Term
| When do Panic Disorders manifest |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
| What is the most common anxiety disorder |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
| Anxiety and depression have ___% comorbidity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
| Cardiac, trembling, shortness of breath, chocking, dizzy, lose control, fear of dying and will do anything to avoid one |
|
|
Term
| What would a GAD present? |
|
Definition
| Muscle tension, GI, pulmonary, unable to relax, initial insomnia (can't fall asleep), poor concentration |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
| Flashbacks, nightmares, "trigger" stimulii, unable to relax, intrusive thoughts, avoidance behaviors, dread |
|
|
Term
| What are some pharmacotherapy agents for treatment of anxiety |
|
Definition
Benzodiazepines "Valium" SSRI's MAO inhibitors for phobias |
|
|
Term
| Which disorder has the strongest degree of familial aggregation? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
| do receptor genes like adrenergic play a role in anxiety disorders? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
| Name some individual etiologies of anxiety |
|
Definition
1. Genetic 2. Temperament 3. Autonomic reactivity 4. Neurobio factors |
|
|
Term
| What's maternal deprivation? |
|
Definition
| Take the baby rat away from the mother, return the rat and it gets over cleansed by the mother, this baby rate will be more stress resistant than other rats |
|
|
Term
| Anxiety involves 3 systems, what are they |
|
Definition
1. CRH 2. Serotonin system 3. GABA system |
|
|
Term
| Which part of the limbic system is key in mediating human emotional state? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
| What happens in the hippocampus in panic disorder? How about PTSD? |
|
Definition
1. Increased Left Hippocampal Metabolism 2. Reduce Hippocampal Activation |
|
|
Term
| ______ activity correlates w/ the inability to recall traumatic events in PTSD patients |
|
Definition
|
|