Anxiety, OCD, and Related Disorders
Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders
Trauma and Stressor Related Disorders
Prolonged Grief Disorder and SUD
The Kitchen Sink
100

What is the key feature that differentiates panic attacks within another disorder from Panic Disorder itself?

Panic Disorder requires recurrent unexpected panic attacks plus persistent fear of more attacks (fear of fear)

while panic attacks within other disorders are typically expected and cued by specific triggers.

100

This disorder involves real physical symptoms, and the mechanism is not the symptoms themselves, but the patient’s excessive thoughts, feelings, and behaviors about those symptoms.



What is Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD)?
(Mechanism = excessive interpretation, not “are symptoms real or not.”)

100

What is the main difference between hypervigilance in PTSD and hypervigilance in Panic Disorder?

PTSD hypervigilance is focused on external threats related to the trauma, while Panic Disorder hypervigilance is focused on internal bodily sensations signaling another attack.

100

Whats the difference between an addiction and a compulsion

Addiction: can be both negatively and positively reinforced

Compulsions: there is just negative reinforcement

100

Depersonalization vs de-realization

Deperson=detached from yourself


Dereal=A feeling that the external world is unreal or distorted.

200

What differentiates ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention) from typical exposure therapy used for phobias?

ERP includes exposure plus the deliberate prevention of compulsions, while standard exposure therapy only involves exposure to the feared stimulus.


In exposure therapy there are no compulsions involved

200

Whats the core mechanism that differentiates between illness anxiety disorder and somatic symptom disorder

IAD=the core mechanism is fear of a serious illness despite minimal or no symptoms

SSD=the mechanism is misinterpreting actual symptoms as dangerous

Fun fact:

In DSM-IV, “medically unexplained symptoms” were required.

✔️ The person’s excessive thoughts, feelings, or behaviors

about the symptoms
—not—
whether the symptoms have a medical cause.

So:

  • The symptoms can be medically explained

  • The symptoms can be medically unexplained

  • Either way, SSD can still be diagnosed
    if the person’s response is excessive or disproportionate.

200

What is the core difference between an obsession (OCD) and an intrusive trauma memory (PTSD)?

OCD obsessions are intrusive, irrational “what‐if” thoughts about imagined dangers, while PTSD intrusions are involuntary re-experiencing of a real traumatic event.

200

This mechanism explains why people with SUD continue using substances despite harm

What is negative reinforcement (relief-driven substance use)?

(Use continues to avoid discomfort.)

200

What is the primary emotion driving behaviors in Social Anxiety Disorder?

Fear of negative evaluation.

300

Whats the fundamental difference between repetitive behaviors in Generalized Anxiety Disorder vs. OCD?

repetitive behaviors in GAD : safety behaviors/reassurance seeking (avoidance strategies) that reduce anxiety but are not linked to obsessions.

repetitive behaviors in OCD:performed to neutralize an intrusive obsession that feels irrational or ego-dystonic.

300

What is the main psychological mechanism involved in Conversion Disorder?

For bonus points!What are the two elements of recommended treatment?

Emotional distress → becomes expressed as motor or sensory symptoms (e.g., paralysis, blindness, pseudoseizures) without conscious intent.

In professor’s phrasing:“A psychological conflict or trauma is converted into a neurological-like symptom.”

1. Address the underlying psychological cause

(e.g., trauma, conflict, stressor)

2. Reduce secondary gain

(attention, avoidance of responsibilities, reinforcement from others)

300

In what situations might it be best to diagnose with Other Reaction to severe stress F43.89

  1. good for complex stress

  2. for series of events

  3. ambiguous trauma

300

What are the two core PGD symptoms that MUST be present (at least one of them) to diagnose Prolonged Grief Disorder?

To diagnose Prolonged Grief Disorder, the person must have one or both of the following:

1. Intense yearning / longing for the deceased ✔️ (you got this!)

2. Preoccupation with thoughts or memories of the deceased

These are the two core symptoms, and at least one must be present.

300

What is the gold standard assessment tool and treatment name for OCD

Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive scale

Exposure and Response Prevention

400

The key mechanism distinguishing Somatic Symptom Disorder and Illness Anxiety Disorder


The presence vs. absence of meaningful symptoms

SSD involves real physical symptoms with excessive thoughts about their meaning, while its close differential, IAD, involves either minimal or no physical symptoms but persistent fear of having a major illness

400

Name the two disorders that involve intentional production of symptoms. How do they differ in their underlying motivational mechanism? 


Factitious Disorder and Malingering involve intentional production of symptoms

Factitious = internal psychological need to be sick.
Malingering = external incentives (money, housing, avoiding work, legal advantages).

400

What are the limitations of PTSD Diagnostic Criteria

high rate of comorbidity between PTSD and other disorders

multiple and interpersonal traumas present more complex symptomatology than PTSD diagnosis covers

400

What is the main emotional difference between PGD and MDD?

In Prolonged Grief Disorder, the emotion is longing for the deceased; in Major Depressive Disorder, the emotion is generalized anhedonia and low mood.

PGD → attachment-focused longing

MDD → global depression, not tied to one person

400

What is the KEY cognitive mechanism emphasized in lecture for OCD (related to obsessions)?

The key cognitive mechanism in OCD is obsessional doubt — confusing imagined possibilities with real probability.

People with OCD give too much weight to imagined “what if?” scenarios and treat them like facts.

500

Whats the threat mechanism that differentiates PTSD from Panic Disorder

PTSD centers around external threat cue tied to past event

Panic Disorder centers around internal threat cue such as racing heart or dizziness

500

This disorder features disproportionate worry that centers almost exclusively on the interpretation and meaning of physical sensations, whereas its look-alike involves persistent worry that shifts across many domains and is not anchored to bodily symptoms. Name BOTH disorders.

What are Somatic Symptom Disorder (symptom-anchored worry) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder (multi-domain, free-floating worry)?

500

Describe the core distinction in symptom structure between Acute Stress, PTSD, and Adjustment Disorder

What is

Adjustment Disorder (stressor-linked, non-trauma, no cluster structure)

Acute Stress Disorder (trauma-linked; 3 days–1 month; pooled 9-symptom requirement)

PTSD (trauma-linked; symptoms >1 month; must meet 4 symptom clusters)



500

Alcohol combined with this drug class dramatically increases overdose risk due to additive suppression of brain regions responsible for breathing

What are opioids or sedative-hypnotics (e.g., benzodiazepines, sleep aids)?

500

True or False: Tolerance/withdrawal criteria can be met in SUD when taking medications as prescribed. 

FALSE

(DSM-5-TR specifically states these symptoms do NOT count toward SUD if meds are taken as prescribed.)