• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
appendix 1 - Department of Neurology and Psychiatry
appendix 1 - Department of Neurology and Psychiatry

... • Major life stressors (patient and family: job loss, bereavement, divorce, illness, etc.) • Spirituality • Support networks and coping • Lifestyle (exercise, diet, recreation) This type of information is important for evaluating patient risks and assets—with regard to psychiatric disorders and resp ...
stable resource toolkit
stable resource toolkit

... This STABLE Resource Toolkit is intended to provide informational material for clinicians for screening, assessment, monitoring and educating patients with bipolar disorder. This toolkit is not intended to provide medical advice to patients. The information provided here is general, and not intended ...
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 5th edition
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 5th edition

...  Stress may be a trigger for depression • People with depression experience a greater number of stressful life events during the month just prior to the onset of their symptoms • Some clinicians distinguish reactive (exogenous) depression from endogenous depression, which seems to be a response to ...
Schizoaffective Disorder in Life
Schizoaffective Disorder in Life

... Results: Researchers predicted patients with the disorders would have positive predictor scores of paranoia, psychopathy, obsessiveness, etc. on their evaluations that would correlate to future reality. 87 % of participants with positive predictor scores had similar scores / evaluations 10 years aft ...
Short communication: State-related differences in heart rate
Short communication: State-related differences in heart rate

... were assessed several times during follow-up and included at the beginning of their course of treatment ...
DEPRESSION UK
DEPRESSION UK

... 10-20% of patients will have a chronic course, with persistent symptoms lasting over 2 yrs. The majority of patients experiencing a depressive episode will have further episodes later in life (risk of recurrence is -30% at 10 yrs, -60% at 20 yrs) Modern antidepressant treatments impact significantly ...
Glossary of Terms
Glossary of Terms

... incapacity related to past heart disease, out of proportion to one's actual disability, or to fear of having a heart attack. cataplexy: Diminished responsiveness, often trance like; may be related to organic or functional disorders or to hypnosis. includes waxy flexibility. cataplexy: Episodic loss ...
The Bipolar Spectrum: Conceptions and Misconceptions
The Bipolar Spectrum: Conceptions and Misconceptions

... onto every DSM·III diagnosis to avoid making any etiological judgments (Ghaemi, 20U); thus, the tenn 'illness', which implied a medical disease, was dropped, producing bipolar 'disorder' and MDD. One can see, after all these distortions, that the bipolar disorder concept is very different from manic ...
Unit 12 Practice-No Answers
Unit 12 Practice-No Answers

... 20. Positive psychological changes that result from ...
DSM-5 ICD-10 Disorder Name Description A
DSM-5 ICD-10 Disorder Name Description A

... Tourette's is characterized by sudden urges to engage in a repetitive behavior (called a tic) such as blinking one's eyes or smacking one's lips. Although usually associated with uncontrollable swearing, this form of the disorder (known as Coprolalia) is actually quite rare. Schizophrenia is a serio ...
Functional Neuroimaging of State, Course, and Symptom
Functional Neuroimaging of State, Course, and Symptom

... Major depressive disorder (MDD) Clinical characteristics and prevalence MDD is a psychiatric disorder characterized by enduring sadness, loss of interest or pleasure, feelings of guilt or low self-worth, disturbed sleep or appetite, feelings of tiredness, and poor concentration (See Box I for Diagno ...
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety Disorders

... • FBA is based on the assumption that if repeated atypical, challenging behaviors are expressed by the individual that behavior must be serving some purpose for the person • FBA’s are used to help identify , functions, purpose, reasons, etiology for identified patterns of behaviors, or verify a medi ...
Axis I comorbidity in bipolar disorder with psychotic features.
Axis I comorbidity in bipolar disorder with psychotic features.

... earlier adolescent drug use and later depressive and disruptive disorders in young adulthood, controlling for earlier psychiatric disorders. Strakowsky et a1 (1996) found that patients with bipolar disorder and antecedent alcohol abuse had a later onset of affective illness, arguing that perhaps thi ...
Mood disorders and violence: a new focus
Mood disorders and violence: a new focus

... mania were two to three times higher than in the general population, even after controlling for ethnicity and age (Teplin 1990). Confounding by the criminal justice system In determining the prevalence of mental illness among those in the criminal justice system a number of factors may influence the ...
Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Child and Adolescent Psychopathology

... related to altered dopaminergic function in the brain.  High levels of comorbidity between substance abuse ...
Page 1 Neuropharmacology of Traumatic Brain Injury
Page 1 Neuropharmacology of Traumatic Brain Injury

... Hypopituitarism ...
LASE 2.13 - semo.edu
LASE 2.13 - semo.edu

... • Most children gradually develop an awareness of their impact on and interactions with others. Children with ADHD, on the other hand, can be described as a "bull in a china shop". They move through the day quickly, often without giving much thought to the feelings or needs of others. Hyperactive, a ...
Memory
Memory

... People are fascinated by the exceptional, the unusual, and the abnormal. This fascination may be caused by two reasons: ...
STRIVE ACS Critical Pathways Optimizing Hospital Care of the ACS
STRIVE ACS Critical Pathways Optimizing Hospital Care of the ACS

... A negativistic, hostile, and defiant pattern of behavior that varies greatly in severity  Common symptoms – Often loses temper – Often actively defies adults – Often deliberately annoys people ...
Mutts and Manic Man-eating Moggies
Mutts and Manic Man-eating Moggies

... Fears are innate an normal Anxieties are often learnt from fears and some are in the animal’s ‘nature’ Anxiety is normal But anxiety disorders are not Panic disorders are high level, damaging ...
Prototype for a Scientific Classification of Mental Disorders – website
Prototype for a Scientific Classification of Mental Disorders – website

... form of dementia - which most experts today would regard as completely wrong. It is said that he based his classification on evidence about many patients, compiled in a complex ‘diagnostic card system’ (Zählkarten). The most important distinction we owe to Kraepelin is that between manic depressive ...
Evidence and implications for early intervention in bipolar disorder
Evidence and implications for early intervention in bipolar disorder

... of an early window of opportunity, through which illness trajectory may be modulated has energized the field, shifting the hope of effective secondary prevention into the bipolar arena. This paper aims to discuss the literature that surrounds this concept. Can bipolar disorder be stage–managed? Cent ...
The Practical Management of Depression
The Practical Management of Depression

... Depression: Current Treatment Patterns • Only about 1/3 of patients with major depression seek care for their depression (1) • Less than 1/2 of patients with major depression are explicitly ...
Depression erkennen und verstehen
Depression erkennen und verstehen

... grandiose ideas or pumped-up self-esteem far less need for sleep than normal an urgent desire to talk racing thoughts and distractibility increased activity that may be directed to accomplishing a goal or expressed as agitation  a pleasure-seeking urge that might get funneled into sexual sprees, ov ...
Chapter 5 - IPFW.edu
Chapter 5 - IPFW.edu

... Guns are by far the most common means of suicide in the United States (60%); men usually shoot or hang themselves; women more likely to use pills The suicide rate increases in old age. The highest rates of suicide in the United States are for white males over age 50 The rates of suicide for adolesce ...
< 1 ... 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 ... 73 >

Mania

Mania is the mood of an abnormally elevated arousal energy level, or ""a state of heightened overall activation with enhanced affective expression together with lability of affect."" Although it is often thought of as a ""mirror image"" to depression, the heightened mood can be either euphoric or irritable and, indeed, as the mania progresses, irritability becomes more prominent and can eventuate in violence. Although bipolar disorder is by far the most common cause of mania, it is a key component of other psychiatric conditions (e.g., schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type; cyclothymia) and may occur secondary to neurologic or general medical conditions, or as a result of substance abuse.The nosology of the various stages of a manic episode has changed over the decades. The word derives from the Greek μανία (mania), ""madness, frenzy"" and the verb μαίνομαι (mainomai), ""to be mad, to rage, to be furious"". In current DSM-5 nomenclature, hypomanic episodes are separated from the more severe full manic ones, which, in turn, are characterized as either mild, moderate, or severe (with or without psychotic features). However, the “staging” of a manic episode – hypomania, or stage I; acute mania, or stage II; and delirious mania, or stage III – remains very useful from a descriptive and differential diagnostic point of view, in particular allowing for a more thorough consideration of the more pronounced manic states, wherein the fundamental signs become increasingly obscured by other symptoms, such as delusions.The cardinal symptoms of mania are the following: heightened mood (either euphoric or irritable); flight of ideas and pressure of speech; and increased energy, decreased need for sleep; and hyperactivity. These cardinal symptoms are often accompanied by the likes of distractibility, disinhibited behaviour, and poor judgement, and, as the mania progresses, become less and less apparent, often obscured by symptoms of psychosis and an overall picture of disorganized and fragmented behaviour.Mania may be caused by drug intoxication (notably stimulants, such as cocaine and methamphetamine), medication side effects (notably SSRIs), and malignancy (the worsening of a condition), to name but a few. Mania, however, is most commonly associated with bipolar disorder, a serious mental illness in which episodes of mania may alternate unpredictably with episodes of depression or periods of euthymia. Gelder, Mayou, and Geddes (2005) suggest that it is vital that mania be predicted in the early stages because otherwise the patient becomes reluctant to comply with the treatment. Those who never experience depression also experience cyclical changes in mood. These cycles are often affected by changes in sleep cycle (too much or too little), diurnal rhythms, and environmental stressors.Mania varies in intensity, from mild mania (hypomania) to delirious mania, marked by such symptoms as a dreamlike clouding of consciousness, florid psychotic disorganization, and incoherent speech. Standardized tools such as Altman Self-Rating Mania Scale and Young Mania Rating Scale can be used to measure severity of manic episodes. Because mania and hypomania have also been associated with creativity and artistic talent, it is not always the case that the clearly manic bipolar person needs or wants medical help; such persons often either retain sufficient self-control to function normally or are unaware that they have ""gone manic"" severely enough to be committed or to commit themselves. Manic persons often can be mistaken for being on drugs or other mind-altering substances.
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report