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Child Psychopathology
ADHD, ANXIETY, CONDUCT, MOOD
71
Psychology
Undergraduate 3
10/20/2009

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Term
ADHD: Projectile Trajectory
Definition
problems maintaining employment
relationship problems
substance abuse
multiple arrests and convictions
Term
ADHD: Epidemiology
Definition
3-5% school age children
rates drop in adolescent boys
more common in boys
one of the most common mental health disorders
Term
ADHD: Comorbidity
Definition
Oppositional defiant disorder and Conduct Disorder : 30-50%
Learning disorders: 25%
o Reading most common
Anxiety disorders: 25%
o Inattentive only at greatest risk
Depression: 20%
Term
ADHD: Etiology
Definition
Cause is unknown
Likely CNS deficit- brain (frontal lobe)
Children do NOT outgrow ADHD
• 1/3 manage, receive treatment, are fine
• 1/3 continue same level of problems
• 1/3 develop additional disorders
Term
ADHD:Genetic Influences
Definition
Parental transmission- more likely from dad
o 30% of fathers who have ADHD will transmit
Concordance rates- twins
o Identical- 81%
o Fraternal- 29%
Term
ADHD: Neurotransmitter Influences
Definition
Dopamine- influences impulsivity and three seeking behavior
Quays Neuropsychological model- all externalizing disorders
o Combined type kids
o Behavioral activation system (BAS)
Stimulates in response to reward or non punishment
• Gas pedal
• Overactive
• Heightened sensitivity to rewards, seek external rewards
o Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS)
• Inhibits in presence of punishment or novel situations
• Breaks
• Under active
• Fail to respond to normal punishment
o Evidence
• Frontal love (executive functioning- planning and problem solving) and prefrontal cortex appear under stimulated
• Basal ganglia (executive functions) abnormalities- react without fear
Term
ADHD: Family Influences
Definition
• No evidence bad parenting is a blame for ADHD
• Bad parenting can exacerbate problem
o So ADHD doesn’t comorbid with ODD/CD
Term
ADHD: Myths
Definition
• Not actually due to sugar, food additives
Term
ADHD: Treatment Psychosocial
Definition
• Parent- management training
• teaches parents how to implement behavior modifications
o lasts 8-12 sessions/ weeks (for white, midclass- takes longer in community outreach because families have other problems like poverty)
• goals:
o establish and consistently enforce rules
o ignore mildly inappropriate behavior
o praise positive behavior
o use token economy
• Classroom intervention- daily report card (drc)
• Choose specific target behaviors (Johnny will get __% of work done)
• Establish a home based reward system
Term
ADHD: Treatment Pharmacological
Definition
• Stimulants (over 90% of ADHD get this)- Focalin
• Stimulate frontal lobe (improve focus, problem solving, etc.)
• Non stimulants
• Generally safe and effective (for 2/3 kids)
o Some don’t respond to one type of drug but respond to other
o For other 1/3 nothing works
Term
ADHD: Treatments: Other
Definition
• Cognitive problem solving skills treatment
• Shouldn’t be used by itself but is effective when used with other treatment
• Teach kid appropriate attributions
• Emotional insight and management
• Social problem solving
Term
ODD
Definition
• Pattern of negativistic, hostile, and defiant behavior lasting at least 6 months
• Look at developmentally inappropriateness of behavior
Term
ODD features
Definition
• Opposition- active resistance to limitations, resrtictions, or directions, “push the limits”
• Defiance- deliberate contradticting/provoking others, seem to argue just to argue
• Onset around age 4 or 5
Term
CD
Definition
• Repetitive/persistent pattern of behavior in which basic rights of others or major age apporpriate societal norms rules are violated
• Plus additional symptoms in 4 major categories: (see chart in book)
• Aggression to people and animals
• Destruction of property
• Deceitfulness/ theft
• Serious violations of rules
Term
CD specifiers
Definition
• Childhood onset type (aka early onset)
o ~ 4 to 8 years
o At least one symptom prior to age 10
o More severe, less frequent
o Low remission, high innovation
• Low remission- behaviors escalate over time
• High innovation- behaviors are varied and occur in multiple contexts
o These kids have the worst prognosis
• Adolscent onset type
o Late childhood, early adolescense
o 0 symptoms prior to age 10
o Less severe, more frequent
o High remission (behaviors disappear over time) and low innovation (behaviors don’t vary)
o Better prognosis problems liekly go away over time, less likely to have genetic basis like in child onset
Term
Delinquency vs. Conduct Disorder
Definition
• Delinquency legal term for crimal behaviors
o Officially delinquent when arrested and convicted
o All CD are delinquent not all delinquent are CD\
• Conduct Disorder clinical term for pattern of distruptive and antisocial behaviors, regardless of legality, more serious/long term than delinquency
Term
CD 4 dimensions
Definition
o Horizontal dimension: overt vs. covert
• Over- observable (fighting)
• Covert- not observable (lying/stealing)
o Vertical: destructive vs. Nondestructive
• Destructive- harm (vandalism)
• Nondestructive- no harm (truancy)
o Kids with overt and destructive have worst developmental trajectory, higher risk of developmental trajectory, higher risk of developing criminal behaviors and psych. Disorders
Term
Types of Aggression
Definition
• Instrumental aggression: intended to achieve a goal, means to an end, happens lots in little kids (hit to get a toy) because they want something but lack verbal skills and control
• Should decrease at around preschool (but hostile aggression increases)
• Hostile aggression: intended to inflict harm
• Risk factor for later psychological disorders
• Direct Aggression: confronting/ attacking victims directly, more common in girls than in boys
• Indirect aggression: sneaky harmful behavior, “relational aggression”, more common in girls than in boy, know far less about it than direct aggression
• Why happens?
• What are good interventions?
• See pyramid diagram in book
• Oppositional symptoms (ex. Tantrums)
o Happens most and earliest
• When kids move into jr. high they use weapons/lie (less frequent but more severe)
• Adolescence: still more severe but less frequent (ex. Mug, rape, steal)
• See chart in book on adolescent limited path (adolescent onset, usually then decreases over lifespan, less extreme and less likely to drop out of school, situational behaviors less bad) vs. life course persistent path (child onset with a worse trajectory)
Term
“Pledging” Psychopath
Definition
• Psychopathy- pattern of callous, manipulative, deceitful, and remorseless behavior
• not a diagnosis but used in clinics and legal situations
• more common in child onset
• impulsive, don’t care about others, aggressive
• can be identified in kids ages 3-5, kids tend to not have a conscious
• Antisocial personality disorder (ASD)
• Pervasive pattern of disregard for violation of rights of others
• Diagnosed starting at 18, not all kids with CD go on to have this disorder (and CD is childhood specific, must be under 18)
Term
CD Epidemiology
Definition
2-6% (less common than ODD)
• Age of onset: early to mid adolescence (later than ODD)
• More common in boys
o DSM doesn’t include covert symptoms that many CD girls show-they could be flying under the radar
• See book chart: age specific prevalence vs. age in years (boys show behaviors more than girls but boys and girls peak and drop off in behaviors in the same time frame/patterns)
Term
ODD Epidemiology
Definition
2-10% prevalence
• Age of onset: preschool to early school age
• Develops earlier in boys than girls (twice as common in boys than girls)
Term
Conduct Problems comorbidity
Definition
o Comorbidity:
• ADHD (50% of ODD/CD kids have ADHD)
• Drug and alcohol abuse
• Lately greater abuse of prescription drugs
• Mood and anxiety disorders
Term
Conduct Problems: Etiology Genetic Factors
Definition
o Adoption and twin studies
• 50% attribute to heredity
o Difficult child temperament
• Restless, impulsive, risk-taking
o Partially affect BAS (overactive- need rewards) and BIS (under active- don’t respond to punishment)
o Neuropsychological deficits
• Lower verbal IQ, executive function problems, impulsivity
• However, most of these studies have been done on jailed people, maybe these people just dumber/get caught?
Term
Conduct Problems: Etiology -Social Cognitive Factors
Definition
• Social information processing deficit
o Hostile attribution bias- misinterpret and think people are doing things out of hostility
• Poor social skills
o Bad at picking up on social cues
Term
Conduct Problems Etiology -Family Factors
Definition
• Parental psychopathology and criminality
o Runs in families, due to genes and environmental
• Parenting
o More common with permissive parent style
o Lack of parental supervision
o Coercive parental interactions
• Each person escalates other person’s behavior
• Family stress and instability
o Multiple bfs/gfs of either parent, moving around
• Family disruption/chaos
o Marital conflict and family violence
Term
Conduct Problems Treatment
Definition
• Parent management training (PMT):
• Teach effective parenting skills
• Change coercive interactions
• Cognitive problem-solving skill training (PSST)
• Teach appropriate appraisals and attributions
• Emotional insight and management
• Problem-solve in social situations
• * PMT and PSST used in combination with older children
• Multisystemic Treatment (MST)
• Family systems approach
• Targets dysfunctional family relationships
• May include other social influences
• May include components of PMT and PSST
• highly effective- requires a ton of labor
• long waitlists- state funded if psychological issue and law issue
Term
Conduct Problems Prevention
Definition
• Apply parent, child, and/or family therapy components to universal or at risk populations
• Highly effective if intervene early
Term
Normal Fears and Worry
Definition
• Universal reactions to unsafe situations and threats
• Adaptive evolution at work
• Follow developmental trajectory
• Change in a consistent way
Term
Anxiety
Definition
• Characterized by strong negative emotion and bodily symptoms of tension in which future danger or misfortune is anticipated
• Physical
• Cognitive
• Behavioral → avoidance
Term
Separation Anxiety Disorder
Definition
• Developmentally inappropriate fear that something bad will happen upon separation
• Reassurance or reasoning doesn’t lessen fear
• Symptoms vary with age but manifest across domains
• Make themselves ill
Term
Anxiety: General Adaptation
Definition
• Young children- 7 and under
o Clingy at home, shadow parents, and become upset if parent is out of sight for any amount of time
o Unhappy and inconsolable until reunited with caregivier
o Refuse to sleep alone
• Marital conflict, family distruption
• Older Children 9-12
o Call home repeatedly
o Visit during middle of day
o Problems concentrating in school
o Refuse extracurricular activities
o Seek parents approval and lack independence
o Refuse to sleep alone
Term
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Symptoms
Definition
• Excessive and uncontrollable anxiety and worry for more days than not for 6+ months
• Worries about different events or activities, often developmentally inappropriate
Term
GAD: General Adaptation
Definition
• Low self-esteem
• Perfectionist
o Expect too much from themselves → set themselves up for failure
• Excessive need for reassurance
Term
OCD Symptoms
Definition
• Obsessions- recurrent and intrusive anxiety provoking thoughts and impulses
o “urges” “images”- cognition less in young kids
o always extreme, always intrusive
• compulsions: repetitive, ritualistic behaviors to reduce anxiety associated with obsessions
o child feels forced
o if interfered with, may have panic attacks, temper tantrums
o vary considerably
• checking, looking, washing, only wear loose clothes, only eats smooth foods
Term
OCD Developmental Trajectory
Definition
• Child at first seems rigid and odd
o Flicks lights a few times, washes hands a few extra times
• Orderliness turns more extreme and broad
o Entire family forced to comply to compulsions
• Behaviors become entrenched and disruption causes severe distress to child and family
o Not for attention
• Daily functioning and entire family affected
Term
OCD General Adaptation
Definition
• 50-60% of youth with OCD face major problems of adaptation at home
o mental and emotional exhaustion
o school refusal and oppositional behavior
Term
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Criteria
Definition
• Trauma involves actual or threatened death or serious injury
• Response of intense fear, helplessness, or horror
o Agitation/disorganization in children
Term
PSTD Symptoms
Definition
• Intrusive symptoms: recurrent recollections of events including images, thoughts, or perceptions
o Keep having flashbacks occurring during disruptive times
o Dreams, sensations, hallucinations, flashbacks
• Adolescence, older kids
• Disassociated
o Repetitive re-enhancing play in children
• Young children
o Can be cued by reminders of trauma
• Avoidance of symptoms- active avoidance of memories or emotions surrounding trauma
o Avoid thoughts, places, people, events
o Partial or total memory loss
• Older kids
o Little interest in activities
o Detachment and restricted range of affect
• Little kids
o Guilt, pessimism, and hopelessness
• Hyper arousal symptoms- body on alert
o Problems sleeping
o Irritability
o Lack of attention and concentration
o Hyperviligence
o Exaggerated startled response
Term
SAD Epidemiology
Definition
10%
• Most common anxiety disorder in children
• Earliest age of onset
• No gender differences
Term
GAD Epidemiology
Definition
• 3-6% of children/adolescents
• age of onset- early in school age
• more common in girls
Term
OCD Epidemiology
Definition
• 1-2% of children/adolescent
• age of onset- preadolescent/early adolescent
Term
Anxiety General Comorbidities
Definition
• Other anxiety disorders
• Depressive disorders
Term
Anxiety Etiology-Genetic influences
Definition
• Vulnerability partly inherited (not disorder specific- doesn’t have to be same disorder)
o Twin studies – higher with identical
o Family studies- 2 parents with anxiety- higher risk
Term
Anxiety Etiology Neurotransmitters
Definition
o Seratonin- problem with reuptake too much at synapse
o GABA
o Norepinephrine- inhibitory
Term
Anxiety Etiology Temperament and regulation
Definition
o Inhibited temperament- irritated and agitated
• Later shy, fearful, and cautious
o Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) overactive
• Monitors threats and allows control and planning
Term
Anxiety Etiology- Psychosocial factors
Definition
• Behavior models
• Classical conditioning (phobias)
• Modeling- mom and dad anxious- reinforce behavior
• Cognitive models
• Learned helplessness
• Dysfunctional Family relationships
• Insecure attachment
• Authoritarian parenting
o High control, unrealistic expectations, little autonomy
• Exposure to marital conflict
Term
Anxiety Treatment
Definition
o Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
• Psychoeducation- kid and parents understand how developed and how to reverse
• Relaxation training- debriefing, imaginable and imagery
• Cognitive restructuring
• Not as affective with young kids
• Fear hierarchy and exposure
• Modeling and role playing
• Most effective with parent training
o Pharmacological Treatment
• SSRIs: selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
• Few studies on children
• Antidepressants
o Effective for reducing symptoms in OCD
o Other than OCD, mixed results
Term
Major Depressive Disorder (short term but intense)
Definition
• Table 8.1- 5 or more symptoms present in same 2 week period- change from previous functioning
• At least 1 has to be depressed mood or loss of interest
• In children irritable mood
• Average episode lasts 8 mos
Term
Major Depressive Disorder Developmental Trajectory
Definition
• Young children- irritability
o Physical complaints
• Older children- sadness and hopelessness
o Often times not a “why”
o Anhedonia- lack of interest
o Vegetative symptoms- weight gain, sleeping fatigue
o Suicidal ideation- thinking about suicide
Term
Major Depressive Disorder Other symptoms
Definition
• Suicidality
o Thoughts- in a community sample about 40% will report they’ve had suicidal thoughts
• Clinical population- 75%
o Attempts- 13% of kids with MDD will attempt
• 26% of adolescence will attempt
• perception of not having a support system
• having means to do it
• family history
• alcohol or other drugs
• sudden stressful event
• if already attempted
• Psychotic Symptoms
o 30-50% have hallucinations → visual and auditory
o decrease with age, but poor prognosis
Term
Major Depressive Disorder Developmental Trajectory
Definition
• Young children- irritability
o Physical complaints
• Older children- sadness and hopelessness
o Often times not a “why”
o Anhedonia- lack of interest
o Vegetative symptoms- weight gain, sleeping fatigue
o Suicidal ideation- thinking about suicide
Term
Major Depressive Disorder Epidemiology
Definition
• 1-2% in school age children
• 3-8% in adolescents
• age of onset- 14-15 years old
• prevalence increases with age (esp. with girls)
Term
Dysthymic disorder (long term- lower grade
Definition
• Table 8.2 depressed mood most of the time for 2 years
• In children can be irritable and only 1 year
• Very continuous- can’t be without symptoms for more than 2 mos at a time
Term
Dysthymic Disorder General Adaptation
Definition
• Problems in intellectual and academic functioning
o Depressed moods is a distraction- can look like ADHD
• Depressive ruminative style
o A lot of focus on bad things
• Ineffective coping
o Avoidance, drugs and alcohol
• Low self-esteem
• Social withdrawal
• *all maintain depression
Term
Dysthymia Disorder Epidemiology
Definition
• 1% of children; 5% of adolescents
• age of onset: 11-12yrs
• initial period lasts ~ 4 yrs
• tends to develop into other disorders
o 70% dysthymia kids will later have MDD
o 40% anxiety disorders
o 30% conduct disorders
Term
Etiology MDD and dysthymia Genetic factors
Definition
o High genetic transmission- 50% accounted for by genes
• Twin family studies
• Identical twins 2-4x more likely to have if I has
• 25-50% will have if parent has
Term
Etiology MDD and dysthymia Neurotransmitters
Definition
o Norepinephrine- deficiency
o Serotonin- may cause norepinephrine to drop
Term
Etiology MDD and dysthymia Psychosocial factors
Definition
o Attachment theory- insecure attachment axious
o Behavioral theory- learning theory principles
• Child quits receiving positive reinforcement for appropriate behavior- gets attention for being depressed
Term
Etiology MDD and dysthymia Psychosocial factors Cognitive theory
Definition
• “depressogenic” cognitions
• aaron beck
o negative cognitive schemas- focus on negative
o cognitive triad: self, world, future
• all negative
• Martin Seligman
o Depressive attributional style
• Negative outcomes: internal stable, global
• Positive outcomes: external, unstable, specific
Term
MDD and Dysthymia Treatment
Definition
• Cognitive behavior therapy
o Address negative cognitions
o Increased pleasurable activities
• Interpersonal therapy
o Focus on dysfunctional relationships
• Antidepressants
o SSRIs
Term
Bipolar disorder
Definition
• One or more: manic, hypomanic, or mixed episode usually with depressive episode
Term
Manic Episode
Definition
• One week period of elevated/irritable mood
• Inflated self-esteem/grandiosity
• More talkative than usual
• Racing thoughts of ideas
• Distractibility
• Hyperactivity/decreased need to sleep
• Excessive risky activities
• Extreme irritability
Term
Hypomanic and mixed episodes:
Definition
• Hypomanic episode- symptoms persist for 4 days; not as severe as manic episodes
o Not as impaired, no psychotic features
• Mixed episode- manic and major depressive episode occurs for at least one week
Term
Bipolar 1
Definition
1 manic or mixed episodes and1+ more major depressive episodes
o No periods of normal functioning
Term
Bipolar II
Definition
1+ hypomanic episodes and 1+ major depressive episodes
Term
Cyclothymic disorder
Definition
2 years of hypomanic and depressive symptoms
Term
Manic episodes in children
Definition
• Irritability
• Explosive temper tantrums (guilt)
• Low frustration tolerance
• Impulsivity
• Difficulty sleeping at night
• Difficulty concentrating on tasks
• Mood or sad
• Problems with academic performance
• Nightmares frenzied activity
Term
Psychotic Features 40%
Definition
• Auditory hallucination
• Delusions or persecution
• Passive feelings of mind control
• Though disorganization
• Loose associations
Term
Bipolar Developmental trajectory
Definition
• Age of onset important factor- usually within first 20 yrs.
• Adolescence period of high vulnerability
• Early onset worse prognosis
o Chronic and continuous course
o Fewer episodes of remission
o Severe symptoms
• Suicide, substance abuse, delinquent
o Mixed presentation of depression and manic
Term
Bipolar Differential Diagnosis and Comorbidity
Definition
• Bipolar and ADHD
o Share a number of diagnostic and associated features differences in nature and course
• Chronicity- ADHD chronic
• Most kids with bipolar have episodic course
• Age of onset- younger for ADHD
• Bipolar- late adolescence
• Psychotic symptoms- not in ADHD
• Additional symptoms- ADHD not grandiose
• No promiscuous behavior
• Comorbidity
• Some kids have both
o No stimulants
Term
Bipolar Etiology
Definition
• Vulnerability stress model
o Strong biological/genetic basis
• Twin studies
• Family studies
o Environmental factors also play role in triggering
• Family factors
• Life stress
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