Mer Scott
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(Psychiatry) PHCY320 Test sobre PSY4 Depression, creado por Mer Scott el 12/10/2019.

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PSY4 Depression

Pregunta 1 de 12

1

Epidemiology of major depressive disorder:
• 1 in primary care patients present with depressive symptoms.
• Lifetime risk of depression is 15% and 12 month prevalence is 4.1%.
• NZ - 17.9% of and 10.4% of
• Highest rates in (21%)
• Mean age of onset is 27 years with 40% having a first episode by the age of 20
• 54% recover within 6 months, 70% within one year, 12–15% fail to recover and develop a chronic unremitting illness
• Economic cost in NZ > $2 billion/year

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    10
    women
    men
    women 35 – 44 years

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 12

1

Match the symptoms/performances affected with their associated regions:
PFC, concentration, interest, pleasure, mental fatigue, guilt, worthlessness, suicidality, mood
S, striatum;
NA, nucleus accumbens;
HY, hypothalamus;
A, amygdala;
C, cerebellum;

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    prefrontal cortex;
    physical fatigue
    pleasure, interest, energy
    sleep, appetite
    guilt, worthlessness, suicidality, mood
    psychomotor

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 12

1

Select from this list of depression symptoms those that overlap with anxiety.

Selecciona una o más de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Sleep issues

  • Concentration issues

  • Fatigue

  • Psychomotor arousal (restlessness)

  • Anhedonia

  • Apathy

  • Worthlessness

  • Appetite and weight changes

  • Suicidality

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 12

1

Diagnosis of depression requires ONE of: .
Also requires at least of: appetite/weight change, sleep disturbances, cognitive , agitation/restlessness, fatigue, suicidal ideation, worthlessness.

Major depressive disorder is the most mood disorder, defined by occurrence of at least a single major depressive episode - most people experience episodes.

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    apathy/anhedonia OR depressed mood
    4
    dysfunction
    common
    recurrent

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 12

1

Pathophysiology:
• Inefficient/dysfunctional projections to amygdala and VMPFC are linked to depression
• Poor information processing in the and NAc (NA, 5HT and DA projections) linked to psychomotor /retardation
-active monoaminergic projections from the brain stem to the hypothalamus, basal forebrain and PFC linked to disturbances
• Feelings of guilt/worthlessness regulated by amygdala and VMPFC - inefficient or dysfunctional projections
• Suicidal ideation regulated by control of the amygdala, VMPFC and cortex (OFC)
• Weight and appetite 5-HT projections in the

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    5-HT, NA and/or DA
    cerebellum, striatum
    agitation
    Hypo
    sleep
    5-HT
    serotonergic
    orbital frontal
    hypothalamus

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 12

1

Why might the clinical effect of SSRIs and SNRIs take several weeks to develop?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Secondary adaptive changes such as downregulation of 5-HT2, α2, β binding sites and the functional response to agonists

  • DA neurotransmission is decreased in the mesolimbic pathway at first

  • Blockade or release of a particular neurotransmitter is slow

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 12

1

Monoamine receptor hypothesis of depression:
There is no clear convincing that monoamine deficiency accounts for depression – i.e., there is no “real” monoamine deficit, but increasing monoamines as a treatment is effective. The monoamine hypothesis of depression extends the classic monoamine hypothesis of depression, positing that activity of monoamine causes regulation of synaptic monoamine neurotransmitter which leads to depression.

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    evidence
    receptor
    deficient
    neurotransmitters
    up
    post-
    receptors

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 12

1

SSRI mechanisms:
- Block 5-HT pump ()
- Increase (initially)
- Desensitize somatodendritic
- Turn on and increase 5-HT from terminals
- Finally desensitize receptors

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    reuptake
    SERT
    somatodendritic 5-HT
    5-HT1A autoreceptors
    neuronal impulse flow
    release
    axon
    postsynaptic 5-HT

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 12

1

Mirtazepine - α2 - noradrenergic & specific serotonergic antidepressant (also blocks a couple receptors).
• α2-adrenergic receptors are mostly autoreceptors and heteroreceptors which enhance adrenergic and serotonergic neurotransmission. This:
a) stops turning off its own release ( feedback) so is increased
b) blocks synaptic α2 i.e. the “brakes” on neurons, so there is enhanced
• SEs - somnolence(excess ), sedation, mouth, weight , increased , and fatigue.

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    antagonist
    5-HT
    NA
    negative
    NA release
    pre-
    heteroreceptors
    serotonergic
    serotonergic transmission
    sleepiness
    dry
    gain
    appetite
    dizziness

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 12

1

Agomelatine acts as a MT1 and MT2 receptor (involved in ) and 5HT(2C) antagonist.
- Stimulation of receptors helps depression-altered circadian rhythms, which potentially can optimize these changes in monoamines
- Binds to receptors on interneurons, prevents 5-HT from and prevents of NA and DA release in the cortex - ie facilitates their releases.

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    sleep
    MT1 and MT2
    resynchronize
    5HT2C
    GABA
    binding
    inhibition
    prefrontal
    agonist

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 12

1

Venlafaxine (SNRI)
- Inhibits at low doses and also at increased doses
- Converted to active , desvenlafaxine, by 2D6
- Desvenlafaxine also inhibits SERT and NAT but its effects are greater than venlafaxine - new drug...

Arrastra y suelta para completar el texto.

    5-HT reuptake
    NA reuptake
    metabolite
    CYP
    noradrenergic

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 12

1

All TCAs:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Block NA reuptake (NAT) and voltage-sensitive sodium channels (VSCCs), and are antagonists at H1, α1, and muscarinic cholinergic receptors.

  • Block 5-HT reuptake (SERT) and voltage-sensitive sodium channels (VSCCs), and are angonists at H1, α1, and muscarinic cholinergic receptors.

Explicación