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Understanding Adjustment Disorders

The document provides information on adjustment disorders according to DSM-IV-TR criteria. It defines adjustment disorders as maladaptive reactions to identifiable stressors occurring within 3 months of the stressor. There are 5 subtypes defined by predominant symptoms: depressed mood, anxiety, mixed anxiety/depressed mood, disturbance of conduct, or mixed disturbance of emotions/conduct. Precipitants can include relationship, school, work, health, legal, or financial problems. The case of Peter, a college student having a depressed reaction to a recent breakup, is provided as an example.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views55 pages

Understanding Adjustment Disorders

The document provides information on adjustment disorders according to DSM-IV-TR criteria. It defines adjustment disorders as maladaptive reactions to identifiable stressors occurring within 3 months of the stressor. There are 5 subtypes defined by predominant symptoms: depressed mood, anxiety, mixed anxiety/depressed mood, disturbance of conduct, or mixed disturbance of emotions/conduct. Precipitants can include relationship, school, work, health, legal, or financial problems. The case of Peter, a college student having a depressed reaction to a recent breakup, is provided as an example.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Joy P.

Malinit, MD, DPBP, FPPA

TERMINAL OBJECTIVE

Upon completion of this


period of instruction,
the student will render
an accurate DSM-IV TR diagnosis
when presented with
symptoms characteristic of
an ADJUSTMENT DISORDER

ENABLING OBJECTIVES

State the DSM-IV TR criteria for an


adjustment disorder & symptom subtypes

Know the etiologic factors linked to


adjustment disorders

Give differential diagnosis for adjustment


disorders

Learn clinical management of adjustment


disorders

ADJUSTMENT DISORDER

Introduced in DSM-III (1980) to


describe conditions in which a
person develops psychological
symptoms in response to
stressful events

Categorized in
DSM I : transient situational personality disorders
DSM II: transient situational disturbances

ADJUSTMENT DISORDER

Categories used to diagnose disorders in


persons who adjusted poorly
To difficult situations
To newly experienced environmental factors in the
absence of serious underlying personality defects

In DSM-IV TR
Maladaptive reaction within 3 months of the stressor
Cannot persist for more than 6 months after termination of
the stressor or its consequences

Diagnostic Criteria for

Adjustment Disorder
A. The development of emotional or behavioral symptoms in
response to an identifiable stressor (s) occurring within 3
months of the onset of the stressor (s).
B. These symptoms or behaviors are clinically significant as
evidenced by either of the following:
1. Marked distress that is in excess of what would be expected
from exposure to the stressor
2. Significant impairment in social or occupational (academic)
functioning

C. The stress-related disturbance does not meet the criteria


for another specific axis I disorder and is not merely an
exacerbation of a preexisting axis I or axis II disorder.

Diagnostic Criteria for

Adjustment Disorder

D. The symptoms do not represent bereavement.


E. Once the stressor (or its consequences) has terminated, the
symptoms do not persist for more than an additional 6
months.

Specify:
Acute: If the disturbance lasts less than 6 months
Chronic: If the disturbance lasts for 6 months or longer

KEY POINTS

stress-related
disproportionately overwhelmed or overly intense in their
responses to given stimuli

non-psychotic disturbance
short-term
time-limited: beginning within 3 months of the stressful
event & symptoms lessen within 6 months upon removal
of the stressor or when new adaptation occurs

ADJUSTMENT DISORDER

With
depressed mood

With
disturbance of conduct

With anxiety

With mixed disturbance


of emotions & conduct

With mixed anxiety &


depressed mood

Unspecified

5 SUBTYPES: diagnosis depends on predominant


symptoms that develop in response to stressor

SUBTYPES & SPECIFIERS


With depressed mood:
predominant symptoms are depressed mood, tearfulness,
& feelings of hopelessness
With anxiety:
Palpitations, nervousness, worry, jitteriness, agitation
- in children: fears of separation from major attachment figures
With mixed anxiety and depressed mood:
combination of anxiety and depression.
With disturbance of conduct:
violation of rights of others or major age-appropriate
societal norms (truancy, vandalism, reckless driving, fighting)

SUBTYPES & SPECIFIERS

With mixed disturbance of emotions and conduct:


predominant manifestations are both emotional symptoms
(e.g., depression, anxiety) & disturbed conduct

Unspecified:
Atypical maladaptive reactions (inappropriate responses

to diagnosis
of physical illness-massive denial & severe noncompliance, physical complaints,
social withdrawal or academic inhibition) to stressors not classifiable

as one of the other subtypes

EPIDEMIOLOGY

Prevalence in general population:

2%- 8%
Frequency in hospital & psychiatric clinics:

5%-10%
Commonly diagnosed on consultation-liaison
services at general hospitals:

50%

Cardiac surgery patients: 51%


Newly hospitalized cancer patients: 32%
Adolescents with diabetes mellitus: 36%

EPIDEMIOLOGY

More common in women,


unmarried persons &
young persons
Behavioral symptoms:
Among adolescents: acting out
Adults: mood or anxiety
symptoms

May occur at any age


average is mid-20s

ADJUSTMENT DISORDER

essor

Reaction

Maladaptive
Not an expected healthy response

ETIOLOGY
stress is thought to be the common antecedent
caused by a disruption of the process of
adaptation
symptoms result from disruption of normal
functioning caused by stress
acute & chronic stress differ in physiologic &
psychological terms
meaning of stress is influenced by ecologic modifiers (e.g, support
systems, resilience)

ETIOLOGY: STRESSORS

a single event (termination of a romantic relationship)


multiple stressors (marked business difficulties & marital problems)

recurrent (periodic examinations or associated with seasonal business crises)

continuous (living in a crime-ridden neighborhood, living in poverty)


sudden or shocking stressors that are not anticipated

NATURE OF STRESSORS

Stressors may affect a single


individual (failure in an important
examination), an entire family, or a
larger group or community (as in a
natural disaster)

Some stressors may accompany


specific developmental events
(going to school, leaving the parental
home, getting married, becoming a
parent, failing to attain occupational
goals retirement)

3 FACTORS TO UNDERSTAND .
Nature of the stressor
Conscious & unconscious
meanings of the stressor
Pre-existing constitutional
& psychological
vulnerability

REMEMBER

Most people are resilient &


do not develop
psychiatric symptoms in
response to stressful
situations
Suggest underlying
vulnerability

PSYCHODYNAMIC EXPLANATIONS

THINK OF A BONE
if enough pressure is applied,
it fracture

Amount of pressure applied differ from person to person


Depend on age, gender, physical well-being

Healthy bone will break if subjected to sufficient stress


Osteoporotic bone will break more rapidly

ETIOLOGY: INTRAPERSONAL CONTEXT

Age, gender, culture influence the nature &


meaning of stressors to the individual
Intelligence, flexibility & range of coping skills,
defense mechanisms affect adaptive capacity
Previous trauma, unresolved conflicts or
developmental issues may also act as vulnerability
factors

ETIOLOGY: INTRAPERSONAL CONTEXT

Level of situational adversity actually has a low


correlation with the severity of response to
stress
Some seem sensitive to even minor stressors,
while others remain resilient even to extreme
trauma
Personality is a major determinant
highly anxious temperament may make one
more prone to over react to a stressful event

PSYCHODYNAMIC EXPLANATIONS

Unpleasant childhood
experiences could lead to
fixation at certain stages of
development triggers
regression when sufficient
stress is applied
Each person has breaking
point
Depends on amount of
stress applied, underlying
constitution, personality
structure & temperament

PRECIPITANTS OF ADJUSTMENT DISORDER


Adolescent

Adults

School problems

60

Marital problems

25

Parental rejection

27

Separation/divorce

23

Alcohol /Drug problem

26

Move

17

Parental separation

25

Financial problems

14

Girlfriend/boyfriend problems

20

School problems

14

Marital problems in parents

18

Work problems

Move

16

Alcohol/Drug problem

Legal problems

12

Illness

Work problems

Legal problems

Other

60

Other

81

Common Stressors for Children

New school year / new school


Disrupted / changed family situation
Peer rejection / disliked / loss
Parental illness
Death of a parent / grandparent
Moving to a new community

Associated Features & Disorders

Decreased performance at school


Temporary changes in social relationships
Suicide attempts & suicide
Excessive substance use

Somatic complaints
Individuals with pre-existing mental disorders
General medical / surgical patients
Complicate the course of illness (decreased compliance with
medical regimen, increased length of hospital stay)

ECOSYSTEMIC MODEL

Individual, family & community change is


inevitable and continuous
Protective factors can be introduced through any
relationship in any part of the ecosystem
Ability to connect with & rely on adults outside the family
School, church & community programs to connect youth
with caring adults

ECOSYSTEMIC MODEL

Improve school climate


Improve parent involvement
Increase positive peer support
Provide education & support prior to the onset of
symptoms
Family counseling
Effective communication & education
Improving coping strategies

PETER

19-year-old college freshman brought by


mother for evaluation

since coming home from vacation, demeanor


has been subdued, a marked departure from
his usual personality

observed to be absent-minded & withdrawn


from the usual family after-dinner activities,
leaving abruptly with his dinner untouched

mother feared that he might have become


involved in the college drug culture &
confronted him

PETER
stormed out of the house, tearful & somewhat
agitated but returned & apologized to his
mother & retired to his room

father asked to speak with him & learned of


his recent break-up with his high-school
sweetheart & that college life has been
extremely challenging for a probinsyano
lad studying in Manila

denied any use of substances and agreed to


see some one to "talk things through"

PETER
had become depressed for the first week
after the break-up, with poor appetite & loss of
interest in his usual activities, mostly the ones
they both enjoyed
concentration had been poor lately but was
improving
slept poorly the first couple of days but had
started sleeping better
denied any thoughts of suicide or of harming
his girlfriend but did feel hopeless the first
couple of days initially

PETER

aware his behavior had been strange, but


he felt he had to deal with the break-up as
a man without involving the family

had lost some weight, he attributed it


mostly to the stress of his college work &
being in a new environment getting used to
"eating fast food instead of home cooked
meals

PETER

denied use of alcohol or substances,


though he had been exposed to and
offered many times by his college pals.

had insight into his problems & was willing


to work with the physician to address his
issues

PAUL

considered by friends and colleagues to be at


the prime of his life at 35

owner of a successful business, owned several


properties & was able to balance this with a
happy, close-knit family life

sudden diagnosis of renal failure due to years of


undetected hypertension came as a big blow to
him

PAUL
when initially he was told that he needed to go
on long-term renal dialysis, he still remained
quite positive & expressed a desire to
remain strong
Had to stop work for two months as a result of
his hospitalization & recuperation
When he returned to his business, he found that
he had lost a number of his major clients.
Felt hampered by his lack of stamina & inability
to put in long hours as before

PAUL
had to sell his property to raise money to pay for
medical bills

began to feel despondent & low in mood for


the subsequent 2 months

anxious whenever he thought of his illness &


financial troubles
continued to run the business but was no longer as
efficient as before
irritable & became angered easily

PAUL

sleep & appetite were normal, although his


libido was diminished
still enjoyed outings with the family on
weekends

referred by nephrologist because, of late, his


blood pressure has been increasingly more
difficult to control due to non-compliance with
medication

occasionally also neglected dietary advice or


fluid restrictions

PAUL has
Adjustment disorder with depressed mood.

Intervention directed firstly to improving his


compliance with anti-hypertensive medication &
other medical advice.

Opportunity given for him to express his feelings of


anger & helplessness resulting from his illness.

Educated him about his illness & treatment


enhanced his sense of control & responsibility.

Group therapy with other renal dialysis patients


helpful in providing support for him & his wife.

PAUL

Over the next few weeks, he began to gain better


acceptance & control over his illness and his mood
improved considerably.

Although his stamina was poor and tired easily due


to the renal disease, he was still able to enjoy his
hobbies and spend time with his family.

He continued to be active in a support group for


renal patients and became a source of
encouragement for other patients facing the
prospect of life-long dialysis.

DIAGNOSIS &
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

In making diagnosis, crucial question is


what is patient having trouble adjusting to?
Without a stressor to cause maladjustment,
no adjustment disorder is present.
Even when stressor exists, other MAJOR
mental disorders must be ruled out as
causing symptoms.
Other axis I disorders take precedence

Stressor cannot represent bereavement

NO!!! NO!!! NO!!!


AXIS I: Adjustment Disorder
AXIS II: Personality Disorder
Because Personality Disorders are
frequently exacerbated by stress, the
additional diagnosis of Adjustment
Disorder is usually NOT made
DSM-IV p 625

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Major depressive episode
in response to a specific stressor

Personality disorders
frequently exacerbated by stress

Acute & Posttraumatic Stress Disorder


require the presence of an extreme stressor & a specific
constellation of symptoms

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Psychological Factors Affecting Medical
conditions
for Adjustment Disorder the psychological symptoms
develop in response to the medical condition & do not
precede it

Bereavement
Non-pathological reactions to stress
Symptoms due to the direct physiological effects
of a General Medical Condition

NOTE ! NOTE ! NOTE !


Psychological Factors
Affecting Medical Condition, specific

In

psychological symptoms, behaviors or other factors


exacerbate a general medical condition, complicate
treatment for a general medical condition or otherwise
increase the risk of developing a general medical
condition.
In Adjustment Disorder, the relationship is the
reverse (the psychological symptoms develop in response to the
stress of having or being diagnosed with a general medical
condition).

Both conditions may be present in some individuals.

COURSE & OUTCOME

Generally transient, lasting days or weeks


Some chronic (woman with alcoholic husband)

Can persist no longer than 6 months after


termination of stressor or its consequences
When disturbance lasts longer, condition may
meet criteria for another disorder

COURSE & OUTCOME

With appropriate treatment, favorable


outcome in adults
In adolescents, more varied outcomes
May later have mood disorders or
substance-related disorders
Adolescents require longer time to
recover than adults

Treatment

Stressor

Adjustment Disorder

Eliminated
Reduced
Accommodated

Maladaptive
Response

(psychological reaction)

CLINICAL MANAGEMENT

Psychotherapy

Most widely used intervention


Remains treatment of choice

Individual
Group
- provide supportive atmosphere for persons who have
experienced similar stressor

GOALS OF PSYCHOTHERAPY
Identify & analyze the
stressors & determine whether
they can be eliminated or
minimized.
Clarify & interpret the meaning
of the stressor for the patient.
Reframe the meaning of the
stressor.

GOALS OF PSYCHOTHERAPY
Illuminate the concerns &
conflicts the patient
experiences
Manage themselves & stressor
Maximize the patient's coping
skills
establish relationships
attend support groups

PSYCHOTHERAPY

Brief, goal-directed, supportive


Therapy could hasten recovery
50% of patients treated resolve in 1 month
Be aware of problems of secondary gain
Medication for target symptom

Crisis Intervention & Case Management


Short-term treatments aimed to resolve
situations quickly
Uses supportive techniques, suggestion,
environmental modification & even
hospitalization
Frequency & length of visits for
crisis support vary according to
patients needs

CLINICAL MANAGEMENT
Medications
May be beneficial & prescribed based on patients
predominant & specific symptoms for a brief time
Example:
Depressed mood with initial insomnia: hypnotic for few
days
Anxiety: brief course of benzodiazepine
Signs of decompensation or impending psychosis:
antipsychotic
Traumatic grief: SSRIs

REFERENCES
TEXTBOOK OF PSYCHIATRY, Nancy Andreasen
Study Guide to DSM-IV by Fauman
KAPLAN & SADOCKs Synopsis of Psychiatry,
10th edition

A STRESS -FREE ,
GOOD DAY TO ALL..

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