-
Question 1
Correct
-
A 87-year-old woman presents with disorientation and restlessness. She has a history of hypertension, atrial fibrillation, polymyalgia rheumatica, osteoarthritis and a hiatus hernia. Her current medications include bisoprolol, digoxin, amlodipine, omeprazole, prednisolone and as required paracetamol. She lives independently and is usually mentally alert. She has been increasingly unwell for the past week, complaining of increased pain in her shoulders, so her GP has increased the dose of prednisolone from 5mg to 30mg daily and added codeine 30mg four times a day. Physical examination and blood tests are unremarkable.
Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Select the SINGLE most likely diagnosis from the list below. Select ONE option only.Your Answer: Polypharmacy
Explanation:Understanding the Possible Causes of Delirium in the Elderly: A Case Study
This patient is most likely experiencing delirium, which is a common condition among the elderly. One of the leading causes of delirium in this population is polypharmacy, which refers to taking multiple medications. In this case, the patient’s unremarkable physical examination and blood tests suggest that polypharmacy is the most likely explanation for her symptoms. Steroids and opioids, which she recently started taking, are known to cause delirium, especially in older adults. Patients with dementia or mild cognitive impairment are particularly vulnerable to the effects of polypharmacy.
Accidental poisoning is also a possibility, but the patient’s usual independence and mental alertness make this less likely. Additionally, her symptoms have been present for a week, which suggests a longer process than accidental poisoning. A chest infection could also cause delirium, but the patient’s examination and blood tests do not support this diagnosis.
Alcohol withdrawal is another potential cause of disorientation and restlessness, but there is no indication in the patient’s history that she is misusing alcohol. Finally, Alzheimer’s disease is unlikely given the short duration of the patient’s symptoms and her usual mental alertness. Overall, polypharmacy is the most probable cause of this patient’s delirium.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 2
Incorrect
-
A woman contacts the local psychiatry crisis team, worried about her daughter - who has previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia - becoming more isolated and paranoid about her surroundings. She reports that her daughter is increasingly concerned about her neighbors eavesdropping on her conversations. Her symptoms were previously well managed on daily risperidone. When the woman visited her daughter, she discovered unopened boxes of her medication on the counter.
What would be a suitable course of treatment for this patient?Your Answer: Cognitive behavioural therapy
Correct Answer: Depot risperidone injections
Explanation:Considering the patient’s increasing symptoms of psychosis, it is possible that non-compliance with their risperidone medication is an issue. In such cases, it is recommended to consider once monthly IM antipsychotic depot injections for patients with poor oral compliance. However, the patient’s risperidone dose would need to be re-titrated to their previous level.
Clozapine is typically used for treatment-resistant psychosis after trying two other antipsychotics. However, there is no evidence of the patient having tried multiple antipsychotics, and it appears that risperidone was effectively controlling their symptoms. If risperidone is not effective, quetiapine could be tried before considering Clozapine, provided there are no contraindications.
While cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) can be helpful in reducing symptoms of psychosis, it is less likely to be effective than monthly depot injections.
Based on the patient’s history, there is no indication that they pose a risk to themselves or others that would warrant admission. Therefore, efforts should be made to manage the patient in the community.
Atypical antipsychotics are now recommended as the first-line treatment for patients with schizophrenia, as per the 2005 NICE guidelines. These medications have the advantage of significantly reducing extrapyramidal side-effects. However, they can also cause adverse effects such as weight gain, hyperprolactinaemia, and in the case of clozapine, agranulocytosis. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency has issued warnings about the increased risk of stroke and venous thromboembolism when antipsychotics are used in elderly patients. Examples of atypical antipsychotics include clozapine, olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine, amisulpride, and aripiprazole.
Clozapine, one of the first atypical antipsychotics, carries a significant risk of agranulocytosis and requires full blood count monitoring during treatment. Therefore, it should only be used in patients who are resistant to other antipsychotic medication. The BNF recommends introducing clozapine if schizophrenia is not controlled despite the sequential use of two or more antipsychotic drugs, one of which should be a second-generation antipsychotic drug, each for at least 6-8 weeks. Adverse effects of clozapine include agranulocytosis, neutropaenia, reduced seizure threshold, constipation, myocarditis, and hypersalivation. Dose adjustment of clozapine may be necessary if smoking is started or stopped during treatment.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 3
Correct
-
A 9-year-old patient is brought to General Practitioner by his parents because he has been disruptive at school. His teachers report that he does not pay attention in class, bullies other classmates and takes their food during lunchtime without their permission. One teacher also reported that the patient was seen hurting the class hamster.
Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis in this patient?Your Answer: Conduct disorder
Explanation:Understanding Different Types of Behavioral Disorders in Children and Adults
Conduct Disorder:
Conduct disorder is a behavioral disorder that affects individuals under the age of 18. It is characterized by repetitive behavior that violates the rights of others, including bullying and torture of animals.Major Depression:
Major depression is a mood disorder that is diagnosed when an individual experiences depressed mood along with at least five of the following symptoms: changes in sleep patterns, loss of interest in activities, feelings of guilt, decreased energy, difficulty concentrating, changes in appetite, sluggishness, and suicidal thoughts.Antisocial Disorder:
Individuals who exhibit signs of conduct disorder and are 18 years or older are diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder.Manic Episode:
Mania is a mood disorder characterized by elevated mood lasting for at least 7 days. Symptoms include increased energy, decreased need for sleep, risky sexual behavior, feelings of invincibility, distractibility, flight of ideas, agitation, and pressured speech.Oppositional Defiant Disorder:
Oppositional defiant disorder is a behavioral disorder characterized by oppositional behavior towards authority figures. However, there is no violation of the rights of others or extreme behavior such as bullying or animal cruelty. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 4
Correct
-
A 50-year-old man who is on antipsychotic medication for schizophrenia complains of extreme restlessness. Which side-effect of the medication could be causing this?
Your Answer: Akathisia
Explanation:Severe restlessness may be caused by antipsychotics, known as akathisia.
Antipsychotics are a group of drugs used to treat schizophrenia, psychosis, mania, and agitation. They are divided into two categories: typical and atypical antipsychotics. The latter were developed to address the extrapyramidal side-effects associated with the first generation of typical antipsychotics. Typical antipsychotics work by blocking dopaminergic transmission in the mesolimbic pathways through dopamine D2 receptor antagonism. They are associated with extrapyramidal side-effects and hyperprolactinaemia, which are less common with atypical antipsychotics.
Extrapyramidal side-effects (EPSEs) are common with typical antipsychotics and include Parkinsonism, acute dystonia, sustained muscle contraction, akathisia, and tardive dyskinesia. The latter is a late onset of choreoathetoid movements that may be irreversible and occur in 40% of patients. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency has issued specific warnings when antipsychotics are used in elderly patients, including an increased risk of stroke and venous thromboembolism. Other side-effects include antimuscarinic effects, sedation, weight gain, raised prolactin, impaired glucose tolerance, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, reduced seizure threshold, and prolonged QT interval.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 5
Incorrect
-
A 25-year-old man with a history of bipolar disorder is scheduled for a medication review. When inquiring about his current state, he starts discussing the vast array of emotions that exist and wonders if everyone has experienced all of them. Eventually, he spontaneously mentions that he is feeling quite good.
What is the patient exhibiting in this scenario?Your Answer: Derailment
Correct Answer: Circumstantiality
Explanation:The patient’s lengthy response to the question suggests circumstantiality, which can be a symptom of anxiety disorders or hypomania. However, the patient has remained on topic and has not derailed. Their response is coherent, and there is no evidence of pressured speech in this text-based interaction. Incoherence would be demonstrated by nonsensical statements, which is not the case here.
Anxiety is a common disorder that can manifest in various ways. According to NICE, the primary feature is excessive worry about multiple events associated with heightened tension. It is crucial to consider potential physical causes when diagnosing anxiety disorders, such as hyperthyroidism, cardiac disease, and medication-induced anxiety. Medications that may trigger anxiety include salbutamol, theophylline, corticosteroids, antidepressants, and caffeine.
NICE recommends a step-wise approach for managing generalised anxiety disorder (GAD). This includes education about GAD and active monitoring, low-intensity psychological interventions, high-intensity psychological interventions or drug treatment, and highly specialist input. Sertraline is the first-line SSRI for drug treatment, and if it is ineffective, an alternative SSRI or a serotonin-noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) such as duloxetine or venlafaxine may be offered. If the patient cannot tolerate SSRIs or SNRIs, pregabalin may be considered. For patients under 30 years old, NICE recommends warning them of the increased risk of suicidal thinking and self-harm and weekly follow-up for the first month.
The management of panic disorder also follows a stepwise approach, including recognition and diagnosis, treatment in primary care, review and consideration of alternative treatments, review and referral to specialist mental health services, and care in specialist mental health services. NICE recommends either cognitive behavioural therapy or drug treatment in primary care. SSRIs are the first-line drug treatment, and if contraindicated or no response after 12 weeks, imipramine or clomipramine should be offered.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 6
Incorrect
-
A 30-year-old man with a history of schizophrenia presents to the Emergency Department with drowsiness. Upon examination, he appears rigid. The medical team suspects neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Which of the following is not a feature of this condition?
Your Answer: Elevated creatine kinase
Correct Answer: Usually occurs after prolonged treatment
Explanation:Patients who have recently started treatment are commonly affected by neuroleptic malignant syndrome, which can lead to renal failure due to rhabdomyolysis.
Understanding Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a rare but serious condition that can occur in patients taking antipsychotic medication. It can also happen with dopaminergic drugs used for Parkinson’s disease. The exact cause of this condition is unknown, but it is believed that dopamine blockade induced by antipsychotics triggers massive glutamate release, leading to neurotoxicity and muscle damage. Symptoms of neuroleptic malignant syndrome typically appear within hours to days of starting an antipsychotic and include fever, muscle rigidity, autonomic lability, and agitated delirium with confusion.
A raised creatine kinase is present in most cases, and acute kidney injury may develop in severe cases. Management of neuroleptic malignant syndrome involves stopping the antipsychotic medication and transferring the patient to a medical ward or intensive care unit. Intravenous fluids may be given to prevent renal failure, and dantrolene or bromocriptine may be used in selected cases. It is important to differentiate neuroleptic malignant syndrome from serotonin syndrome, which has similar symptoms but is caused by excessive serotonin activity.
In summary, neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a rare but potentially life-threatening condition that can occur in patients taking antipsychotic medication or dopaminergic drugs. Early recognition and management are crucial to prevent complications and improve outcomes.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 7
Correct
-
You are conducting an interview with a 24-year-old man who has arrived at the emergency department after self-harming. As you converse with him, you observe that his facial expression is devoid of emotion, his tone of voice is flat, and his body language lacks any animation. This is evident even when he talks about his traumatic experiences of childhood abuse. How would you record this in your documentation?
Your Answer: Flattened affect
Explanation:Affect and mood can be easily confused during a mental state exam. Affect refers to the current emotional state that can be observed, while mood is the predominant emotional state over a longer period. It is helpful to think of affect as the weather on a particular day and mood as the overall climate.
Mood is determined by the patient’s history and can be described as their emotional state over the past month. Symptoms of depression or mania can be used to determine the patient’s mood. On the other hand, affect is the emotional state that is currently being displayed by the patient during the assessment. It is expressed through facial expressions, voice tone, and body movements. Affect can be normal, restricted, blunted, or flat. Labile affect is characterized by abrupt shifts in emotions.
In the given scenario, the patient is displaying a flattened affect, which means there is no expression of emotion. Apathy may be a symptom present in the patient’s history, but the scenario is specifically referring to the current observed emotional state. Depressed mood may also be present, but it is discussed in the patient’s history and is not the same as affect. Symptoms of depressed mood include anhedonia, low mood, lack of energy, poor concentration, and poor sleep.
Thought disorders can manifest in various ways, including circumstantiality, tangentiality, neologisms, clang associations, word salad, Knight’s move thinking, flight of ideas, perseveration, and echolalia. Circumstantiality involves providing excessive and unnecessary detail when answering a question, but eventually returning to the original point. Tangentiality, on the other hand, refers to wandering from a topic without returning to it. Neologisms are newly formed words, often created by combining two existing words. Clang associations occur when ideas are related only by their similar sounds or rhymes. Word salad is a type of speech that is completely incoherent, with real words strung together into nonsensical sentences. Knight’s move thinking is a severe form of loosening of associations, characterized by unexpected and illogical leaps from one idea to another. Flight of ideas is a thought disorder that involves jumping from one topic to another, but with discernible links between them. Perseveration is the repetition of ideas or words despite attempts to change the topic. Finally, echolalia is the repetition of someone else’s speech, including the question that was asked.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 8
Correct
-
A 14-year-old girl has been found to be regularly skipping school, frequently arguing with other students and has been caught smoking on several occasions. Her general practitioner suspects a diagnosis of conduct disorder. She has already been diagnosed with anxiety disorder. She is not currently on any medications.
Given the new suspected diagnosis of conduct disorder, what is the most appropriate initial management option for this patient?Your Answer: Refer for cognitive behavioural therapy
Explanation:Management of Conduct Disorder: Interventions and Referrals
Conduct disorder is a psychiatric condition characterized by persistent patterns of aggressive and antisocial behavior. The management of conduct disorder involves a combination of pharmacological and psychosocial interventions. Here are some of the key interventions and referrals for managing conduct disorder:
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): CBT techniques are used as part of the psychosocial interventions for conduct disorder. These techniques are considered as part of the first-line management of conduct disorder.
Methylphenidate: Methylphenidate is a medication that is used in the treatment of ADHD, which is often a coexisting condition with conduct disorder. This medication should only be initiated and coordinated by a specialist in secondary care (such as CAMHS).
Antidepressant Medications: Antidepressant medications should not be the first line in the management of conduct disorder, particularly with no coexisting health conditions. If there were depressive symptoms, these medications could be considered but are generally avoided in this age group.
Psychosocial Interventions: Psychosocial interventions are important in the management of conduct disorder. These include child-focussed programmes, multimodal interventions and parent training programmes. These interventions would be considered first-line management for conduct disorder if there was not the co-existing complicating factor of ADHD.
Referral to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS): Patients presenting with symptoms of conduct disorder with a significant complicating factor should be referred to CAMHS for specialist assessment. These factors include mental health problems, neurodevelopmental disorder, learning disability or difficulty, and substance misuse. However, if the patient has already been referred to CAMHS, re-referral would not be necessary.
Managing Conduct Disorder: Interventions and Referrals
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 9
Correct
-
A 35-year-old woman is reviewed. She has been drinking alcohol heavily for over 15 years but now needs to drink more to feel satisfied as well as to avoid being anxious. She works as a teacher and gave up cycling five years ago at the insistence of her husband. There is no evidence of chronic liver disease on physical examination. Assessment of her mental state reveals episodes of anxiety. She no longer socialises with friends.
How is her behaviour best categorised?Your Answer: Alcohol dependence
Explanation:Understanding Alcohol Dependence: Symptoms and Screening Tools
Alcohol dependence is a serious condition characterized by a strong compulsion to drink, withdrawal symptoms, tolerance, and loss of control over alcohol use. This vignette illustrates a classic scenario of alcohol dependence, with features of tolerance, withdrawals, neglect of other pleasures, and low mood associated with heavy chronic alcohol consumption. While depression can be a symptom of alcohol dependence, it is not the primary diagnosis.
The term alcohol abuse is being replaced by alcohol-use disorder or harmful drinking to describe patterns of alcohol use that cause physical or mental health damage. In this vignette, the woman likely has harmful use of alcohol, but the overall picture points to a diagnosis of alcohol dependence.
Withdrawal symptoms are a common feature of alcohol dependence, and the woman in this vignette would likely experience them if she suddenly stopped drinking. Social withdrawal is also an indicator of alcohol dependence, but it does not explain the entire pattern of symptoms and behavior presented.
A useful screening test for alcohol-use disorders is the CAGE questionnaire, which asks about cutting down, annoyance from others, guilt, and needing a drink first thing in the morning. Answering yes to two or more questions may indicate the presence of an alcohol-use disorder. Other screening tools include the FAST and AUDIT tests, which can be administered quickly in busy medical settings.
Overall, understanding the symptoms and screening tools for alcohol dependence is crucial for early detection and intervention.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
-
Question 10
Incorrect
-
A young adult woman complains that her mother interferes in every aspect of her life and tries to control her. The woman no longer speaks to her parents or eats meals with them. The mother has increased her efforts to maintain control.
Which of the following conditions could arise from this situation?Your Answer: Separation anxiety disorder
Correct Answer: Anorexia nervosa
Explanation:Psychological Disorders and Family Dynamics
Family dynamics can play a role in the development of certain psychological disorders. Anorexia nervosa, for example, may be linked to attempts to regain control and self-esteem through food restriction and weight loss. Dissociative identity disorder, on the other hand, is associated with severe childhood trauma, particularly sexual abuse. Narcissistic personality disorder is characterised by exaggerated feelings of self-importance and a strong need for approval from others. Schizophrenia may be influenced by highly expressed emotions within the family. Separation anxiety disorder, however, does not seem to be present in the given vignette. Understanding the relationship between family dynamics and psychological disorders can aid in diagnosis and treatment.
-
This question is part of the following fields:
- Psychiatry
-
00
Correct
00
Incorrect
00
:
00
:
0
00
Session Time
00
:
00
Average Question Time (
Mins)