Behavior and Mental Status
Behavior and Mental Status
Behavior and Mental Status
By:
Depression 10%
Early Clues:
low self-esteem
anhedonia(lack of pleasure in daily activities)
sleep disorders
difficulty concentrating or making decisions
Suicide
Highest among men older than 85 years
and are increasing among teenagers and
young adults
Possible Findings:
Aphasia
Dysphonia
Dysarthria
Changes in mood disorders
Speech and Language
Testing for Aphasia
Perceptions.
Ask about any perceptions (eg. seeing or Illusions, hallucinations
hearing things)
Insight and judgement.
Recognition or denial of mental cause of
Assess patients insight into the illness and symptoms, bizarre, impulsive, or
level of judgement used in making unrealistic judgement
decisions or plans
Cognitive Functions
Orientation to time, place, and person Disorientation
Attention
Digit Span--ability to repeat series of numbers Poor performance of digit span, serial 7s,
forward and then backward and spelling backward are common in
Serial 7s--ability to subtract 7 repeatedly, starting
with 100
dementiaand delirium but have other
Spelling backward of a five-letter word such as W-O-
causes too
R-L-D
Remote Memory(birthdays,
anniversaries, social security number, Impaired in late stages of dementia
schools, jobs, wars
Recent memory and new learning ability
Recent Memory (events of the day) impaired in dementia, delirium, and
amnestic disorders
New Learning Ability--ability to repeat
three or four words after a few minutes of
unrelated activity
Higher Cognitive Functions
Examination Techniques Possible Findings
Registration
" Listen carefully; I am going to say three words. You say them back after
I stop. Ready? Here they are...
House(pause),Car(pause),Lake(pause). Now repeat those words back o
me." ( Repeat up to five times, but score only the first trial.)
Naming
"What is This?" (Point to a pencil or pen.)
Reading
"Please read this and do what it says." (Show examinee the words on the
stimulus form)
Close your eyes
Mini-Mental State Exam
Recording the Examination-Mental Status
Mental Status: The patient is alert, well-
groomed, and cheerful. Speech is fluent
and words are clear. Thought processess
are coherent,insight is good. The patient is
oriented to person, place and time. Serial
7s accurate;recent and remotememory
intact. Calculations intact
Mini-Mental State Exam
"Mental Status; the patient appears sad
and fatigued;clothes are wrinkled. Speech
is slow and words are mumbled. Thought
processesare coherent but insight into
current 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."
Somatoform Disorders: Types and
Approach
Management Guidelines
for Patients with
Unexplained Medical
Symptoms
Show empathy and understanding for the complaints and
frustrating experiences the patient has had so far
General Aspects
Develop a good patient-physician relationship;try to be
the coordinator of diagnostic procedures and care
Specific Phobia
A marked, persistent, and excessive or unreasonable
fear that is cued by the presence or anticipation of a
specific object or situation, such as dogs,injections, or
flying
The person recognizes the fear as excessive or
unreasonable,but exposure to the cue provokes
immediate anxiety
Anxiety Disorders
Social Phobia
A marked, persistent fear of one or more social or
performancesituations that involve exposureto unfamiliar
people or to scrutiny by others
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Obsessions or compulsions that caused marked anxiety
or distress.
Although recognized as excessive or unreasonable, they
are time consuming and interfere with the person's
normal routine relationships
Anxiety Disorders
Acute Stress Disorder
Exposure to a traumatic event that involved actual or
threatened deathnor serious injury to self or
others,leading to intense fear,helplessness, or horror
During or immediately after this event ,the person has at
least three dissociative symptoms:
1) A subjective sense of numbing,detachment,or absence
of emotional responsiveness
2) A reduced awareness or sorroundings as in a daze
3) Feelings of unreality
4) feelings of depersonalization
5) Amnesia for an important of the event
Anxiety Disorders
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
The event, fearful response, and persistent
reexperiencing of the traumatic event
Hallucinations may occur
The person has increased arousal,tries to avoid
stimuli related to the trauma,and has numbing of
general responsiveness
Causes marked distress and impaired social or
occupational function, and lasts for more than a
month
Anxiety Disorders
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Lacks a specific traumatic event or focus
for concern
Excessive anxiety and worry are hard to
control and generalized to a number of
events or activities
Anxiety Disorders
Generalized Anxiety 1) feeling restless, keyed up, or on edge
Disorder
2) being easily fatigued
At least three of the
following symptoms 3) difficulty in concentrating or mind
are associated: going blank
4) irritability
5) muscle tension