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Question 1
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A 25-year-old woman is distressed by the sensation of being watched and monitored. She feels as though someone is always observing her actions and knows everything she does, especially right after she completes a task. What is the most appropriate term to describe this experience?
Your Answer: Passivity of volition
Correct Answer: Running commentary
Explanation:Auditory Hallucinations: Running Commentary, Audible Thoughts, Thought Broadcast, and Thought Withdrawal
Running commentary is a type of auditory hallucination that is classified as a first rank symptom. Patients who experience running commentary hear voices that comment on their activities. The commentary may occur before, during, of after the patient’s actions.
Audible thoughts are another type of auditory hallucination where patients hear their own thoughts spoken aloud. They may hear people repeating their thoughts out loud just after they have thought them, answering their thoughts, of saying aloud what they are about to think. This can cause their thoughts to repeat the voices they hear.
Thought broadcast is a passivity experience where patients believe that their thoughts are being taken away from their heads and widely broadcast. This is also classified as a first rank symptom.
Thought withdrawal is another type of passivity experience where patients believe that their thoughts are being taken away from their heads against their will.
It is important to note that these symptoms are often associated with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. Proper diagnosis and treatment are crucial for managing these symptoms and improving the patient’s quality of life.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 2
Incorrect
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A 65-year-old man who suffered a head injury is unable to retrieve previously learned information from his memory. What specific aspect of memory function is impaired?
Your Answer: Recall
Correct Answer: Retrieval
Explanation:Long term memory can be categorized into five functions: Registration, Retention, Retrieval, Recall, and Recognition. Memory issues can arise in any of these areas. Retrieval refers to the ability to retrieve stored information from memory, and its loss indicates an organic cause. Registration involves the ability to add new information to the memory store, which can occur through repeated exposure of a single presentation. Retention refers to the ability to store information that can be retrieved later. Recall is the act of bringing stored information back into consciousness at a specific time. Recognition is the feeling of familiarity that accompanies the retrieval of stored information, and while it is related to memory, it is not strictly a part of the memory process.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 3
Incorrect
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While on a weekend pass to visit his family, a middle-aged man with bipolar disorder destroys his sister's car.
When asked about his behavior, he explains that he saw a black cat cross his path and knew he had to destroy something to ward off bad luck.
What is this an instance of?Your Answer: Delusion of reference
Correct Answer: Delusional percept
Explanation:Delusional perceptions involve attaching a delusional meaning to an accurate perception, which can feel like a significant realization. This differs from interpreting accurate perceptions in a way that aligns with pre-existing delusions. These perceptions are considered a primary symptom.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 4
Correct
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A 30-year-old male experienced the sudden death of his spouse. Within a week, he arrived at the Emergency department with an inability to speak at a normal volume and could only communicate in hushed tones.
What is the most probable cause of his symptoms?Your Answer: Aphonia
Explanation:Speech disturbances can be caused by organic of psychogenic disorders. In this case, the patient is experiencing dissociative aphonia, which is a conversion disorder where psychological stress is converted into physical symptoms. Aphonia is the loss of ability to vocalize, resulting in whispered speech, and can also occur in organic disorders. Dysphonia is a speech impairment characterized by hoarseness but without complete loss of function. Echolalia is the automatic repetition of words of parts of sentences spoken in the presence of the person. Logoclonia is a condition where the patient may get stuck on a particular word, resulting in spasmodic repetition of syllables of words. Stuttering is a speech disorder characterized by involuntary repetitions, prolongations, of blocks in speech flow, resulting in silent pauses of difficulty producing sounds.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 5
Incorrect
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A suspect awaiting trial provides vague responses to the inquiries posed by the investigators. He has a past of participating in a brawl and experiencing a head trauma. During his confinement, he has reported hearing voices that seem to originate from inside his mind.
What is the most probable scenario?Your Answer: Dissociative fugue
Correct Answer: Ganser syndrome
Explanation:Ganser syndrome is characterized by approximate answers, clouding of consciousness, somatic conversion features, and pseudohallucinations. It is controversially classified as a reactive psychosis, with stressful life events as a possible trigger. Pseudologia fantastica, of pathological lying, involves grandiose and extreme untruthful statements that may be believed by the individual, often associated with personality disorders such as histrionic of dissocial and precipitated by major life crises. Cryptomnesia involves falsely recalling an idea, thought, of song as new and original. Confabulation is the falsification of memory in clear consciousness, often used to cover up memory gaps. Dissociative fugue state involves narrowing of consciousness, wandering away from normal surroundings, and subsequent amnesia, with the individual appearing to be in good contact with their environment and maintaining basic self-care.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 6
Incorrect
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A child believes that their teacher is actually their parent in disguise. What is the term for this condition?
Your Answer: Syndrome of subjective doubles
Correct Answer: Frégoli syndrome
Explanation:Frégoli syndrome is a type of delusional misidentification syndrome where a person believes that a familiar person is taking on the appearance of other people. It is named after Leopold Frégoli, a famous impersonator known for his quick changes. In contrast, Capgras syndrome involves the belief that a familiar person has been replaced by an imposter, while Cotard’s syndrome is characterized by nihilistic delusions such as the belief that one is dead. Intermetamorphosis is another delusional misidentification syndrome where a person thinks they can see others physically and physiologically transform into someone else. Finally, the syndrome of subjective doubles involves the belief that another person has become a copy of oneself.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 7
Incorrect
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A 45-year-old patient with schizophrenia has persistent delusions of persecution and is convinced that the government is spying on him through his television.
His new roommate, who has a cognitive impairment, begins to share the same belief and has placed aluminum foil over all the windows.
What is the most probable scenario?Your Answer: None of the above
Correct Answer: Folie imposée
Explanation:Folie a deux is a type of shared psychosis where a mentally healthy person adopts the delusional beliefs of a mentally ill person with whom they have a close relationship. The mentally ill person is the primary individual with the delusion, while the mentally healthy person is the secondary individual who acquires the delusion. There are four different types of relationships between the primary and secondary individuals: folie imposée, folie communiqué, folie induite, and folie simultanée. In folie imposée, the delusions of the mentally ill person are imposed on the mentally healthy person, who may have some social of psychological disadvantage. In folie communiqué, the mentally healthy person initially resists the delusion but eventually adopts it and maintains it even after separation from the mentally ill person. In folie induite, a person who is already psychotic incorporates the delusions of a closely associated primary individual into their own delusional system. In folie simultanée, two of more people become psychotic and share the same delusional system at the same time.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 8
Incorrect
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A 40-year-old male is experiencing difficulty walking of standing normally. He presents to the Emergency department and is observed swaying from side to side, almost falling before recovering. What is the specific name for this condition?
Your Answer: Hypochondriasis
Correct Answer: Blocq's disease
Explanation:Blocq’s disease, also known as astasia-abasia, is a conversion symptom characterized by an abnormal gait that is not indicative of any organic lesion. Hypochondriasis is excessive worry about having a serious illness despite the absence of a medical condition. Malingering involves fabricating symptoms for secondary gain, while somatization is a chronic condition with multiple physical complaints for which no physical cause can be found and is associated with frequent medical contact.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 9
Incorrect
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A 72-year-old male reports feeling distressed after hearing his deceased wife's voice in his head, asking him to come join her. He clarifies that he heard it internally and not as an external sound. What type of perceptual abnormality is reflected in his experience?
Your Answer: Reflex hallucination
Correct Answer: Pseudohallucinations
Explanation:– Pseudohallucinations are figurative and not real
– They are located in the inner subjective space
– Auditory hallucinations are concrete, tangible, and real
– They are located in the outside objective space
– Autoscopy is the experience of seeing oneself
– Reflex hallucination is where a stimulus in one modality produces hallucination in another modality
– Hypnopompic hallucinations occur when waking up from sleep. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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Question 10
Incorrect
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A middle-aged man with memory impairment is observed to wear his watch on his left wrist and then to put on another watch and wear it on his right wrist.
What phenomenon is being demonstrated in this scenario?Your Answer: Mannerism
Correct Answer: Perseveration
Explanation:Common Behavioral Symptoms in Dementia
Perseveration is a behavior where a person repeatedly carries out an action beyond its normal usefulness. This behavior is often observed in individuals with dementia. Another behavior seen in dementia is Ambitendency, where a person alternates between two different actions. Echopraxia is an automatic imitation of the interviewer’s movement, even when asked not to. Mannerism is a repetitive action that appears to have some functional significance, such as saluting. Lastly, stereotypy is a repeated, regular movement that appears to have no significance. These behaviors can be challenging for caregivers to manage and may require specialized interventions.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Descriptive Psychopathology
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