selected disorders related to children and adolescents

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Page 1: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents
Page 2: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Mental Retardation (will probably change to Intellectual Disability)

Pervasive Mental Disorders (will probably change to Autism Spectrum Disorders)

Conduct and Oppositional Defiant Disorder Elimination Disorders ADHD

Page 3: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

The majority of Mental Health Professionals agree:

that diagnosing in children is a difficult and delicate task

that any professional other than a specialist trained in the area should not diagnosis

that the younger the child the more difficult the task

many children are taking medications and over 80% of the WORLD’S supply of Ritalin (for ADHD) is given in the United States

Exercise, diet, and sleep

Page 4: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

IQ 71-84, Code on Axis II.

Page 5: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

If present, always diagnose it.

Must have significantly sub-average intelligence and deficits in adaptive functioning. Adaptive functioning means how individuals cope with life demands and meet expectations of activities of daily living.

Definition is compatible with AAMR definition except for sub-typing.

Page 6: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Onset prior to age 18—if after it is Dementia.

Must have IQ of 70 or below on an individual IQ test (5 point error margin).

This disorder is slightly more common in males.

Page 7: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

MILD: IQ approximately (50-55) 55 to 70, considered educable, able to perform at 6th grade level, can use minimal assistance may need some supervision and guidance, live in community or in supervised settings

MODERATE: IQ approximately (35-40) 35 to 55 (50-55), considered trainable, able to perform at 2nd grade level, with moderate supervision can attend to their own personal care, can perform unskilled or semi-skilled work, can live in the community

SEVERE: IQ approximately (20-25) 20 to 35, (35-40) generally institutionalized, have little or no communicative speech, possible group home

PROFOUND: IQ below 20, generally total care

Page 8: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents
Page 9: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Involve multiple functions and behaviors that are not considered normal at any age.

Qualitative impairment in: reciprocal interaction, verbal and nonverbal skills, imaginative activity, and intellectual skills.

Page 10: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Severe form, onset in infancy or childhood, self-stimulating, and self-injuring behaviors often present, (i.e., rocking, spinning, head banging)

2/3 of Autistic are mentally retarded/moderate range

Facilitative communication is used NO PROOF THAT CONDITION IS RELATED TO PARENTING

STYLES

Age of onset requirement in DSM-IV is age 3

Page 11: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Rett’s Disorder

Childhood Disintegrative Disorder

Asperger's Disorder

Page 12: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Only in females

Deceleration of head growth, start out normal and 5 to 24 months problems develop

Loss of previously acquired hand skills, loss of social engagement, appearance of stereotyped movements, impaired language functioning Generally associated with severe or profound mental retardation

DSM-IV-TR highlights now that many of these cases are related to a specific genetic mutation

Page 13: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Normal development for two years then a drastic decline

Followed by a loss of previously acquired skills and development of autistic like symptoms

Page 14: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Autistic-like symptoms without language impairment

Severely impaired social interaction

DSM-IV-TR Since this is a new category major revisions have been made to this section

Page 15: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Asperger’s

Autism

Page 16: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

DSM-5

Will suggest new categories for the learning disorders and create a category called Autism Spectrum Disorders, will incorporate aspects of all the current disorders.

ASD will be categorized as mild, moderate, and severe

Groups in opposition have already been formed.

Page 17: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Learning Disabilities: These disorders have significant difficulties in acquisition of listening, speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, and math.

•Significant delay in skill level (2 standard deviations below the mean)•Generally noted between ages of 8 and 13•More common in boys than girls•Kids don't always catch up—continues into adulthood•Involve specific functions—not multiple like pervasive—the behavior is characteristic of an earlier state of development

Social Work Treatment: Generally behavioral in nature

Page 18: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Symptoms now in grouped in four categories:

1.Aggression to people and animals 2.Destruction of property3.Deceitfulness or theft4.Serious violations of rules

Page 19: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Two items were added to increase applicability to females:

1. Staying out at night

2. Intimidating others

Page 20: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

New subtypes based on age of onset

Childhood onset and adolescent onset Onset before age 10 has a poor prognosis When 18 used to be diagnosed anti-social

but now can remain into early 20s because not all conduct disorders become anti-socials

Page 21: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Based on research deleted from the criteria "uses obscene language."

Also increased clarification on clearly establishing the deviation from what could be considered normal.

DSM-IV-TR clarifies that many children with Oppositional Disorder do not develop conduct disorder.

Page 22: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Do not meet the full criteria for conduct or oppositional disorder but have clinically significant impairment

Page 23: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Severe mood dysregulation Helps to distinguish children who have

recurrent behavioral outbursts (severe and inappropriate)

Helps adolescents from bipolar and severe mood dysregulation, irritability, and behavior outbursts

Page 24: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Diagnosis explosion of bipolar in children since 1994

Severe irritability and handling behavior outbursts that could be considered/confused with mania

Outbursts need to be severe and developmentally inappropriate

Page 25: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

ADHD—TDDD is more aggressive

Bipolar—TDDD more continuous and not cyclic

Disruptive Behavior Disorder—mood is more labile

Page 26: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

ALWAYS GET A PHYSICAL FIRST NOT DUE TO A PHYSICAL or MEDICAL DISORDER

Enuresis: Elimination of urine during day or night Must be age 5 before it can be diagnosed Remember that a diagnosis can be made before thresholds

are met, if clinical significance can be established

Encopresis: Repeated elimination of feces in inappropriate places One time a month for 3 months (used to be 6 months) Must be at least four years of age to diagnose

Page 27: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Must last at least six months

Predominately inattentive, hyperactivity-impulsivity

Combined symptoms required in two or more situations: home, work, or at school

Page 28: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Can occur in adulthood but must have onset in childhood (generally before age 7)

Not intellectual deficits just attention and concentration

Etiology: unknown, hereditary link, tends to run in families, more common in males

Page 29: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Will make it easier to diagnose ADHD in adults

Number of symptoms will be reduced from six to three

In adults will no longer have to have symptoms before the age of 7 will probably change to 12 years old

Page 30: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Evaluate by a neurologist or physician (medical check)

Exercise, sleep habits, and diet

Medication

Page 31: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Short-acting

Long-acting

Non-stimulant

Page 32: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

It is compelling to think about changing to a new long-acting medication because of the convenience of once-a-day dosing and their long lasting effects, but it is important to remember that they shouldn't be any more effective than a short-acting medicine.

Page 33: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Ritalin (Methylphenidate HCl) Methylin Chewable Tablet and Oral Solution Metadate ER Methylin ER Focalin Dexedrine (Dextroamphetamine sulfate) Dextrostat Adderall Adderall (generic) Dexedrine Spansules

Page 34: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Ritalin, Metadate (age 6 and older) Ritalin-SR (Methylphenidate) (age 6 and older) Concerta (Methylphenidate Extended Release) (age 6

and older) Adderall (Dextroamphetamine and Amphetamine) (age

3 and older) Desoxyn (Methamphetamine) Provigil (Modafanil) Cylert* (Pemoline) (age 6 and older)

*because of potential for serious side effects to the liver, not usually used as a first line for ADHD

Focalin (dexmethlphenidate) (age 6 and older)

Page 35: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

The long-acting stimulants generally have a duration of 8-12 hours and can be used just once a day.

They are especially useful for children who are unable or unwilling to take a dose at school.

Page 36: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

The latest medication to get approval to treat ADHD is Vyvanse, a long-acting stimulant.

This stimulant is similar to Adderall with a main ingredient of lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, a derivative of one of the ingredients in Adderall.

Initially available in 30mg, 50mg, and 70mg capsules, newer 20mg, 40mg, and 60mg capsules.

Page 37: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

This is a methyphenidate or Ritalin patch. The patch is available in 10mg, 15mg,

20mg, and 30mg dosages. Patch can be worn for about nine hours at a

time on a child's hip. The medication works for a few more hours

once you take the patch off.

Page 38: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Approved for use in children over the age of six years, although regular Adderall can be used in younger children from 3-5 years of age.

Adderall XR is a sustained release form of Adderall, a popular stimulant which contains dextroamphetamine and amphetamine.

Available as a 10mg, 15mg, 20mg, 25mg, and 30mg capsule.

The capsule can be opened and sprinkled onto applesauce if your child can't swallow a pill.

Page 39: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

When medication alone is not enough consider:

(A) Is there an accurate diagnosis? (B) Help families deal with the child at home (e.g., parenting

styles reinforce negative behaviors). (C) Help teachers deal with child at school (e.g., sit in least

distracting section of the class, away from the door). (D) May need academic "catch up" help (e.g., computers are

an excellent tool for these children). (E) Allow these children "more time" to complete tasks. (F) Address self-esteem issues in counseling.

Page 40: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

Impulsive type:-Often in trouble at school

Inattentive Type:-Poor grades in school

Page 41: Selected Disorders Related to Children and Adolescents

PICA

Anorexia Nervosa: intense fear of gaining weight, usually underweight, disturbance in body image, won’t eat, over-exercise, often have amenorrhea, refusal to maintain minimum normal body weight, resistance to treatment with strong denial, onset during late adolescence (12-18) and can go into 30s, individuals can die from starvation, 1/2 anorectics are bulimics, common co-conditions: substance abuse and depression

Bulimia Nervosa: episodes of binge eating (recurring),

self-induced vomiting with laxatives, diuretics or fasting, sense of lack of control during eating binges, chronic concern with body weight and shape, two binges per week for three months