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Question 1
Incorrect
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An elderly woman is taken to the clinic by her husband because she has been complaining about seeing ghosts in their house. She no longer wants to enter in the house. You wonder if this might be Charles-Bonnet syndrome. Which of the following risk factors may pre-dispose this woman to Charles-Bonnet syndrome?
Your Answer: Caucasian
Correct Answer: Peripheral visual impairment
Explanation:Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) involves visual hallucinations due to eye disease, usually associated with a sharp decline in vision. The phenomenon is seen in patients with moderate or severe visual impairment. It can occur spontaneously as the vision declines or it may be precipitated, in predisposed individuals, by concurrent illness such as infections elsewhere in the body.
It is not clear why CBS develops or why some individuals appear to be predisposed to it. It is particularly noted in patients with advanced macular degeneration. It has been suggested that reduced or absent stimulation of the visual system leads to increased excitability of the visual cortex (deafferentation hypothesis). This release phenomenon is compared to phantom limb symptoms after amputation.
CBS is much more common in older patients because conditions causing marked visual loss are more common in older people. However, it can occur at any age and has been described in children.
The prevalence is hard to assess due to considerable under-reporting, perhaps because patients frequently fear that it is a sign of mental illness or dementia. However, it is thought to occur in:
About 10-15% of patients with moderate visual loss.
Possibly up to 50% of people with severe visual loss.
Presentation:
The nature of the hallucination depends on the part of the brain that is activated. The hallucinations may be black and white or in colour. They may involve grids/brickwork/lattice patterns but are typically much more complex:The hallucinations are always outside the body.
The hallucinations are purely visual – other senses are not involved.
The hallucinations have no personal meaning to the patient.
Hallucinations may last seconds, minutes or hours.
CBS tends to occur in a ‘state of quiet restfulness’. This may be after a meal or when listening to the radio (but not when dozing off).
Symptoms also have a tendency to occur in dim lighting conditions.
Patients may report high levels of distress, with some patients reporting anger, anxiety and even fear associated with the hallucinations. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 2
Correct
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A 28-year-old fireman presents following a recent traumatic incident where a child died in a house fire. He describes recurrent nightmares and flashbacks which have been present for the past 2 months. Suspecting a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder what is the first-line treatment for this patient?
Your Answer: Cognitive behavioural therapy or eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing therapy
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis in this patient is post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The first-line treatment for this patient would be cognitive behavioural therapy or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can develop in people of any age following a traumatic event, for example, a major disaster or childhood sexual abuse. It encompasses what became known as ‘shell shock’ following the first world war. One of the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria is that symptoms have been present for more than one month.
Clinical features:
Re-experiencing: flashbacks, nightmares, repetitive and distressing intrusive images
Avoidance: avoiding people, situations or circumstances resembling or associated with the event
Hyperarousal: hypervigilance for threat, exaggerated startle response, sleep problems, irritability and difficulty concentrating
Emotional numbing – lack of ability to experience feelings, feeling detached from other people
Depression
Drug or alcohol misuse
AngerManagement:
Following a traumatic event single-session interventions (often referred to as debriefing) are not recommended
Watchful waiting may be used for mild symptoms lasting less than 4 weeks
Trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy may be used in more severe cases
Drug treatments for PTSD should not be used as a routine first-line treatment for adults.
If drug treatment is used then paroxetine or mirtazapine are recommended. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 55-year-old female inpatient in a psychiatric hospital has stopped eating or drinking as she believes she is dead and does not require food anymore. Which syndrome is characteristic of this finding?
Your Answer: Capgras syndrome
Correct Answer: Cotard syndrome
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis of this patient is Cotard syndrome.
Cotard syndrome is a rare mental disorder where the affected patient believes that they (or in some cases just a part of their body) is either dead or non-existent. This delusion is often difficult to treat and can result in significant problems due to patients stopping eating or drinking as they deem it not necessary. Cotard syndrome is often associated with severe depression and psychotic disorders.
Other delusional syndromes:
– Othello syndrome is a delusional belief that a patients partner is committing infidelity despite no evidence of this. It can often result in violence and controlling behaviour.
– De Clerambault syndrome (otherwise known as erotomania), is where a patient believes that a person of higher social or professional standing is in love with them. Often this presents with people who believe celebrities are in love with them.
– Capgras syndrome is characterised by a person believing their friend or relative had been replaced by an exact double.
– Couvade syndrome is also known as ‘sympathetic pregnancy’. It affects fathers, particularly during the first and third trimesters of pregnancy, who suffer the somatic features of pregnancy.
– Ekbom syndrome is also known as delusional parasitosis and is the belief that they are infected with parasites or have ‘bugs’ under their skin. This can vary from the classic psychosis symptoms in narcotic use where the user can ‘see’ bugs crawling under their skin or can be a patient who believes that they are infested with snakes. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 4
Incorrect
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A 57 year old man is reviewed and discovered to be dependent on Temazepam which was prescribed for him as a hypnotic. He wants to end his addiction and requests help. What is the most appropriate strategy?
Your Answer: Switch to the equivalent chlordiazepoxide dose then slowly withdraw over the next 2 months
Correct Answer: Switch to the equivalent diazepam dose then slowly withdraw over the next 2 months
Explanation:Temazepam is a medication that is often prescribed for the treatment of short-term insomnia. It belongs to the benzodiazepine family of drugs and is classed as intermediate-acting, meaning that it can take between six and twenty-four hours for the drug to take effect.
Although it is known that shorter-acting benzodiazepines are more harmful and more likely to cause addiction, temazepam is, nevertheless, a highly addictive drug. It should not be taken for longer than four weeks.
-Adverse effects associated with the use of benzodiazepine hypnotics (to which the elderly are most vulnerable) include confusion, over sedation, increased risks of falls and consequent fractures
-Withdrawal from a benzodiazepine hypnotic must be agreed between the clinician and the patient – patients should never be forced or threatened. The risks of continued benzodiazepine use should be explained. An agreed schedule for reduction of and gradual withdrawal from the benzodiazepine hypnotic should also be agreed. This will involve substitution of the hypnotic with a long-acting benzodiazepine (e.g. diazepam) and a subsequent gradual reduction in dose of the substituted benzodiazepine -the substituted benzodiazepine can then be withdrawn in steps of about one-eighth to one-tenth every fortnight
Example: withdrawal schedule for patient on temazepam 20mg nocte
week 1 – temazepam 10mg, diazepam 5mg
week 2 – stop temazepam, diazepam 10mg
week 4 – diazepam 9mg
week 6 – diazepam 8mg
continue reducing dose of diazepam by 1mg every fortnight – tapering of dose may be slower if necessary -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 5
Correct
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A prescription for Olanzapine is written for a 28 year old lady with a history of schizophrenia. Which adverse effect is she most likely to experience?
Your Answer: Weight gain
Explanation:Weight gain is an extremely common (5-40%) adverse effect of atypical antipsychotics such as olanzapine (dose dependent). Olanzapine causes orthostatic hypotension ≥20% of reported cases. Parkinsonism reactions occurs in 4% of people.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 6
Correct
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Which among the following factors is not associated with a poor prognosis in patients with schizophrenia?
Your Answer: Acute onset
Explanation:A patient with a gradual onset of schizophrenia is to be associated with a poor prognosis.
Schizophrenia is a functional psychotic disorder characterized by the presence of delusional beliefs, hallucinations, and disturbances in thought, perception, and behaviour.
Clinical features:
Schneider’s first-rank symptoms may be divided into auditory hallucinations, thought disorders, passivity phenomena, and delusional perceptions:Auditory hallucinations of a specific type:
Two or more voices discussing the patient in the third person
Thought echo
Voices commenting on the patient’s behaviourThought disorder:
Thought insertion
Thought withdrawal
Thought broadcastingPassivity phenomena:
Bodily sensations being controlled by external influence
Actions/impulses/feelings – experiences which are imposed on the Individual or influenced by othersOther features of schizophrenia include
Impaired insight (a feature of all psychoses)
Incongruity/blunting of affect (inappropriate emotion for circumstances)
Decreased speech
Neologisms: made-up words
Catatonia
Negative symptoms: incongruity/blunting of affect, anhedonia (inability to derive pleasure), alogia (poverty of speech), avolition (poor motivation).Treatment:
For the initial treatment of acute psychosis, it is recommended to commence an oral second-generation antipsychotics such as aripiprazole, olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine, etc.
Once the acute phase is controlled, switching to a depot preparation like aripiprazole, paliperidone, zuclopenthixol, fluphenazine, haloperidol, pipotiazine, or risperidone is recommended.
Cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and the use of art and drama therapies help counteract the negative symptoms of the disease, improve insight, and assist relapse prevention.
Clozapine is used in case of treatment resistance. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 7
Incorrect
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A 63-year-old male presents with behavioural disturbances. He has a history of chronic alcohol intake and previous Wernicke's encephalopathy. He has not consumed alcohol in the past 2 years. Which among the following phenomena is he likely to display on further assessment?
Your Answer: Dysthymia
Correct Answer: Confabulation
Explanation:In a patient with chronic alcoholism, one can expect confabulations, which point towards a diagnosis of Korsakoff’s syndrome.
Korsakoff’s is characterized by confabulation and amnesia, typically occurring in alcoholics secondary to chronic vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency.
Other options:
Dysthymia refers to mild depression.
Hydrophobia is a feature of rabies
Lilliputians may be observed in delirium tremens.
Perseveration is repetitive speech patterns, commonly seen after traumatic brain injury.According to the Caine criteria, the presence of any two among the four following criteria can be used to clinically diagnose Wernicke’s Encephalopathy:
Dietary deficiency
Oculomotor abnormalities
Cerebellar dysfunction
Either altered mental status or mild memory impairment
Korsakoff psychosis:
Altered mental status – disorientation, confabulations
Oculomotor findings – most often horizontal nystagmus, ophthalmoplegia, cranial nerve IV palsy, conjugate gaze
Ataxia – wide-based gaitTreatment:
The mainstay of treatment in an acute presentation is thiamine replacement.
Electrolyte abnormalities should be corrected and fluids replaced.
In particular, magnesium requires replacement, as thiamine-dependent enzymes cannot operate in a magnesium-deficient state.
After the acute phase of vitamin and electrolyte replacement, memory rehabilitation is beneficial in Korsakoff syndrome. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 8
Correct
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A 76-year-old male presents with recurrent episodes of hallucinations. He often sees faces smaller than normal or other objects out of proportion. He says he knows they're not real. His past medical history includes macular degeneration and an episode of depression 15 years ago following the death of his wife. Neurological examination is unremarkable. What is the most probable diagnosis?
Your Answer: Charles-Bonnet syndrome
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis in the given scenario would be Charles-Bonnet syndrome.
Charles-Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is characterized by persistent or recurrent complex hallucinations (usually visual or auditory), occurring in clear consciousness. This is generally against a background of visual impairment (although visual impairment is not mandatory for a diagnosis). Insight is usually preserved. This must occur in the absence of any other significant neuropsychiatric disturbance.
Risk factors include:
Advanced age
Peripheral visual impairment
Social isolation
Sensory deprivation
Early cognitive impairmentCBS is equally distributed between sexes and does not show any familial predisposition. The most common ophthalmological conditions associated with this syndrome are age-related macular degeneration, followed by glaucoma and cataract.
Well-formed complex visual hallucinations are thought to occur in 10-30 percent of individuals with severe visual impairment. The prevalence of CBS in visually impaired people is thought to be between 11 and 15 percent.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 9
Correct
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A 40 year old patient of yours requests to stop treatment using Citalopram after taking it for the past two years for his depression. You have agreed to this because he feels well for the past year. What is the most appropriate method of discontinuing Citalopram?
Your Answer: Withdraw gradually over the next 4 weeks
Explanation:Citalopram is an antidepressant medication that works in the brain. It is approved for the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD). Stopping citalopram abruptly may result in one or more of the following withdrawal symptoms: irritability, nausea, feeling dizzy, vomiting, nightmares, headache, and/or paraesthesia (prickling, tingling sensation on the skin).
When discontinuing antidepressant treatment that has lasted for >3 weeks, gradually taper the dose (e.g., over 2 to 4 weeks) to minimize withdrawal symptoms and detect re-emerging symptoms. Reasons for a slower titration (e.g., over 4 weeks) include use of a drug with a half-life <24 hours (e.g., paroxetine, venlafaxine), prior history of antidepressant withdrawal symptoms, or high doses of antidepressants.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 10
Incorrect
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Which of the following listed below is not a recognised feature of anorexia nervosa?
Your Answer: Hypokalaemia
Correct Answer: Reduced growth hormone levels
Explanation:Physiological abnormalities in anorexia include:
– Hypokalaemia – from diuretic or laxative use
– Low FSH, LH, oestrogens and testosterone – most consistent endocrine abnormality was low serum luteinizing and follicle stimulating hormone (LH and FSH) levels associated with depressed serum oestradiol levels.
– Raised cortisol and growth hormone
– Impaired glucose tolerance – lack of glucose precursors in the diet or low glycogen stores. Low blood glucose may also be due to impaired insulin clearance
– Hypercholesterolemia
– Hypercarotenaemia
– Low T3 -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 11
Incorrect
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A 26 year old male admits to you that he was sexually abused in his childhood. Which one of the following features is not a characteristic feature of post-traumatic stress disorder?
Your Answer: Hyperarousal
Correct Answer: Loss of inhibitions
Explanation:Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder caused by stressful, frightening or distressing events.
PTSD is a lasting consequence of traumatic ordeals that cause intense fear, helplessness, or horror, such as a sexual or physical assault, the unexpected death of a loved one, an accident, war, or natural disaster. Families of victims can also develop PTSD, as can emergency personnel and rescue workers.
PTSD is diagnosed after a person experiences symptoms for at least one month following a traumatic event. However symptoms may not appear until several months or even years later. The disorder is characterized by three main types of symptoms:
-Re-experiencing the trauma through intrusive distressing recollections of the event, flashbacks, and nightmares.
-Emotional numbness and avoidance of places, people, and activities that are reminders of the trauma.
-Increased arousal such as difficulty sleeping and concentrating, feeling jumpy, and being easily irritated and angered.The goal of PTSD treatment is to reduce the emotional and physical symptoms, to improve daily functioning, and to help the person better cope with the event that triggered the disorder. Treatment for PTSD may involve psychotherapy (a type of counselling), medication, or both.
Certain antidepressant medications are used to treat PTSD and to control the feelings of anxiety and its associated symptoms including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and tricyclic antidepressants. Mood stabilizers such are sometimes used.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 12
Incorrect
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A 62 year old man expresses to his doctor that he believes that his partner is being unfaithful. When asked if he has any evidence to prove that this is true, he says no. However, he appears to be distressed and believes that he is right. Which condition could this be a symptom of?
Your Answer: Capgras' delusion
Correct Answer: Othello's syndrome
Explanation:Othello syndrome (OS) is a type of paranoid delusional jealousy, characterized by the false absolute certainty of the infidelity of a partner, leading to preoccupation with a partner’s sexual unfaithfulness based on unfounded evidence. OS has been associated with psychiatric and neurological disorders including stroke, brain trauma, brain tumours, neurodegenerative disorders, encephalitis, multiple sclerosis, normal pressure hydrocephalus, endocrine disorders, and drugs.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 13
Incorrect
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A 28-year-old man visits the clinic and demands a CT scan of his stomach. He states it is 'obvious' he has cancer despite previous negative investigations. Which disorder is this an example of?
Your Answer: Dissociative disorder
Correct Answer: Hypochondrial disorder
Explanation:Illness anxiety disorder (IAD) is a recent term for what used to be diagnosed as hypochondriasis, or hypochondrial disorder. People diagnosed with IAD strongly believe they have a serious or life-threatening illness despite having no, or only mild, symptoms.
Symptoms of IAD may include:
-Excessive worry over having or getting a serious illness.
-Physical symptoms are not present or if present, only mild. If another illness is present, or there is a high risk for developing an illness, the person’s concern is out of proportion.
-High level of anxiety and alarm over personal health status.
-Excessive health-related behaviours (e.g., repeatedly checking body for signs of illness) or shows abnormal avoidance (e.g., avoiding doctors’ appointments and hospitals).
-Fear of illness is present for at least six months (but the specific disease that is feared may change over that time).
-Fear of illness is not due to another mental disorder. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 14
Incorrect
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A 25-year-old man asks to be referred to a plastic surgeon as he claims that his ears are too big in proportion to his face and he seldom leaves the house because of this. His records show that he was treated for anxiety and depression with fluoxetine previously and has been off work with back pain for the past 4 months. On examination, his ears appear to be normal. What is the most appropriate term of this behaviour?
Your Answer: Somatisation
Correct Answer: Dysmorphophobia
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis in the given scenario would be body dysmorphic disorder or dysmorphophobia
It is a mental disorder where patients have a significantly distorted body image.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) IV criteria:
Preoccupation with an imagined defect in appearance. If a slight physical anomaly is present, the person’s concern is markedly excessive.
The preoccupation causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning
The preoccupation is not better accounted for by another mental disorder (e.g., dissatisfaction with body shape and size in Anorexia Nervosa).Treatment:
Cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) is the most commonly used and most empirically supported intervention to improve body image.
Several drugs have been targets of study in anorexia nervosa treatment, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, antidepressants, antipsychotics, nutritional supplementation, and hormonal medications. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 15
Incorrect
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A 30 year old male is reviewed following treatment using cognitive behaviour therapy for bulimia. He thinks there has been no improvement in his condition and is interested in using pharmacological therapy. Which of the following is most suitable?
Your Answer: Low-dose fluoxetine
Correct Answer: High-dose fluoxetine
Explanation:Bulimia nervosa is a serious, potentially life-threatening eating disorder characterized by a cycle of bingeing and compensatory behaviours such as self-induced vomiting designed to undo or compensate for the effects of binge eating.
According to the DSM-5, the official diagnostic criteria for bulimia nervosa are:
Recurrent episodes of binge eating. An episode of binge eating is characterized by both of the following:
Eating, in a discrete period of time (e.g. within any 2-hour period), an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat during a similar period of time and under similar circumstances.
A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (e.g. a feeling that one cannot stop eating or control what or how much one is eating).
Recurrent inappropriate compensatory behaviour in order to prevent weight gain, such as self-induced vomiting, misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or other medications, fasting, or excessive exercise.
The binge eating and inappropriate compensatory behaviours both occur, on average, at least once a week for three months.
Self-evaluation is unduly influenced by body shape and weight.
The disturbance does not occur exclusively during episodes of anorexia nervosa.Antidepressants as a group – particularly selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) – are the mainstay of pharmacotherapy for bulimia nervosa. These may be helpful for patients with substantial concurrent symptoms of depression, anxiety, obsessions, or certain impulse disorder symptoms. They may be particularly good for patients who have not benefited from or had suboptimal response to suitable psychosocial therapy or who have a chronic, difficult course in combination with other treatments.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved treatments
Fluoxetine (Prozac): Initial dose 20 mg/d with advance over 1–2 weeks to 60 mg/d in the morning as tolerated. Some patients may need to begin at a lower dose if side effects are intolerable. A maximum dose of 80 mg/d may be used in some cases. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 16
Incorrect
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A 30-year-old female is brought by her concerned mother. The patient reports that the president is secretly in love with her, despite the fact that there has never been any contact between them. What is the probable psychiatric condition from which the patient is suffering from?
Your Answer: Couvade syndrome
Correct Answer: De Clerambault's syndrome
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis in this patient is De Clerambault’s syndrome, also known as erotomania, which is a form of paranoid delusion with an amorous quality. The patient, often a single woman, believes that a famous person is in love with her.
Other options:
– Bouffée délirante is an acute psychotic disorder in which hallucinations, delusions or perceptual disturbances are obvious but markedly variable, changing from day to day or even from hour to hour.
– Fregoli delusion is the mistaken belief that some people currently present in the deluded person’s environment (typically a stranger) is a familiar person in disguise.
– Capgras delusion is the belief that significant others have been replaced by impostors, robots or aliens.
– Couvade is the common but poorly understood phenomenon whereby the expectant father experiences somatic symptoms during the pregnancy for which there is no recognized physiological basis. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 17
Incorrect
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A 30-year-old female in her second week post delivery presents for review with her husband. He is worried due to her depressed mood and her poor interaction with the baby. He describes her mood three days ago being much different. She was talking in a rapid and incoherent fashion about the future. The mother denies any hallucinations but states that her child has been brought into a 'very bad world'. What is the most appropriate treatment for this patient?
Your Answer: Start lithium
Correct Answer: Arrange urgent admission
Explanation:The given clinical scenario warrants urgent admission and psychiatric evaluation as the mother seems to be suffering from puerperal psychosis.
Post-partum mental health problems can range from the ‘baby-blues’ to puerperal psychosis.
The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale may be used to screen for depression:
A 10-item questionnaire, with a maximum score of 30
indicates how the mother has felt over the previous week
score > 13 indicates a ‘depressive illness of varying severity’
sensitivity and specificity > 90%. It includes a question about self-harmPostpartum psychosis has a complex multifactorial origin. Risk factors include a history of bipolar disorder, history of postpartum psychosis in a previous pregnancy, a family history of psychosis or bipolar disorder, a history of schizoaffective disorder or schizophrenia and discontinuation of psychiatric medications during pregnancy.
Incidence rate: 2.6 per 1000 births.
Onset usually within the first 2-3 weeks following birth
Symptoms of puerperal psychosis include confusion, lack of touch with reality, disorganized thought pattern and behaviour, odd effect, sleep disturbances, delusions, paranoia, appetite disturbances, a noticeable change in the level of functioning from baseline, hallucinations and suicidal or homicidal ideation.
The safety of the patient and new-born is of utmost importance, and thus, immediate hospitalization is warranted if there is a risk of harm to either one.
Cognitive-behavioural therapy may be beneficial. Certain SSRIs such as sertraline and paroxetine may be used if symptoms are severe – whilst they are secreted in breast milk it is not thought to be harmful to the infant
There is around a 20% risk of recurrence following future pregnancies -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 18
Correct
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A 29 year old graduate student is reviewed after feeling anxious all the time. She states that she is unable to relax and she is not sleeping well. However, her mood is okay and her appetite is good. She has been reviewed for several weeks with the same symptoms and has made no improvement with self-help sessions. Which pharmacological option is likely indicated in her diagnosis?
Your Answer: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI)
Explanation:Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) is characterized by persistent and excessive worry about a number of different things. People with GAD may anticipate disaster and may be overly concerned about money, health, family, work, or other issues. Individuals with GAD find it difficult to control their worry. They may worry more than seems warranted about actual events or may expect the worst even when there is no apparent reason for concern.
GAD is diagnosed when a person finds it difficult to control worry on more days than not for at least six months and has three or more symptoms.
Treatment usually consists of a combination of pharmacotherapy and/or psychotherapy. Antidepressant agents are the drugs of choice in the treatment of anxiety disorders, particularly the newer agents, which have a safer adverse effect profile and higher ease of use than the older tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 19
Incorrect
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Which among the following is most likely to be beneficial to a patient with schizophrenia?
Your Answer: Social skills training
Correct Answer: Cognitive behavioural therapy
Explanation:Among the given options, cognitive-behavioural therapy is the most likely to benefit a patient with schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia is a functional psychotic disorder characterized by the presence of delusional beliefs, hallucinations, and disturbances in thought, perception, and behaviour.
Clinical features:
Schneider’s first-rank symptoms may be divided into auditory hallucinations, thought disorders, passivity phenomena, and delusional perceptions:Auditory hallucinations of a specific type:
Two or more voices discussing the patient in the third person
Thought echo
Voices commenting on the patient’s behaviourThought disorder:
Thought insertion
Thought withdrawal
Thought broadcastingPassivity phenomena:
Bodily sensations being controlled by external influence
Actions/impulses/feelings – experiences which are imposed on the Individual or influenced by othersOther features of schizophrenia include
Impaired insight (a feature of all psychoses)
Incongruity/blunting of affect (inappropriate emotion for circumstances)
Decreased speech
Neologisms: made-up words
Catatonia
Negative symptoms: incongruity/blunting of affect, anhedonia (inability to derive pleasure), alogia (poverty of speech), avolition (poor motivation).Treatment:
For the initial treatment of acute psychosis, it is recommended to commence an oral second-generation antipsychotics such as aripiprazole, olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine, etc.
Once the acute phase is controlled, switching to a depot preparation like aripiprazole, paliperidone, zuclopenthixol, fluphenazine, haloperidol, pipotiazine, or risperidone is recommended.
Cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and the use of art and drama therapies help counteract the negative symptoms of the disease, improve insight, and assist relapse prevention.
Clozapine is used in case of treatment resistance. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 20
Incorrect
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A 28 year old woman is reviewed after giving birth one week ago. She complains about having difficulty sleeping and feeling anxious and tearful. She is also concerned about her mood because this is her first pregnancy and she is miserable. She is also not breast feeding. She has no history of any mental health disorder. What is the most appropriate approach to manage this patient?
Your Answer: Trial of fluoxetine
Correct Answer: Explanation and reassurance
Explanation:Most new moms experience postpartum baby blues after childbirth, which commonly include mood swings, crying spells, anxiety and difficulty sleeping. Baby blues typically begin within the first two to three days after delivery, and may last for up to two weeks.
Signs and symptoms of baby blues may include:
Mood swings
Anxiety
Sadness
Irritability
Feeling overwhelmed
Crying
Reduced concentration
Appetite problems
Trouble sleepingThe exact cause of the “baby blues” is unknown at this time. It is thought to be related to the hormone changes that occur during pregnancy and again after a baby is born. These hormonal changes may produce chemical changes in the brain that result in depression.
Although the experience of baby blues is unpleasant, the condition usually subsides within two weeks without treatment. All the mom needs is reassurance and help with the baby and household chores. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 21
Incorrect
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A young man complains that he feels paralysed and is unable to move when he wakes up and less often when he is falling asleep. He complains of having hallucinations and sees other strangers in the room. His anxiety has also increased with these episodes. What is his likely diagnosis?
Your Answer: Frontal lobe epilepsy
Correct Answer: Sleep paralysis
Explanation:Sleep paralysis is a temporary inability to move or speak that occurs when you’re waking up or falling asleep. Paralysis is often accompanied by hallucinations
REM is a stage of sleep when the brain is very active and dreams often occur. The body is unable to move, apart from the eyes and muscles used in breathing, possibly to stop the person from acting out the dreams and hurting himself.
It’s not clear why REM sleep can sometimes occur while one is awake, but it has been associated with:
-not getting enough sleep (sleep deprivation or insomnia)
-irregular sleeping patterns – for example, because of shift work or jet lag
-narcolepsy – a long-term condition that causes a person to suddenly fall asleep at inappropriate times
-a family history of sleep paralysis
-sleeping on one’s back -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 22
Incorrect
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Which one of the following statements is incorrect with regards to post-partum mental health problems?
Your Answer: Post-natal depression usually develops within the first month
Correct Answer: Post-natal depression is seen in around 2-3% of women
Explanation:Most new moms experience postpartum baby blues after childbirth, which commonly include mood swings, crying spells, anxiety and difficulty sleeping. Baby blues typically begin within the first two to three days after delivery, and may last for up to two weeks.
Postpartum depression may be mistaken for baby blues at first — but the signs and symptoms are more intense and last longer, and may eventually interfere with your ability to care for your baby and handle other daily tasks. Symptoms usually develop within the first few weeks after giving birth, but may begin earlier, during pregnancy or later, up to a year after birth.
The period prevalence of postpartum depression among women is a striking 21.9% the first year after birth, which makes it one of the most common medical complications of childbearing. Sertraline has been identified as an antidepressant of choice for breastfeeding women because infants are unlikely to develop quantifiable serum sertraline levels and very few adverse events associated with sertraline have been reported.
Women with a prior episode of postpartum psychosis have about a 30% risk of having another episode in the next pregnancy.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 23
Incorrect
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Which of the following would suggest an increase risk of suicide in a patient with a history of depression?
Your Answer: Being married
Correct Answer: History of arm cutting
Explanation:Risk factors specific to depression:
-Family history of mental disorder.
-History of previous suicide attempts (this includes self-harm).
-Severe depression.
-Anxiety.
-Feelings of hopelessness.
-Personality disorder.
-Alcohol abuse and/or drug abuse.
-Male gender.Protective Factors for Suicide.
Protective factors buffer individuals from suicidal thoughts and behaviour. To date, protective factors have not been studied as extensively or rigorously as risk factors. Identifying and understanding protective factors are, however, equally as important as researching risk factors.Protective Factors:
-Effective clinical care for mental, physical, and substance abuse disorders
-Easy access to a variety of clinical interventions and support for help seeking
-Family and community support (connectedness)
-Support from ongoing medical and mental health care relationships
-Skills in problem solving, conflict resolution, and nonviolent ways of handling disputes
-Cultural and religious beliefs that discourage suicide and support instincts for self-preservation -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 24
Correct
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A 50-year-old male is brought to the emergency department following a suicide attempt. He was found at home with an empty bottle of paracetamol by his side. Still conscious, a history was obtained from him to assess his risk of further attempts. Which of the following is considered to be the strongest risk factor for successful suicide?
Your Answer: Addiction to opiates
Explanation:Among the given options, an addiction to opiates is considered the strongest risk factor for committing suicide.
Other options:
Being a female – Being male is one of the most significant risk factors for suicide.
Being married – Having family support is an important protective factor for suicide.
Having five children – Having children at home is thought to be a protective factor.
Having never seen a general practitioner – Having a chronic mental or physical condition is however a risk factor for suicide.Risk factors of suicide:
There are several factors shown to be associated with an increased risk of suicide:
Male sex
History of deliberate self-harm
Alcohol or drug misuse
History of mental illness (depression, schizophrenia)
History of chronic disease
Advancing age
Unemployment or social isolation/living alone
Being unmarried, divorced or widowed
Previous attempt to commit suicide.Signs pointing towards suicidal intension:
Efforts to avoid discovery
Planning
Leaving a written note
Final acts such as sorting out finances
Violent methodProtective factors against suicide:
Family support
Having children at home
Religious belief -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 25
Incorrect
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A 36 year old female who has been suffering from depression for the past 5 years was recently admitted to the psychiatric intensive care unit. She is currently being managed on Sertraline. In clinic she was observed to be sitting in a fixed position for several hours, awake but unable to move. What would be an appropriate treatment for this patient?
Your Answer: Olanzapine
Correct Answer: ECT
Explanation:Catatonia is a state of apparent unresponsiveness to external stimuli and apparent inability to move normally in a person who is apparently awake. Catatonia can be acute and occur in severely ill patients with underlying psychiatric or other medical disorders.
A history of behavioural responses to others usually includes the presence of the following:
– Mutism (absence of speech)
– Negativism (performing actions contrary to the commands of the examiner)
– Echopraxia (repeating the movements of others)
– Echolalia (repeating the words of others)
– Waxy flexibility (slight, even resistance to positioning by examiner)
– Withdrawal (absence of responses to the environment).In the presence of a catatonic state, both first and second generation antipsychotics (SGA) may contribute to maintaining or worsening the catatonic state and increase the risk of developing NMS (neuroleptic malignant syndrome).
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is effective in all forms of catatonia, even after pharmacotherapy with benzodiazepines has failed. Response rate ranges from 80% to 100% and results superior to those of any other therapy in psychiatry. ECT should be considered first-line treatment in patients with malignant catatonia, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, delirious mania or severe catatonic excitement, and in general in all catatonic patients that are refractory or partially responsive to benzodiazepines. Early intervention with ECT is encouraged to avoid undue deterioration of the patient’s medical condition.
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a procedure, done under general anaesthesia, in which small electric currents are passed through the brain, intentionally triggering a brief seizure. ECT seems to cause changes in brain chemistry that can quickly reverse symptoms of certain mental health conditions.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 26
Incorrect
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Which selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors listed below has the highest incidence of discontinuation symptoms?
Your Answer: Sertraline
Correct Answer: Paroxetine
Explanation:A couple of papers written by the same authors indicate that children and adolescents taking an SSRI definitely experience discontinuation reactions that can be mild, moderate or severe when the medication is stopped suddenly or high doses are reduced substantially. Among the SSRIs paroxetine seems to be the worst offender and fluoxetine the least while sertraline and fluvoxamine tend to be intermediate. The rate of discontinuation syndrome varies with the particular SSRI involved. It is generally quoted as 25% but is higher for SSRIs with shorter half-lives. Paroxetine has been associated with more frequent discontinuation symptoms than the other SSRIs.
The use of fluoxetine with its long half-life appears safer in this respect than paroxetine and venlafaxine causing the most concerns.
Paroxetine has the shortest half-life with 21 hours of all listed SSRIs and as such it would be expected to have a higher incidence or severity (greater number of symptoms) and fluoxetine would have the least since it has a half life of 96 hours. Citalopram has a half-life of 35 hours while escitalopram has a half-life of 30 hours.
The most common symptoms reported are: dizziness, light-headedness, drowsiness, poor concentration, nausea, headache and fatigue.
Another common symptom in adults is paraesthesia described as burning, tingling, numbness or electric shock feelings usually in the upper half of the body or proximal lower limbs. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 27
Incorrect
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A 21-year-old female presents to the emergency department having taken an overdose of 40 x 500mg paracetamol tablets and 400ml of vodka. This is her fourth attendance with an overdose over the past 3 years. She is also known to the local police after an episode of reckless driving/road rage. On arrival, she is tearful and upset. Vital signs and general physical examination are normal apart from evidence of cutting on her arms. She is given activated charcoal. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Borderline personality disorder
Explanation:The given clinical scenario is highly suggestive of a borderline personality disorder.
Borderline personality disorder is marked out by instability in moods, behaviour, and relationships. The diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of at least 5 of the following symptoms;
1) Extreme reactions including panic, depression, rage, or frantic actions to abandonment, whether real or perceived
2) A pattern of intense and stormy relationships with family, friends, and loved ones, often veering from extreme closeness and love to extreme dislike or anger
3) Distorted and unstable self-image or sense of self, which can result in sudden changes in feelings, opinions, values, or plans and goals for the future (such as school or career choices)
4) Impulsive and often dangerous behaviours, such as spending sprees, unsafe sex, substance abuse, reckless driving, and binge eating
5) Recurring suicidal behaviours or threats or self-harming behaviour, such as cutting, intense and highly changeable moods, with each episode lasting from a few hours to a few days
6) Chronic feelings of emptiness and/or boredom
7) Inappropriate, intense anger or problems controlling anger
8) Having stress-related paranoid thoughts or severe dissociative symptoms, such as feeling cut off from oneself, observing oneself from outside the body, or losing touch with reality.Other options:
There are no features consistent with endogenous depression, such as early morning wakening or loss of appetite.
There are also no features consistent with hypomania such as pressure of speech, a flight of ideas, or over-exuberant behaviour.
The lack of history of drug abuse rules out drug-induced psychosis.
An anti-social personality disorder is characterized by a failure to conform to social norms and repeated lawbreaking. There is consistent irresponsibility, impulsivity, and disregard for both their safety and that of others. This is not the case in the given scenario. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 28
Incorrect
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A 22-year-old, thin drama student presents with weakness and muscle cramps. She has a past medical history of reflux and bronchial asthma, for which she takes lansoprazole 30mg once daily, inhaled salbutamol PRN, and a once-daily inhaled corticosteroid. She reports feeling stressed lately as she has a leading role in a significant stage production due to open in one week. Her heart rate is 87 bpm, blood pressure 103/71mmHg, respiratory rate 13/min. Her blood results are: pH: 7.46 Na+: 138 mmol/L, K+: 2.8 mmol/L, Chloride: 93 mmol/L, Magnesium: 0.61 mmol/L, What is the most likely aetiology for her symptoms?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Bulimia
Explanation:The most probable diagnosis considering hypochloraemia and the mild metabolic alkalosis as well as the history of GERD (requiring a high dose of PPI to control) would be bulimia.
Other options:
Diuretic abuse tends to give a hypochloraemic acidosis.
Gitelman syndrome also fits the diagnosis but, it is very rare compared to bulimia.
Inhaled steroid use and stress would not be responsible for such marked electrolyte derangement.Other potential signs of bulimia nervosa would be parotid gland swelling and dental enamel erosion induced by regular vomiting.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 29
Incorrect
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Which statement is true regarding anorexia nervosa?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: It is the most common cause of admissions to child and adolescent psychiatric wards
Explanation:Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder characterized by an abnormally low body weight, an intense fear of gaining weight and a distorted perception of weight. People with anorexia place a high value on controlling their weight and shape, using extreme efforts that tend to significantly interfere with their lives.
The minimum level of severity is based, for adults, on current body mass index (BMI) (see below) or for
children and adolescents, on BMI percentile. The ranges below are derived from World Health
Organization categories for thinness in adults; for children and adolescents, corresponding BMI percentiles
should be used. The level of severity may be increased to reflect clinical symptoms, the degree of
functional disability, and the need for supervision.
Mild: BMI > 17 kg/m2
Moderate: BMI 16-16.99 kg/m2
Severe: BMI 15-15.99 kg/m2
Extreme: BMI < 15 kg/m2 Anorexia nervosa is more common in women than in men, with a female-to-male ratio of 10-20:1 in developed countries. The prognosis of anorexia nervosa is guarded. Morbidity rates range from 10-20%, with only 50% of patients making a complete recovery. Of the remaining 50%, 20% remain emaciated and 25% remain thin. The main change in the diagnosis of Anorexia Nervosa was to remove the criterion of amenorrhea (loss of menstrual cycle). Removing this criterion means that boys and men with Anorexia will finally be able to receive an appropriate diagnosis.
Similarly, girls and women who continue to have their period despite other symptoms associated with Anorexia, such as weight loss and food restriction, will now be eligible for a diagnosis of Anorexia. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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Question 30
Incorrect
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A 40 year old man who has a 12 year history of bipolar disorder is placed on Lithium. How often should his Lithium levels be checked once a stable dose has been achieved?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Every 3 months
Explanation:Lithium acts by:
– I inhibiting postsynaptic D2 receptor super sensitivity
– Altering cation transport in nerve and muscle cells and influencing reuptake of serotonin or norepinephrine
– Inhibiting phosphatidylinositol cycle second messenger systemsThe NICE guidelines for depression and bipolar disorder both recommend Lithium as an effective treatment; patients who take lithium should have regular blood tests to monitor the amount of lithium in their blood (every 3 months), and to make sure the lithium has not caused any problems with their kidneys or thyroid (every 6 months).
Lithium adverse effects include:
– Leucocytosis (most patients) which is when the white cells are above the normal range in the blood.
– Polyuria/polydipsia (30-50%)
– Dry mouth (20-50%)
– Hand tremor (45% initially, 10% after 1 year of treatment)
– Confusion (40%)
– Decreased memory (40%)
– Headache (40%)
– Muscle weakness (30% initially, 1% after 1 year of treatment)
– Electrocardiographic (ECG) changes (20-30%)
– Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea (10-30% initially, 1-10% after 1-2 years of treatment)
– Hyperreflexia (15%)
– Muscle twitch (15%)
– Vertigo (15%) -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
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