Cards (13)

  • Overview:
    • Generalised anxiety disorder is characterised by excessive worry that is generalised, free-floating and persistent
    • Feelings of apprehension about everyday events/problems
    • Symptoms of muscle and psychiatric tension causing significant distress
  • GAD is seen in women twice as frequently as men
  • Risk factors:
    • Female sex
    • Family history
    • Childhood abuse and neglect
    • Environmental stress
    • Emotional trauma
    • Substance abuse
  • Diagnosis:
    • Symptoms must be present more days than not
    • DSM-5
    • ICD-11
    • Validated assessment tool such as GAD-7 questionnaire to determine severity
  • A number of conditions have considerable overlap with GAD and its presentation, these include:
    • Social phobia
    • Panic disorder
    • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
    • Post-traumatic stress disorder
    • Acute stress disorder
  • Differential diagnosis:
    • Psychiatric - situational anxiety, adjustment disorder, depression (often co-exists), panic disorder, phobias, OCD, substance or drug-induced anxiety
    • CNS depressant withdrawal e.g. alcohol, opiods
    • Cardiac - arrhythmias
    • Respiratory - asthma, COPD, HVS
    • Endocrine - hyperthyroidism, pheochromocytoma
    • Infection
  • Drug causes of anxiety:
    • Salbutamol
    • Theophylline
    • Corticosteroids
    • Antidepressants
    • Caffeine
    • Levothyroxine
    • Levodopa
  • Emotional and cognitive symptoms of GAD include:
    • Excessive worrying
    • Unable to control the worrying
    • Restlessness
    • Difficulty relaxing
    • Easily tired
    • Difficulty concentrating
     
  • Physical symptoms (caused by overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system) include:
    • Muscle tension
    • Palpitations (e.g., a feeling of their heart racing)
    • Sweating
    • Tremor
    • Gastrointestinal symptoms (e.g., abdominal pain and diarrhoea)
    • Headaches
    • Sleep disturbance
  • GAD-7:
    • Scores severity
    • Seven questions, each scored depending on how often they symptoms are experienced
    • 5-9 indicates mild anxiety
    • 10-14 indicates moderate anxiety
    • 15-21 indicates severe anxiety
  • Management:
    1. Monitoring and screen for other mental health conditions
    2. Low-intensity psychological interventions - individual non-facilitated self help
    3. High intensity psychological intervention (CBT) and/or SSRI (sertraline)
    4. Referral for specialist assessment
  • Advise people aged under 30 years that in a minority of people aged under 30 years, SSRIs and SNRIs are associated with an increased risk of suicidal thinking and self-harm. Anyone in this age group receiving an SSRI or SNRI should therefore be seen within 1 week of first prescribing, and the risk of suicidal thinking and self-harm should be monitored weekly for the first month. 
  • Propranolol is a non-selective beta blocker often used to treat the somatic symptoms caused by anxiety. It helps reduce sympathetic nervous system overactivity