Depression
Anxiety
Sleep-Wake Disorders
Psychosis
Bipolar Disorder & Mood Stabilizers
100

Which neurotransmitter is most strongly implicated in the pathophysiology of major depressive disorder?

Serotonin (also norepinephrine and dopamine implicated, but serotonin most prominent)

100

Which class of medication is considered first-line pharmacologic therapy for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)?

SSRIs or SNRIs

100

Which neurotransmitter is most associated with initiating sleep in the hypothalamus?

GABA

100

Which neurotransmitter pathway is primarily associated with the positive symptoms of schizophrenia?

Mesolimbic dopamine pathway

100

Which medication is considered first-line for acute mania in bipolar I disorder?

Lithium (or valproate)

200

According to DSM-5, how long must symptoms persist for a diagnosis of major depressive disorder?

≥2 weeks

200

What is the minimum symptom duration required for a DSM-5 diagnosis of GAD?

≥6 months

200

What is the first-line treatment for primary insomnia according to AASM guidelines?

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I)

200

Name one high-potency typical antipsychotic and one low-potency typical antipsychotic.

High potency: haloperidol; Low potency: chlorpromazine

200

How long must symptoms last for a hypomanic episode per DSM-5 criteria?

≥4 consecutive days

300

Which antidepressant is contraindicated in patients with a history of seizures?

Bupropion

300

Which benzodiazepine has the shortest half-life, making it more prone to withdrawal symptoms?

Alprazolam

300

Which medication for insomnia is a melatonin receptor agonist?

Ramelteon

300

What is the mechanism of tardive dyskinesia?

Dopamine receptor upregulation and supersensitivity after chronic blockade

300

Which bipolar subtype does not involve full manic episodes?

Bipolar II disorder

400

What is the black box warning for all antidepressants in patients under age 25?

Increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors

400

Why is propranolol sometimes prescribed in performance anxiety, and what is its mechanism of action?

Reduces peripheral sympathetic symptoms (tachycardia, tremor) by blocking beta-adrenergic receptors

400

Describe the difference between narcolepsy type 1 and type 2.

Type 1 = cataplexy + hypocretin deficiency; Type 2 = no cataplexy, usually normal hypocretin

400

How does aripiprazole’s mechanism differ from other second-generation antipsychotics?

Partial dopamine D2 agonist (others are antagonists)

400

Describe the risk of antidepressant monotherapy in bipolar disorder.

Risk of switching to mania or rapid cycling

500

A patient on an SSRI develops hyperreflexia, clonus, and hyperthermia after adding a triptan for migraines. What is the most likely diagnosis and first-line intervention?

Serotonin syndrome; discontinue serotonergic agents immediately, supportive care, possible cyproheptadine

500

A 35-year-old with panic disorder reports worsening anxiety after starting fluoxetine. Explain the mechanism behind this paradoxical reaction and the management strategy.

Initial SSRI dose can increase serotonin signaling in certain circuits, causing activation/jitteriness; reduce dose or add short-term benzodiazepine

500

A patient with narcolepsy is prescribed modafinil. What is the drug’s mechanism of action and one notable drug-drug interaction?

Increases hypothalamic histamine release via dopamine reuptake inhibition; interacts with CYP3A4 inducers/inhibitors

500

A patient on clozapine presents with fever, sore throat, and malaise. What is your next immediate step in management?

Stop clozapine and obtain urgent CBC to evaluate for agranulocytosis

500

A patient with bipolar disorder presents with lithium toxicity. List three common causes of elevated lithium levels despite stable dosing.

Dehydration, drug interactions (NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, thiazides), renal impairment

M
e
n
u