Midterm 2 Psych 300 Ch. 5 Anxiety Disorders PDF
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This document discusses anxiety disorders, covering physiological arousal, concepts related to HPA activation, and distinguishing anxiety from anxiety disorders. It explores the importance of anxiety disorders and various aspects of cognitive-behavioral models related to treatment.
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## Anxiety Disorders ### Physiological Arousal - A universal human experience - Innate fear system - Marked by HPA activation - Affects multiple brain regions - Affects every organ system in the body - Essential for survival ### Concepts Related to HPA Activation 1. **Stress**...
## Anxiety Disorders ### Physiological Arousal - A universal human experience - Innate fear system - Marked by HPA activation - Affects multiple brain regions - Affects every organ system in the body - Essential for survival ### Concepts Related to HPA Activation 1. **Stress** - Response to perceived demands (problems) - Objectively demonstrable problem - Outweigh coping abilities 2. **Fear** - Present-oriented - Response to actual danger - Compared to stress, there is something to actually fear - Surge in sympathetic nervous system (fight/flight response) - Strong urge to escape 3. **Panic** - Sudden rush of intense fear and physiological symptoms (fight or flight) - Short, intense HPA activation - No objective danger - False alarm 4. **Anxiety** - Also known as apprehension/apprehensive anxiety - Future-oriented - Possible future threat - Physical tension ### Anxiety vs Anxiety Disorders - When it's very: - Intense - Frequent - Excessive or unreasonable (reaction is exaggerated; exaggerated threat perception) - You have to experience distress and/or impairment ### Importance of Anxiety Disorders 1. **Prevalence** - They're the most prevalent condition - Single largest mental health problem in North America - General population (DSM-III) - 24.9% lifetime prevalence ### DSM-V said GAD is a form of depression ### Speculation that GAD occurs in people with underactive GABA-benzodiazepine system ### Cognitive-Behavioural Models - **Maintaining factors:** cognitive avoidance (Borkovec) - People with GAD used cognition to avoid thinking about things that are very important - Found that people with GAD have less physiological reactivity/arousal except for muscle tension compared to people with panic disorder - Although they are worried, they have less arousal than other anxiety disorders - Worry about images - more verbal than pictorial - Focus on future not present events serves as distraction from fear - Talking to yourself (e.g., "What am I gonna wear? What if I'm early? What if I'm late?") and worrying verbally distracts yourself from serious events that may be happening in life (e.g., if a family member is sick) - Came up with the idea of using cognitions to avoid genuine emotions - **Intolerance of uncertainty (Durgas)** - People get anxious when there are uncertain situations - People with GAD often have erroneous beliefs about worry - more likely to believe that worry is useful - Poor problem orientation - people with GAD could generate solutions to problems but afraid to implement them - Also emphasize cognitive avoidance - people worry to avoid a deeper fear - Came up with the Why Worry questionnaire - Found that people with GAD believe that if they worry, they will be less upset when something actually happens, but it actually has no protective function at all (therefore a dysfunctional belief) - They also believe that worrying has a planning function, but found that this actually keeps individuals from actually implementing problem solutions - In reality, if you worry about something, you're more likely to procrastinate - **Safety behaviors of people with GAD:** overpreparation ### Treatment - **Dugas & Robichaud: CBT for GAD** - Have people keep track of their worries and then ask them to divide those worries - Worry discrimination: Type 1 (controllable) and Type 2 (uncontrollable hypothetical situations) - Type 1: exercise problem solving - Type 2: focus on increasing tolerance for uncertainty - Exercises to engage in actions without preparation - Reduce reassurance-seeking - Exposure to most feared outcome - E.g., visualizing your fear/writing out a loved one getting into a car accident and reading it over and over till emotion drains out of the imagined scenario ### Panic Disorder (PD) - Pan: Greek god who would leap out and yell at those who disturbed his nap - **Unexpected terror** - 30% of people will have a panic attack at some point in their lives, but may not develop PD - **Diagnostic features** - Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks - Panic attack: sudden rush of symptoms, intense, peaks within minutes (goes away fairly quickly) - **Physiological** - Palpitations, pounding heart, or accelerated heart rate; chest pain - Shortness of breath, smothering; feeling of choking - Dizzy, unsteady, lightheaded, faint - Nausea or abdominal distress - Trembling or shaking - Sweating - Paresthesias (numbness or tingling) - Chills or hot flushes - **Psychological** - Derealization (feelings of unreality) - Depersonalization (being detached from oneself) - Fear of losing control, going crazy, or dying - **You can also condition yourself to be afraid of things or learn fears in different ways** - **Panic attacks - have a panic attack in a situation can produce fear even if it's fairly benign** - **Problems with 2-step learning theory** - Often conditioning event is absent - Individual differences in conditionability - Stimuli specificity - does not explain why we aren't afraid of everything - Humans tend to develop fears of certain objects (e.g., people do not typically have a fear of a bottle of water) - **Cognitive interpretations influence fear** - **Integrative models - aetiology** - Interaction between innate vulnerability (biological predispositions whether genetics or evolutionary) and learning experiences - Results in exaggerated threat perceptions - people with phobias tend to have maladaptive thought processes regarding the object/situation they're afraid of - Leads to avoidance and other safety behaviours - **Contemporary models - safety behaviours** - Deliberate - Adopted to prevent negative outcome - Unnecessary - Exercising of safety behaviours reinforces the belief - **First line treatment** - Cognitive modification - to change maladaptive thought processes - In vivo (in real life) exposure - Graduated (step-wise) - Virtual reality exposure - **Treatment - hypothesised mechanisms (why does it work?)** - Reconsolidation: reactivate the fear memory & store with fewer emotion connections - Extinction learning: (aka inhibitory learning) develop new memory store associated with fear stimulus - Cognitive change: reduce selective attention to threat through safety learning, i.e., not focus on the fear ### Panic Itself Subsides But Feelings Of Anxiety May Stay - A critical symptom: sense of choking or unable to get enough air ### Diagnosis Requires - At least 5 symptoms listed above - Before: anticipatory anxiety - After: worry about the consequences of the attack - Significant behaviour change - Situational - avoid situations they associate with triggers for panic attacks - Internal sensations - if someone feels a symptom associated with panic attacks, they think another one will occur, e.g. avoid walking up the stairs to avoid a faster beating heart/getting out of breath - Safety behaviours - e.g. carrying anti-anxiety medication ### Subtypes Of Panic Attacks - Cued (situationally bound - confined to certain situations with certain triggers) - Situationally predisposed (e.g., someone with social anxiety may only have panic attacks in certain situations) - Unexpected - required for diagnosis of panic disorder - Limited symptom attacks - people may have some symptoms of a panic, but no enough to be diagnosed ### Prevalence - 1 in 3 people experience a panic attack - Only 3% meet the criteria for panic disorder ### Biological Contributions - **Biological challenge studies - manipulations that increase CO2** - Infusions of lactic acid - Carbon dioxide inhalation - **Biological theorists** - Neurochemical disturbance - 30-40% genetically transmitted - E.g., suffocation false alarm theory: hypersensitivity to detecting carbon dioxide (chemoreceptors) ### Cognitive Contributions - In biological challenge studies, if told "sensations are not harmful," they are less likely to panic - Catastrophic misinterpretations of one's physical sensations (fear of fear) - person associates bodily sensations with bad things = spiralling of anxiety which surmounts to a panic attack - E.g., interpreting heart beating as dangerous and something bad is going to happen = get more anxious = breathe less properly ### Cognitive Model - Trigger (internal or external) - Catastrophic misinterpretations - Perceived threat - Apprehension - Bodily sensations (anxiety) ### Treatment - Medications may have side effects, i.e., bodily sensations which could trigger panic attacks - CBT is the first line of treatment - Education - e.g. recognizing signs of panic attacks and acknowledging that it is nothing dangerous ### Agoraphobia - Anxiety about being in places/situations where escape might be difficult or embarrassing, or where help may not be available - Differs from simple phobias because it can occur in multiple situations - These situations are either avoided completely, entered only with a "safe person" (very dependent on that person) and/or endured with marked distress - **Commonly avoided situations** - Buses/subways - Bridges - Enclosed spaces - Crowds - Malls - Movie theatres - Standing in line-ups - **Controversy to agoraphobia** - Recall: people who have had panic attacks avoid situations that elicit bodily sensations that resemble panic attacks - According to Barlow, agoraphobia almost always follows panic/PD - European researchers disagree - So is it with or without panic disorder? - 46-80% don't report panic - Clinically ### Social Phobia/Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) - Marked or persistent fear of one or more social or performance situations - Performance: e.g. eating in public; public speaking (but since so many people are afraid of public speaking, many question if it should be considered a disorder) - Fears doing something humiliating or embarrassing and being negatively evaluated - Subtype: performance only - E.g., singing in public ### Prevalence - 4th most prevalent disorder after depression, alcoholism and specific phobias - High prevalence in North America - 8.1% of Canadians - Lower elsewhere - Europe = 2.3% - Prevalence is the same in children (one of the most difficult childhood disorders to treat along with OCD), adolescents and adults - Onset at age 13 (pubescent age being the peak of bullying or heightening of self-awareness) but can begin earlier ### Gender - More prevalent in women in community populations - Men are more likely to seek treatment ### Culture Influences - Taijin kyofusho: fear of offending other people via behaviour, body odour, intense gaze etc. (Japan, Korea) - Hikikomori: severe social withdrawal (aka failure to launch) (Japan) - People from Asian cultures (especially China and Korea) report more social anxiety but have lower rates of social phobia - more accepting of being shy, quiet and reserved = less stigma so it doesn't impair them as much ### Impairment - Social: avoidant personality (people and other things like novel things), hikikomori (60% of men with social phobia don't marry), less social support, fewer friends, lonelier - Education: may choose professional career based on interaction with people - Occupational: underemployment (tend to go less far in their jobs than they should) - Comorbidity: risk factor for depression (usually precedes onset of depression), substance abuse (most strongly predicts marijuana abuse/dependence - 25% of those who use marijuana have SAD) ### Prevalence - 16.4% 12 month prevalence - Patients in primary care settings (who go to the doctor) (DSM-III) - 18% (even excluding specific phobias) - Non-cardiac chest pain: 40% have panic disorder (PD) - Focal epilepsy: 19% develop comorbid anxiety disorder (e.g., anxious they will have another seizure, or social phobia of having a seizure in public) ### Present in All Cultures But Prevalence Varies - 12 month prevalence (DSM-IV) - Europe: 8.4% - USA: 22% - Australia: 5.6% - China: 13% - Canada: 5.8% (PD, Agoraphobia, SAD only) - Francophone: 3.85, Anglophone: 4.89 - More common in European especially those with Anglophone backgrounds - Could be because these typically are wealthier countries where mental health care is more readily available - Tiwari & Wang (2006) - Examined cultural groups within Canada - Canadian Community Health Survey - Residents > 13 years old - Self-reported heritage - 33,399 Euro (10% immigrants) - 733 Chinese (84.5% immigrants) - 1,113 other Asian (86%) - Found that people of European backgrounds seemed to be at higher risk of anxiety disorders than other groups in Canada - Consistent in anxiety disorders and depression ### Issues with Research - Definitions of culture, ethnic heritage - Any gold standard? - Ethnicity vs culture - A lot of Canadians consider themselves bi-culture - Controlling for generational status - By third generation, people resemble Canadian culture more than their ethnic culture - Grouping of heritage groups - "Asian" vs "European" - Lumping all Asian cultures together etc. disguises differences - Southern European cultures differ from Northern European cultures in anxiety disorders - Emotion terms don't translate well from one language to another - E.g., social anxiety disorder (SAD) - Some cultures it means fear of other people, or paranoia - Interestingly, generalized anxiety disorder, or worry, seems to be universal ### Often Chronic ### Cause Significant Personal Impairment ### Risk Factors for Other Disorders - 31% comorbid for another anxiety disorder - 50% also have depression - Increased risk of substance disorder - Possible links with suicide - Multiple health conditions ### Economic Burden for Society