a Psychological Stress Disorder?
  • Can occur at any age and affect all aspects of
    life
  • At least 3.5 of people in the U.S. are affected
    each year
  • 79 of people in the U.S. are affected sometime
    during their lifetime
  • Around two-thirds seek treatment at some point
  • Ratio of women to men is 21
  • After trauma, around 20 of women and 8 of men
    develop disorders
  • Some events including combat, disasters, abuse,
    and victimization are more likely to cause
    disorders than others

17
What Triggers a Psychological Stress Disorder?
  • Combat and stress disorders
  • For years clinicians have recognized that
    soldiers experience distress during combat
  • Called shell shock or combat fatigue
  • Post-Vietnam War clinicians discovered that
    soldiers also experienced psychological distress
    AFTER combat
  • As many as 29 of Vietnam combat veterans
    suffered acute or posttraumatic stress disorders
  • An additional 22 had some stress symptoms
  • 10 still experiencing problems
  • A similar pattern is currently unfolding among
    veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

18
What Triggers a Psychological Stress Disorder?
  • Disasters and stress disorders
  • Acute or posttraumatic stress disorders may also
    follow natural and accidental disasters
  • Types of disasters include earthquakes, floods,
    tornadoes, fires, airplane crashes, and serious
    car accidents
  • Civilian traumas have been implicated in stress
    disorders at least 10 times as often as combat
    traumas

19
What Triggers a Psychological Stress Disorder?
  • Victimization and stress disorders
  • People who have been abused or victimized often
    experience lingering stress symptoms
  • Research suggests that more than one-third of all
    victims of physical or sexual assault develop
    PTSD
  • A common form of victimization is sexual
    assault/rape
  • Around 1 in 6 women is raped at some time during
    her life
  • Psychological impact is immediate and may be
    long-lasting
  • One study found that 94 of rape survivors
    developed an acute stress disorder within 12 days
    after assault

20
What Triggers a Psychological Stress Disorder?
  • Victimization and stress disorders
  • Ongoing victimization and abuse in the family may
    also lead to stress disorders
  • The experience of terrorism or the threat of
    terrorism often leads to posttraumatic stress
    symptoms, as does the experience of torture

21
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Clearly, extraordinary trauma can cause a stress
    disorder
  • However, the event alone may not be the entire
    explanation
  • To understand the development of these disorders,
    researchers have looked to the
  • Survivors biological processes
  • Personalities
  • Childhood experiences
  • Social support systems/cultural backgrounds
  • Severity of the traumas

22
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Biological and genetic factors
  • Traumatic events trigger physical changes in the
    brain and body that may lead to severe stress
    reactions and, in some cases, to stress disorders
  • Some research suggests abnormal neurotransmitter
    and hormone activity (especially norepinephrine
    and cortisol)
  • Evidence suggests that other biological changes
    and damage may also occur (especially in the
    hippocampus and amygdala) as a stress disorder
    sets in
  • There may be a biological/genetic predisposition
    to such reactions

23
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Personality factors
  • Some studies suggest that people with certain
    personality profiles, attitudes, and coping
    styles are particularly likely to develop stress
    disorders
  • Risk factors include
  • Preexisting high anxiety
  • A history of psychological problems
  • Negative worldview
  • A set of positive attitudes (called resiliency or
    hardiness) is protective against developing
    stress disorders

24
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Childhood experiences
  • Researchers have found that certain childhood
    experiences increase risk for later stress
    disorders
  • Risk factors include
  • An impoverished childhood
  • Psychological disorders in the family
  • The experience of assault, abuse, or catastrophe
    at an early age
  • Being younger than 10 years old when parents
    separated or divorced

25
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Social support
  • People whose social support systems are weak are
    more likely to develop a stress disorder after a
    traumatic event
  • Multicultural factors
  • A careful look at research literature suggests
    that there may be important cultural differences
    in the occurrence of PTSD
  • It seems that Hispanic Americans might be more
    vulnerable to PTSD than other racial or ethnic
    groups
  • Possible explanations include early dissociative
    reactions to trauma, cultural beliefs systems,
    and the cultural emphasis on social relationships

26
Why Do People Develop a Psychological Stress
Disorder?
  • Severity of the trauma
  • The more severe the trauma and the more direct
    ones exposure to it, the greater the likelihood
    of developing a stress disorder
  • Especially risky Mutilation and severe injury
    witnessing the injury or death of others

27
How Do Clinicians Treat the Psychological Stress
Disorders?
  • About half of all cases of PTSD improve within 6
    months the remainder may persist for years
  • Symptoms have been found to last an average of 3
    years with treatment and 5½ years without
    treatment
  • Treatment procedures vary depending on type of
    trauma
  • General goals
  • End lingering stress reactions
  • Gain perspective on painful experiences
  • Return to constructive living

28
How Do Clinicians Treat the Psychological Stress
Disorders?
  • Treatment for combat veterans
  • Drug therapy
  • Antianxiety and antidepressant medications are
    most common
  • Behavioral exposure techniques
  • Reduce specific symptoms, increase overall
    adjustment
  • Use flooding and relaxation training
  • Use eye movement desensitization and reprocessing
    (EMDR)
  • Insight therapy
  • Bring out deep-seated feelings, create
    acceptance, lessen guilt
  • Often use family or group therapy formats rap
    groups
  • Usually used in combinations

29
How Do Clinicians Treat the Psychological Stress
Disorders?
  • Psychological debriefing
  • A form of crisis intervention that has victims of
    trauma talk extensively about their feelings and
    reactions within days of the critical incident
  • Four-stage approach
  • Normalize responses to the disaster
  • Encourage expressions of anxiety, anger, and
    frustration
  • Teach self-help skills
  • Provide referrals
  • Relief workers themselves may become overwhelmed
  • Research on this type of intervention continues
    to call into question its effectiveness

30
The Physical Stress Disorders Psychophysiological
Disorders
  • In addition to affecting psychological
    functioning, stress can also have an enormous
    impact on physical functioning
  • The idea that stress and related psychosocial
    factors may contribute to somatic illnesses has
    ancient roots, but had few supporters before the
    20th century
  • 17th century philosopher René Descartes called a
    variation on the idea mindbody dualism

31
The Physical Stress Disorders Psychophysiological
Disorders
  • About 80 years ago, clinicians first identified a
    group of physical illnesses that seemed to result
    from an interaction of biological, psychological,
    and sociocultural factors
  • Early versions of the DSM labeled these illnesses
    psychophysiological, or psychosomatic, disorders
  • DSM-IV-TR calls them psychological factors
    affecting medical condition

32
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33
The Physical Stress Disorders Psychophysiological
Disorders
  • It is important to recognize that these
    psychophysiological disorders bring about actual
    physical damage
  • They are different from apparent physical
    illnesses like factitious disorders or somatoform
    disorders, which will be discussed in Chapter 7

34
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Before the 1970s, the best known and most common
    of the psychophysiological disorders were ulcers,
    asthma, insomnia, chronic headaches, high blood
    pressure, and coronary heart disease
  • Recent research has shown that many other
    physical illnesses may be caused by an
    interaction of psychosocial and physical factors

35
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Ulcers
  • Lesions in the wall of the stomach that result in
    burning sensations or pain, vomiting, and stomach
    bleeding
  • Experienced by 20 million people at some point in
    their lives
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • Environmental pressure, anger, anxiety, dependent
    personality style
  • Causal physiological factors
  • Bacterial infection

36
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Asthma
  • A narrowing of the bodys airways that makes
    breathing difficult
  • Affects up to 20 million people in the U.S. each
    year
  • Most victims are children at the time of first
    attack
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • Environmental pressures, troubled family
    relationships, anxiety, high dependency
  • Causal physiological factors
  • Allergies, a slow-acting sympathetic nervous
    system, weakened respiratory system

37
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Insomnia
  • Difficulty falling asleep or maintaining sleep
  • Affects 35 of people in the U.S. each year
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • High levels of anxiety or depression
  • Causal physiological factors
  • Overactive arousal system, certain medical
    ailments

38
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Chronic headaches
  • Frequent intense aches of the head or neck that
    are not caused by another physical disorder
  • Tension headaches affect 40 million Americans
    each year
  • Migraine headaches affect 23 million Americans
    each year
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • Environmental pressures general feelings of
    helplessness, anger, anxiety, depression
  • Causal physiological factors
  • Abnormal serotonin activity, vascular problems,
    muscle weakness

39
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Hypertension
  • Chronic high blood pressure, usually producing no
    outward symptoms
  • Affects 65 million Americans each year
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • Constant stress, environmental danger, general
    feelings of anger or depression
  • Causal physiological factors
  • 10 caused by physiological factors alone
  • Obesity, smoking, poor kidney function, high
    proportion of collagen (rather than elastic)
    tissue in an individuals blood vessels

40
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Coronary heart disease
  • Caused by blockage in the coronary arteries
  • Includes angina pectoris (chest pain), coronary
    occlusion (complete blockage of a coronary
    artery), and myocardial infarction (heart attack)
  • Leading cause of death in men older than 35 years
    and women older than 40 years in the U.S.
  • Causal psychosocial factors
  • Job stress, high levels of anger or depression
  • Causal physiological factors
  • High level of cholesterol, obesity, hypertension,
    the effects of smoking, lack of exercise

41
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • A number of variables contribute to the
    development of psychophysiological disorders,
    including
  • Biological factors
  • Psychological factors
  • Sociocultural factors

42
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Biological factors
  • Defects in the autonomic nervous system (ANS) are
    believed to contribute to the development of
    psychophysiological disorders
  • Other more specific biological problems may also
    contribute
  • For example, a weak gastrointestinal system may
    create a predisposition to developing ulcers

43
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychological factors
  • According to many theorists, certain needs,
    attitudes, emotions, or coping styles may cause
    people to repeatedly overreact to stressors
    increasing their chances of developing
    psychophysiological disorders
  • Examples a repressive coping style, a Type A
    personality style

44
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Sociocultural factors
  • Adverse social conditions may set the stage for
    psychophysiological disorders
  • Stressors may be wide-ranging (e.g., nuclear
    threat, like Three Mile Island) or local (e.g.,
    living in a crime-ridden neighborhood)
  • One of societys most adverse social conditions
    is poverty
  • Research also reveals that belonging to an ethnic
    or cultural minority group increases the risk of
    developing these disorders and other health
    problems

45
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Clearly, biological, psychological, and
    sociocultural variables combine to produce
    psychophysiological disorders
  • In fact, the interaction of psychosocial and
    physical factors is now considered the rule of
    bodily function, not the exception
  • In recent years, more and more illnesses have
    been added to the list of psychophysiological
    disorders

46
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Since the 1960s, researchers have found many
    links between psychosocial stress and a wide
    range of physical illnesses

47
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Are physical illnesses related to stress?
  • The development of the Social Adjustment Rating
    Scale in 1967 enabled researchers to examine the
    relationship between life stress and the onset of
    illness

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49
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Are physical illnesses related to stress?
  • Using the Social Adjustment Rating Scale, studies
    have linked stressors of various kinds to a wide
    range of physical conditions
  • Overall, the greater the amount of life stress,
    the greater the likelihood of illness
  • Researchers have even found a relationship
    between traumatic stress and death

50
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Are physical illnesses related to stress?
  • One shortcoming of the Social Adjustment Rating
    Scale is that it does not take into consideration
    the particular stress reactions within specific
    populations
  • For example, women and men have been shown to
    react differently to certain life changes
    measured by the scale

51
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Researchers have increasingly looked to the
    bodys immune system as the key to the
    relationship between stress and infection
  • This area of study is called psychoneuroimmunology

52
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychoneuroimmunology
  • The immune system is the bodys network of
    activities and cells that identify and destroy
    antigens (foreign invaders, such as bacteria) and
    cancer cells
  • Among the most important cells in this system are
    the lymphocytes
  • Lymphocytes are white blood cells that circulate
    through the lymph system and the bloodstream,
    attacking invaders
  • Lymphocytes include helper T-cells, natural
    killer T-cells, and B-cells

53
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychoneuroimmunology
  • Researchers now believe that stress can interfere
    with the activity of lymphocytes, slowing them
    down and increasing a persons susceptibility to
    viral and bacterial infections
  • Several factors influence whether stress will
    result in a slowdown of the system, including
    biochemical activity, behavioral changes,
    personality style, and degree of social support

54
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychoneuroimmunology
  • Biochemical activity
  • Stress leads to increased activity of the
    sympathetic nervous system, including a release
    of norepinephrine
  • In addition to supporting nervous system
    activity, this chemical also appears to slow down
    the functioning of the immune system
  • Similarly, the bodys endocrine glands reduce
    immune system functioning during periods of
    prolonged stress through the release of
    corticosteroids

55
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychoneuroimmunology
  • Behavioral changes
  • Stress may set in motion a series of behavioral
    changes poor sleep patterns, poor eating, lack
    of exercise, increase in smoking and/or drinking
    that indirectly affect the immune system
  • Personality style
  • An individuals personality style (including
    their level of optimism, constructive coping
    strategies, and resilience) may also play a role
    in determining how much the immune system is
    slowed down by stress

56
New Psychophysiological Disorders
  • Psychoneuroimmunology
  • Social support
  • People who have few social supports and feel
    lonely seem to display poorer immune functioning
    in the face of stress than people who do not feel
    lonely
  • Studies have found that social support and
    affiliation with others may actually protect
    people from stress, poor immune system
    functioning, and subsequent illness, and can help
    speed up recovery from illness or surgery

57
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • As clinicians have discovered that stress and
    related psychosocial factors may contribute to
    physical disorders, they have applied
    psychological treatment to more and more medical
    problems
  • The most common of these interventions are
    relaxation training, biofeedback training,
    meditation, hypnosis, cognitive interventions,
    insight therapy, and support groups

58
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • The field of treatment that combines
    psychological and physical interventions to treat
    or prevent medical problems is known as
    behavioral medicine

59
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Relaxation training
  • People can be trained to relax their muscles at
    will, a process that sometimes reduces feelings
    of anxiety
  • Relaxation training can be of help in preventing
    or treating medical illnesses that are related to
    stress
  • Often used in conjunction with medication in the
    treatment of high blood pressure
  • Often used alone to treat chronic headaches,
    insomnia, asthma, pain after surgery, certain
    vascular diseases, and the undesirable effects of
    cancer treatments

60
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Biofeedback training
  • Patients given biofeedback training are connected
    to machinery that gives them continuous readings
    about their involuntary bodily activities
  • This procedure has been used successfully to
    treat headaches and muscular disabilities caused
    by stroke or accident
  • Some biofeedback training has been effective in
    the treatment of asthma, irregular heartbeat,
    migraine headaches, high blood pressure,
    stuttering, and pain from burns

61
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Meditation
  • Although meditation has been practiced since
    ancient times, Western health care professionals
    have only recently become aware of its
    effectiveness
  • Meditation is a technique of turning ones
    concentration inward and achieving a slightly
    changed state of consciousness
  • Meditation has been used to treat pain, high
    blood pressure, heart problems, insomnia, and
    asthma

62
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Hypnosis
  • Individuals undergoing hypnosis are guided into a
    sleeplike, suggestible state during which they
    can be directed to act in unusual ways, to
    remember unusual sensations, or to forget
    remembered events
  • With training, hypnosis can be done without a
    hypnotist (self-hypnosis)

63
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Hypnosis
  • This technique seems to be particularly helpful
    in the control of pain is now used to treat such
    problems as skin diseases, asthma, insomnia, high
    blood pressure, warts, and other forms of
    infection

64
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Cognitive interventions
  • People with physical ailments have sometimes been
    taught new attitudes or cognitive responses as
    part of treatment
  • One intervention is self-instruction training, in
    which patients are taught to rid themselves of
    negative self-statements and to replace these
    with positive self-statements

65
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Insight therapy and support groups
  • If negative psychological symptoms (e.g.,
    depression, anxiety) contribute to a persons
    physical ills, therapy to address these emotions
    should help reduce the ills
  • These techniques have been used to treat a
    variety of illnesses including HIV, asthma,
    cancer, headache, and arthritis

66
Psychological Treatments for Physical Disorders
  • Combination approaches
  • Studies have found that the various psychological
    treatments for physical problems tend to be equal
    in effectiveness
  • Psychological treatments are often of greatest
    help when used in combination and with medical
    treatment
  • With these combined approaches, todays
    practitioners are moving away from the mindbody
    dualism of centuries past
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