USMLE Psychiatry – Flashcards

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define classical conditioning
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PAVLOVS DOGGY DOGS (SNOOP DOGS) natrual response is elicited by a conditioned or learned stimulus(bell) that was previously presented in conjunction with an unconditioned stimulus(food)
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1. define operant conditioning ~different types of operant conditioning below: 2. positive reinforcement 3. negative reinforcement 4. punishment 5. extinction
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1. learning in which a particular action is elicited because it produces a particular result 2. desired reward prouces action 3. removal of averse timulus eliminates shock (mouse button prevents shock) 4. application of averse stimulus extinguishes unwanted behavior 5. disconntinuation of reinforcement eliminates behavior
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1. define transference 2. define coutertransference
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1. patient projects feeling about formative or another important person onto the physician (ex. psychiatrist = parent) 2. docotr projects feeling about formative or other important person onto patient
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defense mechanisms (psychiatry) 1. acting out 2. dissociation 3. denial 4. displacement 5. the above ^^ defense mechanisms are what level of maturity
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1. unacceptable feelings expressed through actions (tantrums) 2. temporary drastic change in personality, memory, consciousness, motor behavior to avoid stress 3. avoidance of awarness of some painful reality (ex. new AIDS or cancer dx) 4. avoided ideas or feelings are transferd to a neutral person or object (ex. angry mom blames innocent kid) 5. IMMATURE DEFENSES
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defense mechanisms (psychiatry) 1. fixation 2. identification 3. isolation of affect 4. projection 5. the above ^^ defense mechanisms are what level of maturity
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1. partially remaining at a more childish level of development (ex. SUNDAY FOOTBALL YEA YEA YEA) 2. modeling behavior after another person who is more powerful (ex. child pretends to get ready for work when mom is leaving the house) 3. seperating feelings from ideas and events (describe a murder with no emotional response) 4. unacceptable internal impulse is attributed to an external source (man who wants divorce blames his wife for cheating) 5. IMMATURE DEFENSES
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defense mechanisms (psychiatry) 1. rationalization 2. reaction formation 3. regression 4. the above ^^ defense mechanisms are what level of maturity
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1. proclaiming logical reasons for actions actually performed for other reasons to avoid self blame (after being fired saying that the job was not important) 2. warded off idea or feeling is replaced by an emphasis on its oppsite (libidinous patient enters a monestary) 3. turning black maturational clock and going to earlier modes of dealing with the world (toilet trained children under stress will begin to bedwet again) 4. IMMATURE DEFENSES
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defense mechanisms (psychiatry) 1. repression 2. splitting 3. the above ^^ defense mechanisms are what level of maturity
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1. involuntary witholding of an idea of feeling from consious awareness (not remembering a traumatic event) 2. belief that people are all good or all bad at different times 3. IMMATURE DEFENSES
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defense mechanisms (psychiatry) 1. alturism 2. humor 3. sublimation 4. suppression 5. the above ^^ defense mechanisms are what level of maturity
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1. guilty feelings alleviated by unsolicited generosity to others (mafia boss makes donation) 2. appreciating amusing nature of adverse situation (med student jokes about boards) 3. replace unacceptable wish with a course of action that is similar to the wish but does not conflict with ones values (teenagers aggression toward father is used to accel in sports) 4. voluntary withholding of an idea or feeling from conscious awarness (wait until one week before USMLE to study) 5. MATURE MECHANSIMS - MATURE WOMEN WEAR A SASH (MNEUMONIC)
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1. what is the result of long term deprevation of affection 2. what happens if deprevation of affection lasts more than 6 months
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1. WWWW- weak, wordless, wanting (socially), wary - poor muscle tone, dec. language, no basic trust, anaclitic depression, weight loss, physcial illness 2. irreversible changes, in infants can result in death
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what are the signs of child abuse- phsical vs sexual
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physical - healed fractures, cigareete burns, subdural hematomas, multiple bruises, retinal hemorrhage/detachment sexual - genital trauma, STD, UTI
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who is most likely the abuser in child abuse + peak age of incidence of child abuse
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1' caregiver, female 9-12 years of age
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what is the evidence of child neglect, what must doctors do when they recognize this
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malnourished, withdrawl, social impairment, failure to thrive- report to CPS
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Attention defecit hyperactivity disorder 1. age of onset + % progression to adulthood 2. clinical characteristics 3. neuroanatomical changes 4. treatment*
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1. BEFORE AGE 7, 50% progress to adulthood 2.normal intelligence, hyperactivity, motor impairment, emotional lability 3. decreased FRONTAL LOBE volume 4. methylphenidate, amphetamines , atomoxetine (non stimulant SNRI)
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conduct disorder 1. age of onset ( 18) 2. clinical characteristics
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1. 18 = ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER 2. repetative violation of social norms (physical aggression destruction of property, theft)
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oppositional defiant disorder 1. clinical characteristics
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1. enduring pattern of hostile, defiant behavior toward AUTHORITY FIGURES in teh absense of serious violations of social norms
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tourettes syndrome 1. age of onset 2. clinical characteristics 3. treatment
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1. before age 18 2. rapid recurrent non rhythmic motor movements, associated with OCD 3. antipsychotics - (halperidol)
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separation anxiety disorder (not seperation anxiety) 1.age of onset 2. clinical characteristics
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1. 7-9 years of age 2. fear of seperation from home or attachment figure, may lead to factitious physical complaints to avoid going to school
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pervasive developmental disorders (definition)
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difficulties with language and failure to acquire/loss of social skills
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autistic disorder 1. clinical presentation 2. tretament
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1. severe language disorder, repetative behavior, BELOW NORMAL INTELLIGENCE, unusual abilities, focus on objects more than people 2. behavioral and supportive therapy
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aspergers disorder 1. clinical presentation *make sure understand differences between aspergers and autism
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1. more mild than autism, NORMAL INTELLIGENCE NO LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT, all absorbing interests, problems with social relationships
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Retts disorder 1. inheritance 2. clinical presentation (age of onset important)
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1. X linked disorder seen in GIRLS, fatal in boys 2. age of onset 1-4, loss of development, loss of verbal abilityies, mental retardation, ataxia, hand wringing
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Childhood disintegrative disorder 1. clinical presentation (age of onset important)
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1. onset age 3-4, loss of language skills, loss of social skills, loss of bowel/bladder control, male predominance
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neurotransmitter level changes in psychiatric disorders 1. anxiety 2. depression 3. alzheimers disease 4. Huntingtons disease 5. schizophrenia 6. parkinsons disease
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1. inc. NE, dec GABA, dec 5-HT 2. dec NE, dec 5-HT, dec DA 3. dec Ach 4. dec. GABA, dec. 5. inc. DA 6. dec. DA, inc. SA, inc. Ach
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1. what is loss of orientation 2. common causes of loss of orientation
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1. loss of knowledge of time, place, person 2. alchohol, drugs, fluid/electrolyte, head trauma, hypoglycemia, nutritional deficiecy
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1. retrograde amnesia 2. anterograde amnesia
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1. cannot remember what happened before an insult 2. cannot remember what happened after an insul
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korsakoff amnesia 1. pathogensis 2. clinical presentation
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1. caused by thiamine deficiency (ALCHOHOLICS) and destruction of mammillary bodies 2. anterograde/retrograde amnesia, confabulation
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dissociative amnesia 1. pathogenesis 2. clinical presentation
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1. trauma or stress 2. cannot recall important personal information
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cognitive disorders 1. what are the two cognitive disorders 2. delirium clinical presentation 3. delirium causes 4. EEG (normal or abnormal)
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1. delirium and dementia 2. waxing and waning change in level of consiousness; ACUTE ONSET rapid dec. in attention span/arousal, disorganized thinking change in sensorium; hallucinations, misperceptions 3. secondary to other illnesses, CNS/infection/trauma/abuse 4. normal
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dementia 1. clinical presentation 2. delirium causes 3. can a person with dementia develop delirium 4. EEG
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1. GRADUAL decline in intellectual ability or cognition with NO CHANGE IN LEVEL OF CONSCIOUSNESS memory loss**, aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, personality/behavioral changes 2. alzheimers, cerebral infarcts, HIV, picks disease, chronic susbstance abuse, CJD 3. YES - ex. person with alzheimers gets pneumonia 4. NORMAL
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what is pseudodementia
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depression that presents like dementia in elderly patients
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define psychotic disorder
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distorted perception of reality (psychosis), characterized by delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking
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what are the four signs of psychosis
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hallucinations - perceptions in the absense of stimuli illusions- percieving external stimuli as something it is not delusions - false believes about oneself or others (the CIA is after me) loose associations - disorders in the form of thought (how ideas are tied together)
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hallucination subtypes - what underlying conditions do they occur in 1. visual 2. auditory 3. olfactory 4. tactile 5. hypnagogic 6. hypnopompic
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1. medical illness (ex. drug interaction) 2. psychiatric illness (ex. schizophrenia) 3. part of aura of epilepsy, brain tumors 4. alcohol withdrawl (formication- sensation of insects) 5. while going to sleep 6. while waking up from sleep
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schizophrenia 1. clinical diagnositc criteria*** 2. neurotransmitter changes 3. 5 subtypes
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1. psychosis/disturbed behavior and thought >6 months 2 positive symptoms: delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, disorganized or cationic behavior negative symptoms- flat affect, social withdrawl, lack of motivation/speech/thought 2. increased dopamine, dec. dendritic branching 3. paranoid, disorganized, catatonic, undifferentiated, residual (after tx)
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1. brief psychotic disorder- dx criteria 2. schizophrenifom disorder - dx criteria 3. schizoaffective disorder -dx criteria
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1. <1 month psychotic disorder, assc. with stress 2. 1-6 months of positve and negative sx 3. 2 wk psychotic sx w/o mood disturbance + major depressive manic or mixed episode
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1. delusional disorder - dx criteria 2. folie a deux
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1. fixed persistant NONBIZARRE belive system >1month, functioning otherwise normal 2. shared delusion between two people in a close relationship
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1. dissociative identity disorder - clinical presentation+ demographics 2. depersonalization disorder clinical presentation
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1. multiple personality disorder- two or more distinct identities or personality states --- more common in women, assc with sexual abuse 2. persistent feelings of estrangement from ones body, social situation, environment
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1. dissociative fugue - clinical presentation
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1. change in geographic location causes inability to recall past, confusion about personal identity **include depression, bipolar, dysthymia, cyclothimia +/- psychotic sx
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1. list the mood disorders (4)
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1. major depressive disorder, bipoar disorder, dysthymic disorder, cyclothymic disorder
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1. manic episode - dx criteria
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>1 week persistently elevated, expansive, or irritable mood with marked impairment of social/occupational functioning + 3 criteria: ( maniacs DIG FAST) distractibility irresponsibility grandiosity flight of ideas increased goal directed activity decreased sleep talkativeness or pressured speech
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hypomanic episode - dx criteria
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similar to manic episode, but NO marked impairment in social or occupational functioning, no psychotic features
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1. Bipolar 1 and Bipolar 2 - dx criteria 2. bipolar treatment
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Bipolar 1; > 1 manic episode +//- depressive symptoms Bipoar 2; >1 hypomanic episode + major depressive episode 2. mood stabilizers- lithium, valproic acid, carbamazepine, atypical antipsychotics
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cyclothymic disorder- dx criteria
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> 2 years of dysthymia and hypomania --- milder form of bipolar disorder
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major depressive disorder - dx criteria
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self limited 6-12 months in duration + 5/9 of SIG E CAPS Sleep disturbance loss of Interest Guilt or feeling of worthlessness loss of Energy loss of Concentration Appetite/weight changes Psychomotor retardation or agitation Suicidal ideation Depressed mood
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1. dysthymia - dx criteria 2. seasonal affective disorder -dx criteria
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1. same as major depressive disorder but more mild and lasts > 2 years 2. same as dysthymia, assc with winter season, improves with full spectrum light exposure
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1. atypical depression - dx criteria 2. treatment of atypical depression
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1. hypersomnia, overeating, mood reactivity, weight gain, sensitivity to rejection 2. MAOI, SSRI
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post partum mood disturbances 1. maternal "blues" 2. post partum depression + tx 3. post partum psychosis + tx
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1. 50-85% ~ 10 days of depressed affect , tearfulness, fatigue, resolves by itself or progresses to post partum depression 2.10-15% ~depressed affect, anxity, poor concentration 2 weeks-2 months- tx antidepressants/psychotherapy 3. 0.1-0.2% ~ delusions, confusion, homiciadal/suicidal, 4-6 weeks - tx = antipsychotics, antidepressants, inpatient hospitalization
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ECT therapy 1. indications 2. mechanism 3. side effects
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1. major depression, pregnant women with major depression 2. painless seizure in anesthesized pt 3. disorientation, temporary amnesia, resolves after 6 months
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risk factors for suicide
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male teenager or elderly ethanol use loss of rational thinking sickness organized plan no spouse social support lacking men>women in succeeding women>men in trying
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1. anxiety disorder general characteristics 2. list the anxiety disorders
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1. inappropriate fear/worry and anxiety when the source of fear is insufficient to account for the severity of sx 2. panic disoder, phobias, OCD, PTSD, generalized anxiety disorder
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1. panic disorder - diagnostic criteria 2. treatment
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1. reccurent periods of intense fear/discomfort peaking in 10 minutes. Patients have persistent fear of having another attack PANICS (specific symptoms) Palpitations, paresthesias, abdominal distress, nausea, intense fear of dying, light headedness, Chest pain, chills, choking, sweating, shaking, shortness of breath 2. CBT, SSRI, TCA, benzodiazepines
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1. specific phobia - diagnostic criteria 2. treatment
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1. unreasonable fear cued by presence of a specific object or situation - person realizes fear is excessive 2. systematic desensitization
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1. social phobia -diagnositic criteria 2. treatment
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1. exaggerated fear of embarrassment in social situations 2. SSRI
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Obsessive compulsive disorder 1. diagnostic criteria 2. associated disorder 3. treatmnet
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1. recurring intrusive thoughts, feelings, or obsessions that cause distress- relieved by performance of repetitive actions 2. tourettes disorder 3. SSRIs, clomipramine (TCA)
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Ego dystonic disorder - dx criteria
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behavior that is inconsistent with one's own beliefs and attitudes (compare to OCD)
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Post traumatic stress disoder 1. dx criteria 2. treatment 3. acute stress disorder
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1. Disturbance >1 month after traumatic event (nightmares, intense fear, flashbacks), causes impaired functioning 2. psychotherapy, SSRI 3. lasts 2 days to 1 month
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Generalized anxiety disorder 1. dx criteria 2. treatment 3. adjustment disorder - dx criteria
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1. uncontrollable anxiety for >6 months unrelated to specific situation, event or person- fatigue, GI disturbance, difficulty concentrating 2. benzodiazepine, buspirone, SSRI 3. anxiety/depression after an IDENTIFIABLE psychosocial stressor , lasts <6 months
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1. malingering - dx criteria (compare to factitious disorder and somatiform disorders)
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pt consciously fakes claims of having a disorder to get drugs or avoid work- often has poor compliance - complaints STOP AFTER GAIN
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factitious disorder 1. dx criteria 2. munchausen's syndrome 3. munchausens syndrome by proxy (compare to factitious disorder and somatiform disorders)
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1. patient creates physical or psychological symptoms to assume the sick role and get medical attention (1' gain) (DOES NOT STOP AFTER GAIN) 2. chronic factitious disorder with physical signs/symptoms- willing to receive invasive procedures 3. illness in child is caused by the caregiver, motivation is to assume sick role by proxy - this is CHILD ABUSE
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1. somatoform disorders general features 2. list the different somatoform disorders
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1. physical symptoms with no identifiable physical cause, illness is caused by entirely unconsious drives, symptoms not intentionally created (compare to factitious and malingering) 2. somatization disorder, conversion, hypochondriasis, body dysmorphic, pain disorder
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somatoform disorders 1. somatization disorder 2. conversion disorder 3. hypochondriasis 4. body dysmorphic disorder 5. pain disorder
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1. multiple organ systme complaints (4 pain, 2 GI, 1 sexual, 1 pseudoneurologic) over several years 2. sudden loss of sensory or motor function following an acute stressor, patient aware but indifferent to sx (blindness, paralysis, mutism) 3. preoccupation with fear of having illness despity medical evalulation 4. preoccupation with appearance, leads to emotional distress, seek cosmetic surgery 5. prolong pain with no physical findings
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1. define personality trait 2. define personality disorder
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1. enduring repetitive pattern of percieving, relating to and thinking about the environment and oneself 2. infelexible maladaptive behavior pattern that causes stress and impaired functioning
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Cluster A personality disorders 1. cluster A personality disorders general characteristics 2. paranoid disorder (+defense mech) 3. schizoid disorder 4. schizotypal disorder
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1. Accusatory Aloof Awkward: odd and eccentric, cannot develop meaningful social relationships, NO psychosis 2. distrust, suspicion, use of projection as defense mechanism 3. social withdrawl, limited emotional expression, social isolation 4. MAGICAL thinking, eccentric appearance, interpersonal awkwardness
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Cluster B personality disorders 1. Cluster B personality disorders general characteristics 2. antisocial disorder 3. borderline disorder (+defense mech) 4. histrionic disorder 5. narcissistic disorder
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1. dramatic, emotional, erratic, assc with substance abuse 2. violation of rights of others, criminality (conduct disorder if males 4. excessive emotionality and excitability, attention seeking, sexually provocative, overly concerned with apperance 5. grandiosity, entitilement, lacks empathy, requires admiration, reacts to criticism with rage
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Cluster C personality disorders 1. Cluster C personality disorders general characteristics 2. avoidant disorder 3. obsessive compulsive personality disorder 4. dependent disorder
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1. anxious or fearful 2. hypersensitive to rejection, socially inhibited, feels inadequate, desires relationships with others (vs schizoid) 3. preoccupied with order, perfectionism, control, behavior consistent with ones own beliefs (vs OCD****) 4. submissive, clinging, needs to be taken care of, low confidence
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1. schizoid 2. schizotypal 3. schizophrenic 4. schizoaffective 5. schizophreniform (*_*)
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1. socially withdrawn, content with isolation 2. schizoid + odd or magical thinking 3. >6 months delusions/hallucinations/cationic or disorganized behaviror + negative sx 4. 2 weeks psychosis + major depression, or manic episode (schizophrenia + mood episodes) 5. schizophrenia that occurs for <6 months
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1. anorexia nervosa - clinical signs 2. anorexia nervosa - clinical symptoms
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1. excessive dieting +/- purging, body weight <85% of ideal, dec. bone density, amenorrhea, anemia, electrolyte disturbances 2. fear of gaining weight, body image distortion, depression
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1. buleimia nervosa -clinical signs
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1. binge eating +/- purging, laxitive, diuretics, emetics body weight NORMAL RANGE, parotitis, enamel erosion, electrolyte disturbances alkalosis, russels sign (marks on back of the hand from vomitting)
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gender identity disorders 1. transexualism 2. transvestism
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1. desire to live as opposite sex through surgery or hormone treatments 2. paraphilia- wearing cloths of the opposite sex
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substance dependence- diagnostic criteria (7)
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>3 in one year tolerance withdrawl increasing dose desire and unsuccess to dec use significant time/energy recovering from drug use social/job/recreational impairments continued use despite knowing problems with use
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substance abuse - diagnostic criteria (4)
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recurrent use resulting in failure at work/school/home use in hazardous situations substance related legal problems use despite continuous problesm
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stages of change in overcoming substance addiction (6)
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1. precontemplation - dont know there is problem 2. contemplation - know there is problem but no action 3. preparation/determination - getting ready to change 4. action/willpower - changing behavior 5. maintainence - maintaining behavior change 6. relapse - returning to old behaviors
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Depressants (general) 1.intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. what drugs are depressants (4)
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1. mood elevation, dec. anxiety, sedation, behavioral disinhibition, respiraotry depression 2. anxiety, tremor, seizures, insomnia 3. alchohol, opiods, barbiturates, benzodiazepines
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alchohol (depressant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. treatment for alcohol withdrawal 3. blood markers of alcoholism****
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1. slurred speech, ataxia, emotional lability 2. mild = anxiety, tremor, seizures, insomnia severe= delirium tremens 3. benzodiazepines 4. gamma-glutamyltransferase, AST 2x> ALT****
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opioids (depressant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. treatment of intoxication 4. treatment of withdrawal
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1. CNS depression, N/V, constipation, pinpoint pupils, seizures 2. sweating, dilated pupils, piloerection, fever, rhinorrhea, craps, diarrhea 3. naloxone/naltrexone 4. symptomatic
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barbiturates (depressant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. treatment of intoxication
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1. major respiratory depression (low safety margin) 2. delierium, life threatening cardiovascular collapse 3. artificial ventilation, increase BP
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benzodiazepines (depressant) 1. intoxication 2. treatment of intoxication
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1. ataxia, minor respiratory depression (compre to barbiturates) (greater safety margin) 2. flumazenil (GABA antagonist)
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stimulants (general) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. what drugs are stimulants (4)
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1. mood elevation, psychomotor agitation, insomnia, cardiac arrhythmias,tachycardia, anxiety 2. "crash" depression, lethargy, weight gain, headache 3. amphetamines, cocaine, caffeine, nicotine
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amphetamines (stimulant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal
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1. pupil dilation, insomnia, prolonged wakefulness/attention, delusions, hallucinations, fever 2. stomach cramps, hunger, hypersomnolence
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cocaine (stimulant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. treatment for withdrawl
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1. sudden cardiac death *pupillary dilation, hallucinations, paranoid ideations 2. suicidality, hypersomnolence, malaies, psychological craving 3. benzodiazepines
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caffeine (stimulant) 1. intoxication
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1. restlessness, diuresis, muscle twitching
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nicotine (stimulant) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal 3. treatment of withdrawal
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1. restlessness 2. anxiety, craving, irritability 3. bupropion, varenicline, patch, gum
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PCP (hallucinogen) 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal
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1. belligerence, impulsiveness, NYSTAGMUS, tachycardia, homicidality, psychosis, delirium 2. depression, anxiety, irritability, restlessness, anergia
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LSD 1. intoxication
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1. anxiety, depression, delusions, FLASHBACKS, pupillary dilation
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marijuana 1. intoxication 2. withdrawal + urine testing
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1. euphoria, anxiety, paranoid delusions, impaired judgment, social withdrawal, increased appetite, conjunctival injection, hallucinations 2. irritability, depression, insomnia, anorexia, sx peak 48 hours last ~1 week, detectable in the urine for up to one month
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heroin 1. medical complications of heroin addiction 2. methadone 3. suboxone
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1. right sided endocarditis, hepatitis, AIDS, abscesses 2. oral opiate used for heroin detox/maintenance 3. naloxone (only active if injected**) + buprenorphine (partial agonist) long acting with less withdrawal compared to methadone
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alcoholism 1. medical complications of alcoholism 2. wernicke korsakoff syndrome 3. treatment of wernicke korsakoff syndrome
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1. alcoholic cirrhosis, hepatitis, pancreatitis, peripheral neuropathy, testicular atrophy 2. thiamine deficiency - necrosis of mamillary bodies Wernicke= Triad: confusion, ophthalmoplegia, ataxia Korsakoff = memory loss, confabulation, personality change 3. parenteral B1
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Mallory weiss syndrome
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longitudinal lacerations at gastroesophageal junction caused by excessive vomiting, presents with meatemesis
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treatment of alchoholism
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disulfiram support groups
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1. delirium tremens 2. treatment of delirium tremens
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1. alcohol withdrawal syndrome 2-5 days after last drink autonomic hyperactivity, (tachycardia, tremors, anxiety), hallucinations/delusions, confusion 2. benzodiazepines
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psychiatric disorder treatments 1. alcohol withdrawal 2. bulimia 3. anxiety 4. ADHD 5. atypical depression
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1. benzodiazepines 2. SSRI 3. benzodiazepines, buspirone, SSRIs 4. methylphenidate, amphetamines 5. MAOI, SSRI
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psychiatric disorder treatments 1. bipolar disorder 2. depression 3. depression with insomnia 4. OCD 5. panic disorder
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1. lithium, valproate, carbamazepine (mood stabilizers), atypical antipsychotics 2. SSRI, SNRI, TCA 3. mirtazapine 4. SSRIs, clomipramine 5. SSRIs, TCAs, benzodiazepines
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psychiatric disorder treatments 1. PTSD 2. schizophrenia 3. tourettes syndrome 4. social phobias
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1. SSRI 2. antipsychotics 3. antipsychotics 4. SSRI
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methylphenidate, dextroamphetamine 1. mechanism 2. clinical use
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1. increase catecholamines (NE/DA) in the synaptic cleft 2. ADHD, narcolepsy, appetite control
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antipsychotics (typical) 1. high potency (3) 2. low potency (2) 3. mechanism 4. clinical use
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1. Try to Fly High - trifluoperazine, fluphenazine, haloperidol 2. Cheating Thieves - chlorpromazine, thioridazine 3. block D2 receptors (increasing cAMP) 4. schizophrenia (+ symptoms), psychosis, mania, tourettes syndrome
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antipsychotics (typical) 1. side effects 2. neuroleptic malignant syndrome 3. treatment of NMS 4. tardive dyskinesia
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1. EPS, hyperprolactinemia/galactorrhea (b/c blocks D2), antimuscarinic side effects (dry mouth/constipation), alpha blocking (hypotension), histamine (sedation) 2. FEVER - fever, encephalopathy, vitals unstable, elevated enzymes, rigidity of muscles 3. dantrolene 4. stereotypic oral facial movements due to long term antipsychotic use
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antipsychotics (typical) 1. chlorpromazine (low potency)/thioridazine(high potency ocular side effects
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1. chlorpromazine - corneal deposits thioridazine - retinal deposits
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antipsychotics (typical) 1. evolution of EPS for pt on typical antipsychotics
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rule of 4's 4 hours - acute dystonic -spasms/stiffness/oculogyric crisis 4 days - akinesia (parkinsonism) 4 weeks - akathisia (restlessness) 4 months - tardive dyskinesia
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atypical antipsychotics 1. drug names 2. mechanism 3. clinical use
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1. olanzapine, clozapine, quetiapine, risperidone, aripiprazole, ziprasidone 2. 5HT2, DA, alpha, H1 receptor modulation not completely understood 3. schizophrenia (BOTH +/- symptoms)
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atypical antipsychotics 1. which atypical for OCD, anxiety, depression, mania, tourettes 2. SE compared to typicals 3. which atypicals cause weight gain 4. which atypical causes agranulocytosis 5. which atypical causes long QT
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1. olanzapine 2. less EPS, no tardive dyskinesia 3. olanzapine, clozapine 4. clozapine (MOST WATCH CLOZAPINE CLOZLY with WBC counts every week) 5. ziprasidone
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lithium (mood stabilizer) 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3.side effects 4. renal effects
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1. not known, possibly inhibits phosphatidylinositol cascade 2. mood stabilizer for bipolar disorder, blocks relapse and acute manic events, SIADH 3. tremor, nephrogenic DI (ADH antagonist), hypothyroidism, ebstein abnormality, narrow therapeutic window 4. nephrogenic DI, reabsorbed in PCT with Na+
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buspirone 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3. advantage compared to benzodiazepine/barbiturates
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1. 5HT1a agonist 2. generalized anxiety disorder 3. does not interact with alcohol
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TCA 1. drugs 2. mechanism 3. clinical uses
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1. amitriptyline, nortriptyline, imipramine, desipramine, clomipramine, doxepin, amoxapine, *-iptyiline, *-ipramine 2. NE/5HT reuptake inhibitors 3. depression, bedwetting (imipramine), OCD (clomipramine), fibromyalgia
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treatments for OCD (3)
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clomipramine (TCA) olanzapine (atypical) SSRIs
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TCA 1. side effects 2. which TCA has more anticholinergic SE 3. which TCA has less sedation + less seizure 4. signs of toxicity 5. treatment of toxicity
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1. alpha blocking (hypotension), anticholinergic (tachycardia, urinary retention) 2. amitriptyline (3') > nortriptyline (2') 3. desipramine 4. convulsions, coma, cardiotoxicity(arrhythmia) (3 Cs) respiratory suppression, hyperpyrexia, confusion, hallucinations 5. NaHCO3- to protect the heart
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SSRIs 1. drug list 2. mechanism 3. clinical uses 4. toxicity 5. treatment of toxicity
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1. fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, citalopram 2. 3. depression, OCD, bulimia, social phobias, PTSD 4. serotonin syndrome (if used with MAOIs or other drugs that inc. serotonin hyperthermia, myoclonus, cardiovascular collapse, diarrhea, flushing, seizure 5. cyproheptadine (5HT2 antagonist)
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SNRI 1. drug list 2. clinical uses 3. toxicity
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1. venlafaxine, duloxetine 2. depression, generalized anxiety disorder (venlafaxine), diabetic peripheral neuropathy (duloxetine) 3. increaesd BP, sedation, nausea
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MAOI 1. drug list 2. mechanism 3. clinical use 4. toxicity
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1. tranylcypromine, phenelzine, isocarboxazid, selegiline 2. MAO inhibitor, increases NE/5HT/DA 3. atypical depression, anxiety, hypochondriasis 4. hypertensive crisis with tyramine ingestion and beta agonists, contraindicated with SSRI or merperidine
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buproprion 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3. side effects
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1. increases NE/DA by unknown mechanism 2. atypical antidepressant, smoking cessation 3. stimulant effects, seizure, no sexual side effects** (compare to other SSRIs)
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mirtazapine 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3. side effects
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1. alpha 2 antagonist - increases release NE/serotonin, 5HT antagonist 2. atypical antidepressant 3. sedation, inc. appetite, weight gain, dry mouth
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maprotiline 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3. side effects
answer
1. blocks NE reuptake 2. atypical anti-depressant 3. orthostatic hypotension, sedation
question
trazadone 1. mechanism 2. clinical use 3. side effects
answer
1. inhibits seratonin reuptake 2. insomnia 3. PRIAPISM, sedation, postural hypotension
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