Dual Diagnosis
Psychiatric Disorders
Anxiety and PTSD
PERSONALITY & BEHAVIOR
SUBSTANCE MISUE
TREATMENT & REHABILITATION
100

This term describes a person who has both TBI and psychiatric symptoms or illness.

What is dual diagnosis?

100

A Major Depressive Episode must last at least this long.

What is 2 weeks?

100

Generalized Anxiety Disorder is most often described as these two emotions.

What are fear and worry?

100

This lobe plays a major role in emotional regulation and self-awareness.

What is the frontal lobe?

100

DSM-V combined substance abuse and substance misuse into this diagnosis.

What is Substance Use Disorder (SUD)?

100

This interviewing technique uses open-ended questions and reflective listening to encourage change.

What is motivational interviewing?

200

These symptoms may make a brain injury patient extremely agitated, confused, or combative during rehabilitation.

What are psychiatric symptoms?

200

This disorder involves at least one week of elevated or irritable mood with additional symptoms such as grandiosity or decreased sleep.

What is a manic episode?

200

This condition involves repeated panic attacks and worry about future attacks.

What is Panic Disorder?

200

Sudden uncontrollable episodes of laughing or crying after neurological injury are called this.

What is Pseudobulbar Affect (PBA)?

200

If a person misused substances before injury, their risk of returning to misuse after injury is this many times higher.

What is 10 times higher?

200

This type of therapy may help treat ritualistic behaviors in OCD.

What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)?

300

This factor greatly increases when behavioral or psychiatric problems are present after TBI.

What is caregiver stress?

300

This disorder includes repetitive, ritualistic behaviors that become time consuming.

What is Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)?

300

Sweating, trembling, chest pain, and dizziness are examples of these symptoms seen during panic attacks.

What are somatic symptoms?

300

Unlike depression, episodes of PBA usually last this length of time.

What are seconds to minutes?

300

This screening tool asks questions about Cutting down, Annoyance, Guilt, and Eye-openers.

What is CAGE?

300

Providers should use these types of questions when assessing substance misuse.

What are open-ended questions?

400

According to the slides, this common psychiatric disorder is the most common Axis I disorder after TBI.

What is Major Depressive Disorder?

400

This disorder may include hallucinations, delusions, incoherent speech, or catatonia for at least six months.

What is schizophrenia?

400

This disorder may include flashbacks, avoidance, irritability, and increased arousal after trauma.

What is PTSD?

400

This symptom refers to exaggerated or rapidly changing emotions often seen after TBI.

What is affective lability?

400

According to the slides, about this percentage of people receiving SUD treatment have a history of at least one TBI.

What is approximately 50%?

400

According to the slides, confrontation shuts down thinking and elicits this response.

What is rigidity?

500

This important process is emphasized because psychiatric symptoms may appear early or late after TBI.

What is monitoring and follow-up?

500

This traditional diagnosis refers to personality changes following TBI.

What is Organic Personality Disorder?

500

According to the slides, reduced awareness or amnesia after trauma may reduce the likelihood of developing this disorder.

What is PTSD?

500

EEGs, neuropsychological testing, and MRIs help diagnose this syndrome associated with frontal lobe damage.

What is Frontal Lobe Syndrome?

500

This treatment model divides intervention settings into four quadrants based on severity of TBI and SUD.

What is the Four-Quadrant Model?

500

The key to successful rehabilitation for dual diagnosis patients is the integration of these services into the rehab plan.

What are mental health services?