Exam (elaborations) NR 509 Final Study Guide
Exam (elaborations) NR 509 Final Study Guide Assessment: a. b. Many mental health disorders are masked by other clinical conditions; 20% of primary care outpatients have mental disorders(50-70% go undetected and untreated) c. Physical symptoms account for approx 50% of office visits d. ⅓ of physical symptoms are unexplained; in 20-25% those symptoms become chronic e. Symptoms and Behaviors: i. Sorting symptom is a challenge; can be unexplained symptoms 1. Patients who have unexplained symptoms depression and anxiety exceeds 50% ii. Physical or “somatic” symptoms account for 50% of U.S. office visits 1. Pain, fatigue, palpitations, GI symptoms, sexual dysfunction, dizziness or loss of balance 2. Symptoms that present as clusters are called “functional syndromes” such as IBS, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, TMJ disorder, and multiple chemical sensitivity 3. The presence of symptom overlap is high in the common functional syndromes such as fatigue, headache, sleep disturbance, pain, GI upset iii. Patients with unexplained and somatic symptoms are often frequent users of the health care system and termed “difficult patients” iv. Patients with symptoms that last longer than 6 weeks are recognized as chronic and should be screened for depression and anxiety. a. A two tiered approach is recommended for screening. A brief screening with questions that yield high sensitivity then a more detailed investigation when indicated V. Patient who warrant a mental health screening include: 1. medically unexplained physical symptoms 2. Multiple physical or somatic symptoms 3. High severity of the presenting somatic symptom 4. Chronic pain 5. Symptoms longer than 6 weeks 6. Physician stating “a difficult encounter” 7. Recent stress NR 509 Final Study Guide 8. Low self-rating of overall health 9. Frequent use of health care services 10.Substance abuse 2. Adjustment for age: A. Elderly: a. Older adults may complain of memory problems but usually is due to benign forgetfulness. b. Older adults retrieve and process data more slowly and take longer to learn new information c. Older adults may have slower motor responses and their ability to perform complex task may diminish d. It is important to try to distinguish age-related changes from manifestations of mental disorders e. Older patients are more susceptible to delirium which could be the first sign of infection, problems with medications, or impending dementia B. Newborn: a. Assess mental status of a newborn by observing newborn activities i. Look at human faces and turn to a parents voice ii. Ability to shut out repetitive stimuli(such as a vacuum) iii. Bond with caregiver iv. self-soothe b. Assess for mental status during alert periods · Normal VS. Abnormal Findings and Interpretation 1. Attention: a. Normal: able to focus and concentrate b. Abnormal: inattentive and easily distracted 2. Memory a. Normal: able to repeat immediate repetition of material given; b. Abnormal: unable to repeat recent events 3. Orientation: a. Normal: aware of person, place, and time b. Abnormal: unaware of person, place, or time 4. Perception: a. Normal: Sensory awareness of objects in the environment b. Abnormal: hallucinations 5. Thought Process: a. Normal: logic, coherent, and relevant thoughts b. Abnormal: irrational thought 6. Thought Content: a. Normal: Has insight and judgement b. Abnormal: impaired judgement and irrational behaviors 7. Insight a. Normal: able to distinguish normal vs. abnormal b. Abnormal: Unable to distinguish normal vs. abnormal 8. Judgement a. Normal: good judgement b. Abnormal: poor or bad F· Speech Patterns 1. Note characters of speech a. Slow speech= depression b. Accelerated and Loud speech= mania c. Articulation: are the words clear and distinct; does the speech have a nasal quality i. Dysarthria(defective articulation) ii. Dysphonia-impaired volume, quality or pitch iii. Aphasia-disorder of speech d. Fluency: reflects rate, flow and melody of speech and the content and words used. Abnormalities include i. Hesitancies and gaps in flow ii. Disturbed inflections such as monotone iii. Circumlocutions, in which phrases or sentences are substituted for a word the person cannot think of ie. “what you write with” instead of “pen” iv. Paraphrasias, words are malformed(“I write with a den”), wrong (I write with a bar) or made up (I write with a dar) v. Fluency abnormalities indicate aphasia from cerebrovascular infarction. vi. Aphasia may be receptive(impaired comprehension with fluent speech) OR expressive(with preserved comprehension and slow nonfluent speech) vii. A person who can write a correct sentence does NOT have aphasia e. Testing for Aphasia i. Word Comprehension: Ask the patient to follow one-stage commands such as “Point to your nose” ii. Repetition: Ask the patient to repeat a phrase of one-syllable words “ No ifs, ands, or buts” iii. Naming: Ask the patient to name the parts of a watch iv. Reading Comprehension: Ask the patient to read a paragraph aloud v. Writing: Ask the patient to write a sentence · Mental Status Examination 1. Five components of the mental status examination a. Appearance and Behavior i. Note level of consciousness: is the patient awake and alert, does the patient understand your questions and respond appropriately 1. If the patient does not respond then speak to the patient by name in a loud voice 2. Lethargic patients are drowsy but open their eyes and look at you, respond to questions, then fall back asleep 3. Obtunded patients open their eyes and look at you but respond slowly and are somewhat confused ii. Note posture and motor behavior:does the patient sit or lie quietly or prefer to walk around; note the pace, range, and type of movement 1. Look for tense posture, restlessness, and anxious fidgeting; the crying, pacing, and hand wringing of agitated depression 2. The hopeless slumped posture and slowed movement of depression 3. The agitated and expansive movements of manic episodes iii. Note Dress, Grooming, and Personal hygiene: how is the patient dressed, clean and presentable?, how is grooming compared to those of similar age, compare one side to the other 1. May deteriorate in depression, schizophrenia, and dementia 2. Excessive fastidiousness may be seen OCD 3. One-sided negligence may result from a lesion in the opposite parietal cortex; usually the non-dominant side iv. Note facial expression: observe the face at rest and during conversation; are changes in expression appropriate 1. Note Expressions of anxiety, depression, apathy, anger, elation, or facial immobility in parkinsonism v. Manner, Affect, and Relationship to People and Things: assess the patients external expression of the inner emotional state(Affect). Is the affect appropriate to topics being discussed?, seem exaggerated at points, labile, blunted, or flat? 1. Paranoia= anger, hostility, suspiciousness, or evasiveness 2. Mania= elation and euphoria 3. Schizophrenia=flat affect with remoteness 4. Dementia and Anxiety or Depresion= apathy(dulled affect with detachment and indifference) 5. Hallucinations=schizophrenia, alcohol withdrawal, and systemic toxicity b. Speech and Language= SEE ABOVE in language patterns c. Mood: Ask patient to describe his/her mood, including usual level and fluctuations related to life events i. Moods range from sadness and melancholy, contentment, joy, euphoria, and elation; anger and rage, anxiety and worry, to detachment and indifference ii. If you suspect depression, assess its severity and any risk of suicide iii. It is your responsibility as the provider to ask directly about suicidal thoughts. This may be the only way to uncover suicidal ideation and plans that launch immediate intervention and treatment d. Thought and Perception: i. Thought Process: assess the logic, relevance, organization, and coherence of the patients thought process throughout the interview; does speech progress logically?, listen for patterns of speech that suggest disorders; Variations and Abnormalities include: 1. Circumstantiality: speech with unnecessary detail, indirection, and delay in reaching the point; Occurs in patients with obsessions 2. Derailment: “tangential” speech with shifting topics that are loosely connected or unrelated; seen in schizophrenia, manic episodes, and other psychotic disorders 3. Flight of Ideas: a continuous flow of accelerated speech with abrupt changes from one topic to the next; most frequently seen in manic episodes 4. Neologisms: Invented or distorted words, or words with new and highly idiosyncratic meanings; observed in schizophrenia, psychotic disorders, and aphasia 5. Incoherence: Speech that is incomprehensible and illogical, with lack of meaningful connections, abrupt changes in topic, or disordered grammar or word use. Flight of ideas, when severe, may produce incoherence. Seen in severe psychotic disturbances usually schizophrenia 6. Blocking: Sudden interruption of speech in mid sentence or before the idea is completed, attributed to “losing the thought.” Blocking occurs in normal people. May be striking in schizophrenia 7. Confabulation: Fabrication of facts or events in response to ques- tions, to fill in the gaps from impaired memory. Seen in Korsakoff syndrome from alcholism 8. Perseveration: Persistent repetition of words or ideas Occurs in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders 9. Echolalia:Repetition of the words and phrases of others. Occurs in manic episodes and schizophrenia 10.Clanging: Speech with choice of words based on sound, rather than meaning, as in rhyming and punning. For example, “Look at my eyes and nose, wise eyes and rosy nose. Two to one, the ayes have it!” Seen in schizophrenia and manic episodes ii. Thought Content: to assess follow patients cues rather than asking direct questions; “Can you tell me more about that” or “What do you think about times like these?” Abnormalities in content include 1. Compulsions: Repetitive behaviors that the person feels driven to perform in response to an obsession, aimed at preventing or reducing anxiety or a dreaded event or situation; these behaviors are excessive and unrealistically connected to the provoking stimulus 2. Obsessions: Delusions 3. Recurrent persistent thoughts, images, or urges experienced as intrusive and unwanted that the person tries to ignore, suppress, or neutralize with other thoughts or actions (for example, performing a compulsive behavior) 4. Phobias :Persistent irrational fears, accompanied by a compelling desire to avoid provoking stimulus 5. Anxieties: Apprehensive anticipation of future danger or misfortune accompanied by feelings of worry, distress, and/or somatic symptoms of tension 6. Feelings of Unreality: A sense that the environment is strange, unreal, or remote 7. Feelings of Depersonalization:A sense that one’s self or identity is different, changed, unreal; lost; or detached from one’s mind or body 8. Delusions: False fixed personal beliefs that are not amenable to change in light of conflicting evidence; types of delusions include: a. ● Persecutory ● Grandiose ● Jealous ● Erotomanic— the belief than another person is in love with the individual ● Somatic—involves bodily functions or sensations ● Unspecified—includes delusions of reference without a prominent persecutory or grandiose component, or the belief that external events, objects, or people have a particular and unusual personal significance (for example, commands from the radio or television) 9. Compulsions, obsessions, phobias, and anxieties often occur in anxiety disorders. 10. Delusions and feelings of unreality or depersonalization are often associated with psychotic disorders 11. Delusions may also occur in delirium, severe mood disorders, and dementia iii. Perceptions: Purse false perceptions, “When you heard the voice speaking to you, what did you say?” Abnormalities in perception include 1. Illusions: Misinterpretations of real external stimuli, such as mistaking rustling leaves for the sound of voices. Illuisions may occur in grief reactions, delirium, acute and posttraumatic stress disorders, and schizophrenia 2. Hallucinations: Perception-like experiences that seem real but, unlike illusions, lack actual external stimulation. The person may or may not recognize the experiences as false. Hallucinations may be auditory, visual, olfactory, gustatory, tactile, or somatic. False perceptions associated with dreaming, falling asleep, and awakening are not classified as hallucinations. Hallucinations may occur in delirium, dementia, posttraumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia, and alcoholism e. Insight:Patients with psychotic disorders often lack insight into their illness, Denial of impairment may accompany some neurologic disorders f. Judgement: may be poor in delirium, dementia, intellectual disability, and psychotic states. Anxiety, mood disorders, intelligence, education, income, and cultural values also influence judgement g. Cognitive Functions: i. Orientations: Assess person, place and time 1. Disorientation is common when memory or attention is impaired, as in delirium ii. Attention: Digit Span, Serial 7s, and Spelling Backward are used to test attention 1. Digit Span: recite a series of digits and ask patient to repeat; try increasing the series to a multiple numbers; choose digits such as street numbers and zip codes and not consecutive numbers Causes of poor performance include delirium, dementia, intellectual disability, and performance anxiety 2. Serial 7s: Tell patient to start at 100 and count back by 7s 3. Spelling Backward: Spell a 5 letter word and ask the patient to repeat it backwards iii. Remote Memory: Inquire about birthdays, anniversaries, social security #, names of schools attended, jobs held, or past historical events such as wars May be imparied in late dementia iv. Recent Memory: Ask questions with answers you can check against other sources; involve events of the day, weather, appointment time, current meds, lab test Impaired in dementia and delirium, Amnestic disorders impair memory or new learning ability and reduce social or occupational functioning, but lack the global feature of delirium or dementia. Anxiety, depression, and intellectual disability may also impair recent memory v. New Learning Ability: Give the patient 3-4 words and ask them to repeat the words. After 3-5min ask the patient to repeat the words. h. Higher Cognitive Functions i. Information and vocabulary:Ask about work, hobbies, reading, favorite television programs, or current events. Start with simple questions, then move to more difficult questions. Note the person’s grasp of information, complexity of the ideas, and choice of vocabulary. Information and vocabulary are rela- tively unaffected by psychiatric disorders except in severe cases. Testing helps distinguish adults with life-long intellectual impairment (whose infor- mation and vocabulary are limited) from those with mild or moderate dementia (whose information and vocabulary are fairly well preserved). ii. Calculating Ability: Test ability to do arithmetical calculations; start with simple addition, or pose practical functionally important questions such as if something cost 78 cents and you give the clerk $1 how much change should your receive Poor performance suggests dementia or aphasia, but should be measured against the patient’s fund of knowledge and education. iii. Abstract Thinking: ask the patient about what certain proverbs mean or explain the similarity between two things such as an apple and orange. Concrete responses are common in people with intellectual disability, delirium, or dementia, but may also reflect limited education. Patients with schizophrenia may respond concretely or with personal and bizarre interpretations iv. Constructional Ability: ability to copy figures of increasing complexity onto a piece of blank unlined paper. With intact vision and motor ability, poor constructional ability suggests dementia or parietal lobe damage. Intellectual disability can also impair performance. i. Special Techniques for the Mental Exam i. Mini-Mental State Examination: brief test used to screen for cognitive dysfunction or dementia, and follow the patients course over time j. Recording Your Findings i. Example of normal findings:The patient is alert, well-groomed, and cheerful. Speech is fluent and words are clear. Thought processes are coherent, insight is good. The patient is oriented to person, place, and time. Serial 7s accurate; recent and remote memory intact. Calculations intact. ii. Example of findings that suggest dementia: “The patient appears sad and fatigued; clothes are wrinkled. Speech is slow and words are mumbled. Thought processes are coherent, but insight into current life reverses is limited. The patient is oriented to person, place, and time. Digit span, serial 7s, and calculations accurate, but responses delayed. Clock drawing is good. · Screening for Depression: BECKY PECK Generalized Anxiety Disorder: WONGEL MARKOS Depressive Disorders: CRYSTAL SHAGENA/Ada Ejimadu Depressive Disorders ( pg 156) Ada Ejimadu Depression and anxiety disorders are a common cause of hospitalization in the United States, and mental illness is associated with increased risks for chronic medical conditions, decreased life expectancy, disability, substance abuse, and suicide. About 19million adult American or almost 7% have major depression with other coexisting anxiety disorder or substance abuse. Depression is as common in women as men, and the prevalence of postpartum depression is about 7% to 13%. Most patients with chronic medical conditions have depression. Symptoms of depression in high-risk patients may be subtle and may include; I. Low self-esteem II. Loss of pleasure in daily activities (Anhedonia) III. Sleep disorder, IV. Difficulty concentrating or making decisions. Look carefully for symptoms of depression in vulnerable patients, especially those who are young, female, single, divorced or separated, seriously or chronically ill, bereaved, or have other psychiatric disorders, including substance abuse. A personal or family history of depression also places patients at risk. Asking two simple questions about mood and anhedonia appears to be as effective as using more detailed instruments. All positive screening tests warrant full diagnostic interviews. Failure to diagnose depression can have fatal consequences—the presence of an affective disorder is associated with an 11-fold increased risk for suicide. Depression screening · Over the past 2 weeks, have you felt down, depressed, or hopeless? · Over the past 2 weeks, have you felt little interest or pleasure in doing things ·(anhedonia)? Depression tends to be long-lasting and can recur. Because of these two factors, a waitand-see approach to treatment is not desirable and timely treatment is necessary. Suicide I. Suicide is the second leading cause of death among 15- to 24-year olds. II. Suicide rates are highest among those ages 45 to 54 years, III. followed by elderly adults ≥age 85 years. IV. Men have suicide rates nearly four times higher than women, though women are three times more likely to attempt suicide. V. Men are most likely to use firearms to commit suicide, VI. while women are most likely to use poison. VII. Overall, suicides in non-Hispanic whites account for about 90% of all suicides. VIII. American Indian/Alaska Native women ages 15 to 24 years have the highest suicide rates of any racial/ethnic group. Substance Use Disorders, Including Alcohol and Prescription Drugs. The harmful interactions between mental disorders and substance use disorders also present a major public health problem. Rates of drug-induced deaths continue to increase and are highest among whites and American Indian/Alaska Natives. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that prescription drugs have replaced illicit drugs as a leading cause of drug-induced deaths. Every patient should be asked about alcohol use, substance abuse, and misuse of prescription drugs Schizophrenia (Pg. 161, 162) Variations and abnormalities in thought process: ● See above “Thought process” section for abnormalities seen in schizophrenia Suicide Risk and Prevention KIMBERLY RAFFAELE Chapter 9 and Chapter 12 · Cardiac/Vascular Assessment and Modification for Age MADAME QT PIE Chapter 9: Cardiac/Vascular Assessment and Modifications for Age 1.) Describe the chest wall anatomy and identify the key listening areas. -The general appearance of the patient provides many clues to cardiac illness, so pay special attention to the patient’s color, respiratory rate, and level of anxiety, in addition to blood pressure and heart rate. 2.) Evaluate the jugular venous pulse, the carotid upstroke, and presence or absence of carotid bruits. -JVP-The JVP closely parallels pressure in the right atrium, or central venous pressure, related primarily to volume in the venous system. The JVP is best assessed from pulsations in the right internal jugular vein, which is directly in line with the superior vena cava and right atrium. The internal jugular veins lie deep to the SCM muscles in the neck and are not directly visible. (See Figure 9- 24 pg375) Pulsations in the right external jugular vein can also be used, but the route from the vena cava is more tortuous, and examination can be impaired by kinking and obstruction at the base of the neck and by obesity. Note that the jugular veins and pulsations are difficult to see in children under 12 years of age, so inspection is not useful in this age group. The DOMINENT MOVEMENT of the JVP is INWARD vs the CAROTID PULSE MOVEMENT is OUTWARD! - Identify the highest point of pulsation in the right jugular vein. Extend a long rectangular object or card horizontally from this point and a centimeter ruler vertically from the sternal angle, making an exact right angle. Measure the vertical distance in centimeters above the sternal angle where the horizontal object crosses the ruler and add to this distance 5 cm, the distance from the sternal angle to the center of the right atrium. The sum is the JVP. -JVP measured at >3 cm above the sternal angle, or more than 8 cm in total distance above the right atrium, is considered elevated above normal. -Carotid Upstroke- View figure 9-27 on page 379. The first elevation, the presystolic a wave, reflects the slight rise in atrial pressure that accompanies atrial contraction. It occurs just prior to S1 and before the carotid upstroke. The normal upstroke is brisk; it is smooth, rapid, and follows S1 almost immediately. The timing of the carotid upstroke in relation to S1 and S2. Note that the normal carotid upstroke follows S1 and precedes S2. -Carotid Bruits- The carotid pulse provides valuable information about cardiac function, especially aortic valve stenosis and regurgitation. Press just inside the medial border of a relaxed
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