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Title: Class%20Activity


1
Class Activity
  • For each of the following words, write a sentence
    that describes an experience you had that is
    associated with that respective word
  • Train
  • Ice
  • House
  • Meeting
  • Machine
  • Road
  • Rain
  • Tunnel

2
Class Activity
  • For each experience you wrote down, rate whether
    the experience was pleasant or unpleasant
  • After you have rated all experiences, tally the
    total number of pleasant and unpleasant
    experiences

3
Class Activity
  • How have you felt today?
  • Happy? Sad? Somewhat depressed?
  • The number of pleasant vs. unpleasant experiences
    you recalled should be related to your mood
    today.
  • When we are depressed, we remember more
    unpleasant than pleasant events.
  • What is this called????

4
Mood Disorders - Emotional disturbances that
interfere with normal life functioning (Axis 1)
Bipolar II no mania
Bipolar I
Bipolar disorders
Depressive disorders
Dysthymia
5
Major Depressive Episode (building block)
  • A. During the same 2-week period, five or more of
    the following symptoms including either 1 or 2
    have been present (must be a change in
    functioning)
  • Depressed mood most of the day, nearly everyday
  • Diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost
    all, activities
  • Significant changes in appetite and/or weight
  • Significant changes in sleep patterns
  • Psychomotor retardation or agitation
  • Fatigue or loss of energy
  • Feelings of worthlessness or inappropriate guilt
  • Diminished ability to concentrate or make
    decisions
  • Recurrent thoughts or death or suicide

6
Major Depressive Episode (building block)
  • B. The criteria do not meet criteria for a Mixed
    Episode
  • C. The symptoms cause clinically significant
    distress or impairment in functioning
  • D. Not due to a General Medical Condition or
    substance
  • E. The symptoms are not better accounted for by
    Bereavement

7
Manic Episode (building block)
  • Distinct period of abnormally and persistently
    elevated, expansive, or irritable mood, lasting
    at least 1 week
  • During the mood disturbance, 3 or more of the
    following symptoms have persisted (4 or more if
    the mood is only irritable)
  • Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
  • Decreased need for sleep
  • More talkative than usual, or pressure to keep
    talking
  • Racing thoughts (flight of ideas)
  • Distractibility
  • Increase in goal-directed activity
  • Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities
    that have the potential for negative consequences

8
Manic Episode (building block)
  • C. The symptoms do not meet criteria for a Mixed
    Episode
  • D. The symptoms cause significant impairment in
    functioning or necessitate hospitalization to
    prevent harm to self or others
  • E. Not due to a GMC or substance

9
Mixed Episode (building block)
  • A. The criteria are met for both a Manic Episode
    and a Major Depressive Episode (except duration)
    nearly every day during at least a 1-week period
  • B. The symptoms cause significant distress or
    impairment in functioning
  • C. Not due to a GMC or substance

10
Hypomanic Episode(building block)
  • Distinct period of persistently elevated,
    expansive, or irritable mood lasting at least 4
    days
  • During the mood disturbance, 3 (or more) of the
    following symptoms have been present (4 or more
    if mood is only irritable)
  • Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
  • Decreased need for sleep
  • More talkative than usual, or pressure to keep
    talking
  • Racing thoughts (flight of ideas)
  • Distractibility
  • Increase in goal-directed activity
  • Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities
    that have the potential for negative consequences

11
Hypomanic Episode(building block)
  • C. The episode is associated with an unequivocal
    change in functioning that is uncharacteristic of
    the person when not symptomatic
  • D. The mood disturbance and change in functioning
    are observable to others
  • E. The episode is not severe enough to cause
    marked distress or impairment in functioning and
    does not require hospitalization
  • F. Not due to a GMC or substance

12
Mood Episodes
Mixed Episode
Mania
Hypomania
Normal Mood
Depression
13
Major Depressive Disorder
  • One or more Major Depressive Episodes
  • AND
  • No history of mania or hypomania
  • Specify
  • Single Episode
  • Recurrent

14
Major Depressive Disorder
Major Depressive Episode
Major Depressive Episode
Major Depressive Episode
Major Depressive Episode
MDD, recurrent episodes
MDD, single episode
15
Major Depressive Disorder Types
  • Melancholic
  • Catatonic
  • Seasonal Pattern
  • Post-partum onset

16
Dysthymia
  • A. Depressed mood most of the day, more days than
    not, for at least 2 years
  • B. Presence, while depressed, of 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. During the 2-year period, the person has never
    been without the symptoms for more than 2 months
    at a time

17
Dysthymia
  • D. Not better accounted for by Major Depressive
    Disorder
  • E. There has never been a Manic, Mixed, or
    Hypomanic episode
  • F. Not better accounted for by another disorder
  • G. Not due to a GMC or substance
  • H. Symptoms cause clinically significant distress
    or impairment in functioning

18
Dysthymic Disorder
Dysthymic disorder lies between a blue mood and
major depressive disorder. It is a disorder
characterized by daily depression lasting two
years or more.
19
Major Depression vs. Dysthymia
Recurrent Major Depressive Episodes
Dysthymia
20
Bipolar Disorder
  • Formerly called manic-depressive disorder. An
    alternation between depression and mania signals
    bipolar disorder.

Manic Symptoms
Depressive Symptoms
Elation
Gloomy
Euphoria
Withdrawn
Desire for action
Inability to make decisions
Hyperactive
Tired
Multiple ideas
Slowness of thought
21
Bipolar Disorder
Many great writers, poets, and composers suffered
from bipolar disorder. During their manic phase
creativity surged, but not during their depressed
phase.
Earl Theissen/ Hulton Getty Pictures Library
George C. Beresford/ Hulton Getty Pictures Library
The Granger Collection
Bettmann/ Corbis
22
Bipolar Disorder
  • Two Main Distinctions
  • Bipolar I Disorder
  • Technically, this should mean Mania/Mixed
    Depression
  • Actually, this means Mania/Mixed Depression
  • Bipolar II Disorder
  • Hypomania Depression (No mania ever)
  • It is distinguished from Major Depressive
    Disorder by the lifetime history of at last one
    Manic or Mixed Episode

23
Bipolar I Disorder
Depressed and manic episodes
One or more manic episode
OR
Major Depressive Episode
Manic or Mixed Episode
Manic or Mixed Episode
OR
24
Bipolar II Disorder
One or more hypomanic episode
Depressed and hypomanic episodes
OR
Major Depressive Episode
Hypomanic Episode
Hypomanic Episode
OR
25
Explaining Mood Disorders
Since depression is so prevalent worldwide,
investigators want to develop a theory of
depression that will suggest ways to treat it.
Lewinsohn et al., (1985, 1995) note that a theory
of depression should explain the following
  1. Behavioral and cognitive changes
  2. Common causes of depression

26
Theory of Depression
  1. Gender differences

27
Theory of Depression
  1. Depressive episodes self-terminate.
  2. Depression is increasing, especially in the teens.

Desiree Navarro/ Getty Images
Post-partum depression
28
Biological Perspective
Genetic Influences Mood disorders run in
families. The rate of depression is higher in
identical (50) than fraternal twins (20).
Linkage analysis and association studies link
possible genes and dispositions for depression.
Jerry Irwin Photography
29
Neurotransmitters Depression
A reduction of norepinephrine and serotonin has
been found in depression. Drugs that alleviate
mania reduce norepinephrine.
Pre-synaptic Neuron
Serotonin
Norepinephrine
Post-synaptic Neuron
30
The Depressed Brain
  • PET scans show that brain energy consumption
    rises and falls with manic and depressive
    episodes.

Courtesy of Lewis Baxter an Michael E. Phelps,
UCLA School of Medicine
31
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Psychodynamic Views
  • Freud noted similarities between grief and
    depression
  • Theorized that depression is grief (anger
    sadness) turned against the self
  • Actual or symbolic loss can trigger depression
  • Attachment theorists have expanded the theory
  • Childhood losses/separations create vulnerability
    to later depression

32
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Behavioral Views
  • When people experience a decline in rewards
    particularly social rewards they can enter a
    downward spiral of decreasing rewards that leads
    to depression.
  • Theoretical Problem Does decline in rewards
    cause depression, or does depression cause
    decline in rewards?

33
Explanatory Style
Explanatory style plays a major role in becoming
depressed.
34
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Cognitive Views
  • Depression is the result of ingrained, negative
    thought patterns.
  • Two main theories
  • Becks Explanatory Style
  • Seligmans learned helplessness

35
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Cognitive Views
  • Negative Thinking
  • Maladaptive attitudes often rooted in childhood
  • E.g. If I make a mistake, Im worthless
  • These attitudes develop into entrenched schemas
  • Stress triggers negative schemas

36
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Cognitive Views
  • Negative Thinking
  • Controlled by these schemas, self, present
    future perceived negatively
  • Schemas lead to automatic thoughts that
    continuously confirm negative perceptions
  • Schemas lead to thinking errors
  • E.g. Nobody cares about me

37
Mood Disorders
Psychological Views of Depression
Cognitive Views
  • Negative Thinking
  • Considerable research supports the link between
    depression and
  • Maladaptive attitudes negative schemas thinking
    errors automatic thoughts
  • However, do cognitive patterns cause depression
    or are they caused by it?

38
Systems Approach
39
Depression Cycle
  1. Negative stressful events.
  2. Pessimistic explanatory style.
  3. Hopeless depressed state.
  4. These hamper the way the individual thinks and
    acts, fueling personal rejection.

40
Suicide
The most severe form of behavioral response to
depression is suicide. Each year some 1 million
people commit suicide worldwide.
41
Suicide
  • Risk Factors
  • Best predictor Prior attempt
  • Living alone, especially if divorced/separated
  • Retired/unemployed
  • Elderly
  • Loss of a loved one
  • Chronic illness
  • Financial troubles
  • Feelings of hopelessness
  • Impulsivity
  • Sexual identity difficulties

42
Suicide
  • Who attempts? Who completes?
  • Women 3-4 times more likely to attempt suicide
  • Men 3-4 times more likely to complete suicide
  • Ages 18-24 Peak age for attempting suicide
  • Ages 65 Peak age for completing suicide

43
Suicide
  • Common Warning Signs
  • Symptoms of depression
  • Talking about death, disappearing, ending it
    all, etc., even just in passing
  • Writing letters, saying last goodbyes
  • Getting rid of personal effects, making a will
  • Arranging for the care of pets, plants, etc.
  • Extravagant spending

44
Suicide
  • Prevention
  • Help the person regain ability to cope with
    immediate stressors
  • Maintaining supportive contact with the person
  • Help the person realize that their distress is
    impairing their judgment
  • Help the person realize that the distress is not
    endless
  • Broad based programs focused on high-risk groups
  • Crisis hotlines
  • Call 911/ER
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