treatment with cognitive therapy july 19, 2010 psyu 575: advanced individual counseling brandman...
TRANSCRIPT
Treatment with Cognitive Therapy
July 19, 2010PSYU 575: Advanced Individual Counseling
Brandman University Instructor: Dr. Saule Buzaite, PhD, LMFT
Presented By:Jackie Camarena Michael Crilly Debra
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Jackie Camarena
What is Body Dysmorphic Disorder?
Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD)
Added as a Psychiatric Disorder in DSM-III-R in 1987.Prior to 1987, BDD was called dysmorphophobia, a “subjective sensation of deformity or physical defect that causes the patient’s belief of being noted by the others, although the physical aspect appears normal”. It is also known as “the fear of having a deformity.”Enrico Morselli in 1886Changed to BDD, dysmorphophobia was a misnomer, implying that a person had a phobia of one’s perceived deformity.Preoccupation with facial flaws, genitals, breasts, buttocks, abdomen, limbs, hands, feet, shoulders, or backOne body part usually acquires prominence and arouses the most distress, although the focus may switchA type of chronic mental illness in which you can't stop thinking about a flaw with your appearance — a flaw either that is minor or that you imagine. But to you, your appearance seems so shameful and distressing that you don't want to be seen by anyone. Body dysmorphic disorder has sometimes been called "imagined ugliness.“When you have body dysmorphic disorder, you intensely obsess over your appearance and body image, often for many hours a day. You may seek out numerous cosmetic procedures to try to "fix" your perceived flaws but never are satisfied.
BDD and Men
Sensitive about skin, nose, thinning hair, genitals and overall body size. This condition is called muscle dysmorphia. A subtype of BDD Commonly leads to excessive exercise, the use of dietary supplements, & at times anabolic steroids
Research Suggested that individuals with BDD have various personality
disorders. Described as early as 1908, as being rooted in the personality,
resembling hysterics and obsessives. BDD may occur in variety of illnesses. Usually arises out of neurotic conditions or crises of personality
development. Found that patients with BDD are more “obsessoid, introverted,
intropunitive, highly neurotic and hostile.” Research shows that there is a high comorbidity between BDD and
Axis II disorders. Two types of BDD – Mirror gazing and Mirror avoiding Mirror avoiding or gazing is found in 80% of BDD individuals while
mirror is found in 20% of BDD individuals It’s a hidden disorder. Most individuals are secretive and report
shame about their behavior and disgust about their appearance Individuals have an eternal hope that they will look different to their
internal body image or feel comfortable with their appearance.
Jackie Camarena
1 minute 33 seconds to 2 minutes 10 seconds
CSI - The Hunger Artist Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HfFxg3Dllg&feature=related
How is Body Dysmorphic Disorder defined?
• Diagnostic Criteria
• Criterion 1: Preoccupation
• Criterion 2: Distress or Impairment of Functioning
• Criterion 3: Differentiating BDD from Other Disorders
BDD
Jackie Camarena
Criterion 1: Preoccupation 1. Preoccupation with an imagined defect in
appearance. If a slight physical anomaly is present, the person’s concern is markedly excessive.
2. The preoccupation causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
3. The preoccupation is not better accounted for by another mental disorder (e.g., dissatisfaction with body shape and size in anorexia nervosa.)
Jackie Camarena
Criterion 2: Distress or Impairment in Functioning
Emotional suffering: feelings of depression, sadness, anxiety, worry, fear, panic, and other negative thoughts and feelings, or more severe anxiety, depression, or suicidal thinking.
Social Functioning: relationships, socializing, intimacy, being around other people, as well as problems with the ability to function in a job, academically, or in one’s role in life (such as being a parent).
Partially or completely avoid many of these situations:Friendships (ability to have friends)Spending time with friendsDatingIntimacy and sexual relationshipsRelationship with spouse or partnerAttending social functions and eventsDoing things with familyHaving a job or being able to be in schoolGoing to school or work each dayBeing on time for school or workFocusing on school or workBeing productive and meeting expectations at school or workDoing homework or maintaining gradesCarrying out important role activities, such as caring for children or elderly parentsMaintain a household, doing errands, going shoppingOther daily activities, recreational activities, or hobbiesJackie Camarena
Criterion 3: Differentiating BDD from other Disorders
Anorexia Nervosa
Gender Identity Disorder
Major Depressive Episode
Social Phobia
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Schizophrenia
Jackie Camarena
5 minutes 40 seconds to 8 minutes 7 seconds
CSI - The Hunger Artist Part 4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHuyw9BKwaA&feature=related
DifferentialsNormal concern about appearance
Eating DisorderAnorexia NervosaBulimia Nervosa
Gender Identity Disorder
Major Depressive Episode
Avoidant Personality Disorder
Social Phobia
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Trichotillomania
Delusional Disorder, Somatic Type
KoroCulture related syndrome occurring
primarily in Southeast Asia that may be related to BDD
Jackie Camarena
Co-Morbid DisordersMajor Depressive Disorder
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Anxiety disorders, especially social phobias
Eating Disorders
Jackie Camarena
1 minute 25 seconds to 3 minutes 15 seconds
CSI – The Hunger Artist Part 5
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tPqN5137TIA&feature=related
Causes of BDD
Largely Unstudied
Genetic & Neurobiological Risk factors
Psychological Risk Factors
Social & Cultural Risk Factors
Triggering Events
Debra Fessett
•Society’s emphasis on appearance
•Availability of steroids (for muscle dysmorphia)•Cultural Influences
•Comments about appearance•Stressful life event•Feeling rejected•Cosmetic procedure•Physical changes of adolescence
• Life events• Personality traits and
values• Focus on aesthetics
• Genes• Evolutionary Influences• Certain brain circuitry and
regions• Neurotransmitters
Genetic/ Biological
Psychological
Social/ Cultural
Triggering Event
BDD Symptoms
Causes of BDDDebra Fessett
http://health.howstuffworks.com/body-dysmorphic-disorder.htm/printable page 3
In the arena of biological causes, researchers have begun looking for differences between the brains of healthy people and people with BDD. One study conducted by researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles shows that people with BDD may process visual information differently than people without the disorder.Researchers showed 25 people, half with BDD and half without the disorder, three different images of faces in high, regular and low resolutions. MRI results showed that participants with BDD used the left sides of their brains -- the analytical side -- to process all three images. The other participants used their brains' left hemispheres for only the high-resolution images. This could mean the minds of people with BDD strive to acutely process visual details, even when there aren't any to process. This might be why they can see flaws in themselves, even when those flaws might not exist.Another biological factor under consideration is that people with BDD seem to have a chemical imbalance of the neurotransmitter serotonin, because they often respond well to the SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) class of antidepressants. Serotonin is one of the chemicals in the brain that transmits signals between the billions of neurons that constantly communicate with each other, allowing the body to think and act. Serotonin (produced in each individual neuron from an amino acid called tryptophan) is typically active in the regions of the brain responsible for emotions, sleeping and sensory perception
.During interactions between neurons, serotonin is released from the end of the first (presynaptic) neuron and picked up by the second (postsynaptic) neuron. Not all of the serotonin will be taken into the second neuron. The remainder, along with what's released from the postsynaptic neuron after use, floats within the space between the two -- called the synaptic cleft -- until enzymes destroy it. Some of the released serotonin is also reabsorbed by the first neuron.SSRIs decrease the rate at which the serotonin is taken back into the presynaptic neuron. This causes more serotonin to linger in the synaptic cleft, also increasing the message's strength as it passes to the postsynaptic neuron. This leads to a more ideal chemical balance and seems to have a positive effect on mood. SSRI drugs include Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft and Celexa. For a more detailed explanation about serotonin and antidepressants, read How Antidepressants Work.While doctors know that differences in brain and neurotransmitter functions exist, they don't know whether BDD causes the differences or if the differences cause BDD. However, as researchers continue to study those discrepancies, they learn valuable information about specific areas of the brain that might be targeted in BDD treatment.But researchers are looking beyond biological links, as many cultural and psychological factors appear to influence BDD. The next section will examine how culture and personal life-events can determine the way we view ourselves. Debra Fessett
MRI scans of the brains of BDD patients show predominant activity on the left side of the brain. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of California - Los Angeles)
Although they look normal, people suffering from body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) perceive themselves as ugly and disfigured. New imaging research reveals that the brains of people with BDD look normal, but function abnormally when processing visual details. The UCLA findings are the first to demonstrate a biological reason for patients' distorted body image.
Debra Fessett
Debra Fessett
JENNY28 years old 26 plastic surgeriesFirst became a slave to the scalpel after one critical comment from her then husband
Brow lift BotoxCheek implantsThree nose jobsVeneers on her teeth Three lip implantsTwo boob jobsThree breast liftsLiposuction on her arms, stomach, hips, thighs, and knees.
“I just moved from a bad relationship with him to a bad relationship between me and
my reflection. After the divorce, plastic surgery became an obsession for me."
$80,000.00
Debra Fessett
JesseSees self as gruesomely disfiguredBelieves he is not even humanDespite the fact that everyone else sees a
handsome young manHas lost two jobs because of his disorder,
spends hours and hours each day in the bathroom and relies on his parents to drive him because he finds the rear-view mirror too distracting to safely drive himself
Debra Fessett
Taryn
"When I look in the mirror I see somebody who is non-human. I've had times when I've actually felt physically ill because I can't understand how a person could look like this, how God could create somebody that looks like this." "To hate yourself, to hate who you are—it's difficult beyond anything I can explain," she says. "Many days I would cry myself to sleep because all I wanted was to not wake up in the morning."
24-year-old Fearful of peoples' stares makes it hard for her to leave her house.BDD has cost her many things—a productive life, relationships and, at moments, her sense of sanity.
Michael Riddle-Crilly
Testing for Body Dysmorphic Disorder
Body Dysmorphic Disorder Exam (BDDE)
Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale for BDD (YBOCS-BDD)
Body Satisfaction Scale (BSS)Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)Overvalued ideas Scale (OVIS)
Michael Riddle-Crilly
How can we treat BDD?POSITIVE TREATMENTS:
Cognitive TherapyBehavior TherapyCognitive-Behavioral TherapyMedication Electroconvulsive TherapyNeurosurgeryNeuromodulation (such as Vagal Nerve stimulation and Deep Brain stimulation)
NEGATIVE TREATMENTS
Cosmetic Treatments Including, but not limited to: Surgery, Dermatological, Dental, and Diets
Michael Riddle-Crilly
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Exposure & Response prevention
Attitude ChangesCollecting positive and neutral information about patients’ assumptions that is normally discounted or distorted to build more realistic assumptions about their bodyEncouraging the use of a continuum to rate patients’ ugliness or defectiveness so that they appear most people in the middle of the continuum. Reversed role play as described by Newell and Schrubb (1994).
Cognitive Restructuring
CBT can give patients a series of goals so they begin to learn more appropriate behaviors and develop mechanisms to cope in difficult situations. This method of BDD therapy is preferred for its effectiveness and relative brevity. When patients adhere to homework assignments, CBT can help them achieve relief within months.
Michael Riddle-Crilly
CBTAddress the goal of treatmentProvide patient with
Basic information on the psychology of physical appearanceThe concept of body imageThe development of Body Dysmorphic Disorder
Stress that the problem is how the person views themselves from the insideTherapy is designed to change “body image” and not appearancePhysical appearance is important in interpersonal perception, but mainly in initial impressions between unacquainted personsBody image is subjective and psychological and the two variables (body image and physical appearance) can be independent {e.g., changes in appearance do not always lead to change body image}Body image can be altered without having to change ones physical appearanceSelf-Monitoring Diary can greatly facilitate cognitive restructuringRecognize maladaptive behaviorsAVOID arguing with the patient about the reality of the defect
BEHAVIORAL PROCEDURESExposure to avoided situationsResponse preventionSelf-management techniquesExposure PLUS Response preventionAvoid reassuranceBehavioral self-control
Michael Riddle-Crilly
CBT Cognitive Restructuring Exposure and Behavioral Experiments Ritual (Response) Prevention Perceptual (Mirror) Retraining Relapse Prevention Reverse Role-Play Behavioral experiments or exposure to social situations without their safety
behavior Habit reversal for impulsive behaviors such as skin-picking Mirror Feedback Video Feedback Photo Feedback Modifying Cognitive Processes Imagery Rescripting One author and her colleagues has a 22 weekly session plan, plus 3 “booster”
sessions, to treat an individual with BDD. Optimally, published studies show that they have used 8 to 60 sessions for treatment.
Treatment with CBT is typically weekly lasting the traditional hour session (50 minutes), however most published sessions have used 90 minute sessions.
Individual or group therapy is used depending on the individual Homework is an essential ingredient of getting better.
Michael Riddle-Crilly
BDD Treatment Algorithm Using Medications
1
•Confirm BDD Diagnosis
2
•Comorbid symptoms/
•Family History of Bipolar Disorder
3
•First treatment
•SRI for 12 weeks, 2-4 weeks at highest tolerated dose recommended by manufacturer
4
•Second Treatment Decision
•If response see number 5, If no response see number 6
5
•Maintain
•If sexual side effects occur, add bupropion or sildenafil
6
•Consider adding buspirone, buprogion, atypical antipsychotic, or clomipramine (check blood levels).
•If no response, consider adding CBT or switch to another SRI.
Michael Riddle-Crilly
Psychopharmacological
Fluvoramine Clomipramine Desipramine Citalopram Antidepressant
Venlafaxine Bupropion Antidepressant
Escitalopram Reuptake inhibitor/ Antidepressant
Busiprone Antianxiety
Levetiracetam Antiepileptic
Olanzapine Ziprasidone Resperidone Psychotropic Agent (Neuroleptic)
Lithium Mood Stabalizer
Methylphenidate Stimulant
Michael Riddle-Crilly
Do you know someone who may be suffering from Body Dysmorphic Disorder?
References Body Dysmorphic Disorder (2010). Definition. Retrieved July 4, 2010 from Mayo Clinic website
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/body-dysmorphic-disorder/DS00559
Fiori, P. & Giannetti, L.M. (2009). Body Dysmorphic Disorder: A complex and polymorphic affection. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat, 5, 477-481. Retrieved July 4, 2010 from PubMed Central website http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2747387/
Geremia, G.M. & Neziroglu, F.. (2001). Cognitive Therapy in the Treatment of Body Dysmorphic Disorder. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 8, 243-251.
Gilbert, P. & Miles, J. (2002). Body Shame: Conceptualisation, research, and treatment. New York; Brunner-Routledge.
Neziroglu, F., McKay, D., Todaro, J., & Yaryura-Tobias, J.A. (1996). Effect of Cognitive Behavior Therapy on Persons With Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Comorbid Axis II Diagnoses. Behavior Therapy, 27, 67-77.
Neziroglu, F.A. & Yaryura-Tobias, J.A. (1993). Exposure, response Prevention, and Cognitive Therapy in the Treatment of Body Dysmorphic Disorder. Behavior Therapy, 24, 431-438
Phillips, K.A. (2009). Understanding Body Dysmorphic Disorder: An essential guide. New York; Oxford University Press.
Rosen, A.C. (1995). The Nature of Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Treatment With Cognitive Behavior Therapy. Cognitive and Behavioral Therapy Practice, 2, 143-166.
Toothman, J. (2010). How Body Dysmorphic Works. Retrieved June 20, 2010 from Discovery Health website: http://health.howstuffworks.com/mental-health/mental-disorders/body-dysmorphic-disorder.htm
Veale, D., Gournay K., Dryden, W., Boocock, A., Shah, F., Willson, R., & Walburn, J. (1996). Body Dysmorphic Disorder: A Cognitive Behavioural model and Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial. Behav. Res. Ther., 34 (9), 717-729.
Veale, D. & Neziroglu. F. (2010). Body Dysmorphic Disorder. Malden, MA; Wiley-Blackwell.
Veale, D. & Riley, S. (2001). Mirror, Mirror on the wall, who is the ugliest of them all? The psychopathology of mirror gazing in body dysmorphic disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 39, 1381-1393.
Treatment and Research Programs
BDD and Body Image Program Providence, RI
BDD Clinic and Research Unit Boston, MA
Compulsive, Impulsive, and Anxiety Disorders Program New York, NY
Los Angeles Body Dysmorphic Disorder & Body Image Clinic Los Angeles, CA
UCLA Body Dysmorphic Disorder Research Program Los Angeles, CA
UCLA OCD Intensive Treatment Program Los Angeles, CA
University of California San Diego OCD Program La Jolla, CA
Menninger Clinic OCD Treatment Program Houston, TX
BDD Treatment Programme Southgate, London, UK
Centre for Anxiety Disorders & Trauma London, UK
Bio-Behavioral Institute Great Neck, NY
Massachusetts General Hospital/ McLean Hospital OCD Institute at McLean Hospital Belmont, MA
Rogers Memorial Hospital OCD Center - Oconomowoc Oconomowoc, WI
Rogers Memorial Hospital - Milwaukee Milwaukee, WI
Organizations & WebsitesBooks & Other Readings
BDD Central – www.bddcentral.com
Obsessive Compulsive Foundation – www.ocfoundation.org
Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapists – www.aabt.org
OCD Action – www.ocdaction.org.uk
National Alliance on Mental Illness – www.nami.org
The Broken Mirror: Understanding and Treating Body Dysmorphic Disorder, Revised and Expanded Edition (Katherine A. Phillips, M.D.)
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Body Dysmorphic Disorder(Sabine Wilhelm, Ph.D., Katherine A. Phillips, M.D., and Gail Steketee, Ph.D.)
The Adonis Complex: How to Identify, Treat, and Prevent Body Obsession in Men and Boys(Harrison G. Pope, Jr. M.D., Katherine A. Phillips, M.D., and Roberto Olivardia, Ph.D.)
Feeling Good About the Way You Look (Sabine Wilhelm, Ph.D.)
Body Dysmorphic Disorder (David Veale and Fugen Neziroglu)
Scientific research articles published in journals