100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary All literature and lecture notes Neuropsychology And Psychiatric Disorders £7.28   Add to cart

Summary

Summary All literature and lecture notes Neuropsychology And Psychiatric Disorders

 21 views  2 purchases
  • Module
  • Institution

De samenvatting bevat alle benodigde artikelen en leesstof voor het vak Neuropsychology And Psychiatric Disorders (dit studiejaar '24-'25). Daarnaast bevat het document ook alle hoorcollege aantekeningen: schizophrenia, mood disorders, ADHD, Tourette syndrome, ASS en identity & severe mental il...

[Show more]

Preview 5 out of 82  pages

  • October 28, 2024
  • 82
  • 2024/2025
  • Summary
avatar-seller
Week 1 Introduction (No literature)
Lecture notes
Lecture 1 - Introduction - 11 September
Exam
 7-10 Open questions
 Answer in Dutch/English
Historical perspective
 Before 1800
 No medication, doctors involved
 1790 - French revolution
 Human rights more taken in account
 Moral treatment
 Contact with psychiatric disorders → psychotherapy
 1860 researching psychiatry (linking brain to behavior)
 Malfunctioning brain to brain disturbance
 1890 - Classification of Kraeplin
 First close to describe as DSM
 First calling Schizophrenia
 1880 - hypnosis
 Catharsis: relieve yourself from your problems
 1890 - Freud Psycho-analysis
 1900 - Biological psychiatry
 ECT: persistent depression guidelines method.
 Lobotomy: pierce with sharp thing in frontal lobe
 Malfunction in this area, you will be quit relaxed (no higher
functions)
 Relieve complaints of people with mental disorders
 1940 - Psychopharmaceutic
 Chlorpromazine - antipsychotic drugs = proof for brain dysfunction
 Nowadays: psychosis medication for lifelong >2 psychoses. More
balancing the advantages and disadvantages if psychosis is stable
for 3 months or longer.
 1950 - Introduction DSM

,  Classify people, to find labels what fits the person best. Not
helping why people are in a specific situation and why are difficulties
in functioning?
 Specific wishes of person, symptoms and social functioning is
needed for treatment!
 1960 - Neuropsychology in psychiatry
 Schizophrenia
 Severe cognitive impairments in psychotic disorder and
comparable with neurological disorders (TBI).
 First attempt of cognitive training in people with
schizophrenia.
 Difficulties with allocated effort to specific tasks →cause to
much energy of keep level up to pay attention
Modern Psychiatry
 Brain and environment interaction (earlier nature vs nurture)
 Mental disorders never exist on a vacuum. Always personal history
and social context
 Criticism if you don’t fit in a box, you get a label with a disorder. A
lot of expectations for people on how to live. More awareness of
interaction with individuals and the context. Less try to change the
individual
 Recovery beyond symptomatic remission - treatment
 Try to avoid internal voices, relieve delusional thoughts. =
symptomatic recovery (doctors) → Change over the years:
 Functional recovery = able to function in society (job,
study), participating again in their roles → role of
neuropsychologists increasing as clinician
 Cognitive remediation
 You can reach functional recovery without symptomatic
recovery.
 Personal recovery = living a life with our own purposeful
lives, values and spirituality. Strive for the person you want to
be
 NIMH RDoC:
 Biological disorders: dimensions and focus on domains/units
of analysis
 Transdiagnostic framework: how to think about
disorders. Less using labels
Definitions

,  Psychiatry = medical specialty concerned with the diagnosis and treatment
of mental illness
 Neurology = medical specialty concerned with the diagnosis and treatment
of disorders of nervous system (brain, spinal cord and nerves)
 Neuropsychology: psychological specialty concerned with relationship
between behavior emotion cognition on the one hand and brain function
on the other
Traditional neuropsychology: Link brain regions/lesions to specific behavior.
Knowledge on the role of brain areas in mental processes → moved away from
specific brain part in these days
Neuropsychology as profession
 Generating hypothesis on underlying mechanisms of symptoms
 Understanding why person is acting ina specific way and which
cognitive functions involves
 Understand role of cognitive processes in the etiology (onset) and
presentation of psychiatric disorders
 Before onset of psychotic episode, increase in impairment in social
cognition and unable to read mind of other people = Theory of
Mind→ you can become untrust people and reject your own ideas
on others. What you think will happen and explain the onset of
paranoid
 Understand clinical behavioral and phenomenological correlates of
neuropsychological impairment
 Doing individual neuropsychological assessments (profile of strengths and
weaknesses)
How psychiatrists seen neuropsychology
 Underutilized resource → make yourself visible
 Establishing deterioration in cognitive functioning
 Making differential diagnosis → hard for NP because severe impairment can
come along with a lot of NP disorders. No specific profiles for disorders
 Facilitating improved outcomes
Problems/questions in psychiatry
 Not only based on neuropsychological assessment making a DSM 5 label
(or differential diagnosis)
 More information needed about social context, substance use,
family, education, how problem arises
 Making predictions if someone is able to go back to previous level of
functioning in social, work
 Difficult to make predictions based on the NP tests

,  Cognitive limitation should be taken into account in treatment of this
person
 Extra break through when someone has severe memory problems.
Make more summaries, write things down
 Evaluate effect of pharmacological interventions on cognitive functioning
 Repeat assessment and stop treatment
 In parallel version (learning effect)
Interpretation errors
 NP tests measure specific functions, poor performance on a single test.
Lower score
 Deficit on specific test
 Or poor attention during test
 Abnormal test scores is not related to a specific bain dysfunction
 Hypoactivity (less) during functional imaging with cognitive activation task
suggests regional brain dysfunction
 Schizophrenia: making MRI scan and do Tower of London test →
hypoactivation in frontal lobe compared to normal population
 Did not understand task, not allocating → a lot is possible
Interpretation eros in neuropsychiatry
 Directly link brain areas and disorders/personality/sexual orientation: neo-
phrenology = misinterpretation
 Making a psychiatric diagnosis based on neuroimaging studies = not
possible
 Reductionism: psychological conditions are brain disorders associated with
a state of chemical imbalance
 Feeling depressed: me of my brain? Insufficiency dopamine level in
brain, but there are more neurotransmitters and brain regions
involved
 Assuming an association between functional impairments and NP
impairment is disorder-specific
 Social cognition leads to poor social functioning in schizophrenia is
NOT the case. Links between cognitive domains are transdiagnostic
and does not have anything to do with the label a person has
 Assuming NP dysfunctions causes such functional impairments
 Not knowing the direction based on test scores
Therapy/treatment

,  Cognitive remediation = brain training by using it over it = drill and
practice. Use it or lose it. People gets better on specific task/exercise → no
generalization
 Helping people to think of strategies. To wipe out cognitive
impairments. Can you visuale the things you have to remember?
 In neurological setting, not in psychiatry setting. Effect Size as big as
CBT, but specified to a specific domain.
 Optional treatment for psychosis
 NP test data used to develop treatment strategies tailored for an
individual's specific cognitive strengths and deficits

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller jhboerde. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £7.28. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

77254 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling
£7.28  2x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart