100% Zufriedenheitsgarantie Sofort verfügbar nach Zahlung Sowohl online als auch als PDF Du bist an nichts gebunden
logo-home
Summary - Affective Disorders (FSWP3082K) 7,16 €
In den Einkaufswagen

Zusammenfassung

Summary - Affective Disorders (FSWP3082K)

 7 mal angesehen  0 mal verkauft
  • Kurs
  • Hochschule

Summary - Affective Disorders (FSWP3082K) + some class notes!

vorschau 3 aus 27   Seiten

  • 23. august 2024
  • 27
  • 2023/2024
  • Zusammenfassung
avatar-seller
1. MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER
A. 5 (or more) symptoms during the same 2-week period with at least one of the
symptoms either: (1) depressed mood and (2) loss of interest or pleasure in all, or
almost all, activity most of the day, nearly every day
3. Weight loss when not dieting or weight gain or decrease or increase in appetite
4. Insomnia or hypersomnia
5. Psychomotor retardation or agitation (observable)
6. Fatigue or loss of energy
7. Feeling of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt
8. Diminished ability to think or concentrate or indecisiveness
9. Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide ideation/attempt
B. Symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational,
or other important areas of functioning
C. Not attributable to physiological effects of a substance or medical condition
D. Not better explained by schizoaffective, schizophrenia, delusional disorder or other
specified/unspecified schizophrenia spectrum/other psychotic disorders
E. Never been a manic or hypomanic episode
Note
- Criteria A-C represent a major depressive episode
- Children & Adolescents
o Mood may be irritable rather than sad compared to older people
o Hypersomnia and hyperphagia more common
 In older people more common psychomotor retardation

2. PERSISTENT DEPRESSIVE DISORDER (DYSTHYMIA)
A. Depressed mood for most of the days for at least 2 years
In children & adolescents irritable mood for at least 1 year
B. 2 (or more) of the following:
1. Poor appetite or overeating
2. Insomnia or hypersomnia
3. Low energy or fatigue
4. Low self-esteem
5. Poor concentration or difficulty making decisions
6. Feelings of hopelessness
C. The individual has never been without symptoms (Criteria A and B) for more than 2
months at a time
D. Criteria for a MDD may be continuously present for 2 years
E. Never been a manic or hypomanic episode and criteria have never been met for
cyclothymic disorder
F. Not better explained by schizophrenia, delusional disorder or other psychotic
disorders
G. Not attributable to physiological effects of a substance or medical condition
H. Symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational,
or other important areas of functioning
Note
- Higher risk of comorbidity, especially for anxiety and substance use disorder
- No loss of interest or recurrent thoughts of death in dysthymia

Both have the same specifiers - MDD only has with “catatonia” and “seasonal pattern”

Melancholic features
A. 1 of the following during the most severe period of the current episode:
1. Loss of pleasure in all, or almost all, activities (anhedonia)
2. Lack of reactivity to usually pleasurable stimuli when something good happens
B. 3 (or more) of the following:
1. Depressed mood characterized by despondency, despair, and/or moroseness or
by empty-mood
2. Worse in the morning
3. Early-morning awakening

, 4. Psychomotor retardation or agitation
5. Significant anorexia or weight loss
6. Excessive or inappropriate guilt

Note
- Modest tendency to repeat across episodes
o More frequent in inpatients and older adults
o More likely to occur in those with psychotic features
o Less likely to occur in milder episodes

Psychotic features: Delusions and/or hallucinations are present with mood congruent
(guilt, disease, death etc.) or incongruent

Atypical features:
A. Mood reactivity (i.e., Brightens in response to positive events)
B. 2 (or more) of the following:
1. Weight gain or increase in appetite
2. Hypersomnia
3. Leaden paralysis
4. Pattern of interpersonal rejection sensitivity resulting in social/occupational
impairment
C. Criteria not met for “melancholic features” or “with catatonia”

Anxious distress:
A. At least 2 of the following:
1. Feeling keyed up or tense
2. Feeling usually restless
3. Difficulty concentrating
4. Fear that something awful may happen
5. Feeling that you may lose control

Mixed features:
A. At least 3 of the following:
1. Elevated, expansive mood
2. Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
3. More talkative than usual or pressure to keep talking
4. Flight of ideas or subjective experience that thoughts are racing
5. Increase in energy or goal-directed activity
6. Increase or excessive involvement in activities that have a high potential for
painful consequences
7. Decreased need for sleep
B. Symptoms are observable and represent a change from the usual behaviour
C. For whom symptoms meet full criteria for either mania or hypomania, the diagnosis
should be bipolar I or bipolar II
D. Symptoms not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance

Catatonia features: Catatonia features present during most of the episode

Peripartum onset: Onset of mood symptoms occurs during pregnancy or in the 4
weeks after delivery

Seasonal pattern:
A. Regular temporal relationship between the onset of MDD and a time of the year
B. Full remissions also occur at a characteristic time of the year (usually spring/summer)
C. In the last 2 years, two MDD episodes have occurred during the same period
D. Seasonal MDD episodes substantially outnumber the non-seasonal ones

, Cognitive vulnerability-stress models of depression – Ambramson
Why some people are vulnerable to depression whereas other not?  According to BOTH
theories, the meaning/interpretation that people give to their experiences influence
this

Hopelessness Theory Beck’s Theory
Inference  Stable-global causes
s  Future negative consequences
 Negative self-characteristics
Event  Negative cognitive Event  Negative cognitive
style (inferences)  schema/dysfunctional attitudes 
Hopelessness  Symptoms Cognitive distortions  Negative
cognitive triad (yourself, world and
future)  Symptoms
Moderato  Social support, material,
rs emotional and informational
support
Depressed people inferences are Depressed people inferences are
negative negative and distorted

Similarities
- Role of cognition in the origins and maintenance of depression
- Cognitive vulnerability component moderating the effects of negative events on
depression
- Mediating sequence of negative inferences (hopelessness/negative cognitive
triad)
- Heterogeneity of depression
Differences
- Cognitive process (encoding, retrieval, attention)
- Cognitive products (cognitions about causes and consequences)

Hopelessness = Depressive & non cognition differ in content but not in process
Beck’s = Depressive & non cognition differ in content AND process

Cognitive theories explain the big facts of depression:
- Depression is recurrent
- Life events play a role in the development of depression
- Depression can be lethal (as increase the risk for suicide)
- Depression is a common disorder
- Depression peaks during middle to late adolescence
- There are gender differences where women show elevation in interpersonal
domain and negative cognitive styles (Abramson) while men on dysfunctional
attitudes (Becks)
- Depression is heterogenous with multiple causes

Assumptions of contemporary integrative interpersonal theory –
Hopwood
Contemporary integrative interpersonal theory (CIIT)
 Personality and psychopathology manifest in interactions
with others
 Psychopathology = Someone acts different than expected
o Agency (vs passivity) & communion (vs
dissociations)
o Levels = Motives, traits, behaviours
 Motive = Be in control – Be close
 Trait = Dominance – Nurturance
 Behaviour = Directive – Friendly

Alle Vorteile der Zusammenfassungen von Stuvia auf einen Blick:

Garantiert gute Qualität durch Reviews

Garantiert gute Qualität durch Reviews

Stuvia Verkäufer haben mehr als 700.000 Zusammenfassungen beurteilt. Deshalb weißt du dass du das beste Dokument kaufst.

Schnell und einfach kaufen

Schnell und einfach kaufen

Man bezahlt schnell und einfach mit iDeal, Kreditkarte oder Stuvia-Kredit für die Zusammenfassungen. Man braucht keine Mitgliedschaft.

Konzentration auf den Kern der Sache

Konzentration auf den Kern der Sache

Deine Mitstudenten schreiben die Zusammenfassungen. Deshalb enthalten die Zusammenfassungen immer aktuelle, zuverlässige und up-to-date Informationen. Damit kommst du schnell zum Kern der Sache.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Was bekomme ich, wenn ich dieses Dokument kaufe?

Du erhältst eine PDF-Datei, die sofort nach dem Kauf verfügbar ist. Das gekaufte Dokument ist jederzeit, überall und unbegrenzt über dein Profil zugänglich.

Zufriedenheitsgarantie: Wie funktioniert das?

Unsere Zufriedenheitsgarantie sorgt dafür, dass du immer eine Lernunterlage findest, die zu dir passt. Du füllst ein Formular aus und unser Kundendienstteam kümmert sich um den Rest.

Wem kaufe ich diese Zusammenfassung ab?

Stuvia ist ein Marktplatz, du kaufst dieses Dokument also nicht von uns, sondern vom Verkäufer itsross. Stuvia erleichtert die Zahlung an den Verkäufer.

Werde ich an ein Abonnement gebunden sein?

Nein, du kaufst diese Zusammenfassung nur für 7,16 €. Du bist nach deinem Kauf an nichts gebunden.

Kann man Stuvia trauen?

4.6 Sterne auf Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

45.681 Zusammenfassungen wurden in den letzten 30 Tagen verkauft

Gegründet 2010, seit 14 Jahren die erste Adresse für Zusammenfassungen

Starte mit dem Verkauf
7,16 €
  • (0)
In den Einkaufswagen
Hinzugefügt