Is he mentally ill?


Insomnia is more common among older than younger people



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Insomnia is more common among older than younger people

  • Insomnia is more common among older than younger people

  • At least 40% of those over 65 experience some measure of insomnia

  • Prone to this because of medical ailments, pain ,medications, depression, anxiety

  • Also normal physical changes—as we age, we spend less time in deep and REM sleep; sleep is more readily interrupted, we have trouble falling back asleep

  • Maybe 10% of elderly have sleep apnea



At any given time 6% of elderly men and 11% of elderly women (Fisher et al 2001)

  • At any given time 6% of elderly men and 11% of elderly women (Fisher et al 2001)

  • GAD is particularly common—up to 7% of all elderly

  • Prevalence increases with age—higher among those over 85

  • May be related to declining health—see higher rates in those with medical problems

  • Have not been able to identify why some get anxious and others stay generally calm

  • Treated with cognitive tx, benzos, prozac—just like younger people, but side effects are a risk



Prevalence of such patterns declines after 60—perhaps declining health or reduced financial status.

  • Prevalence of such patterns declines after 60—perhaps declining health or reduced financial status.

  • Accurate abuse data are hard to come by

  • 4-7% of older people, particularly men—alcohol related disorders in a given year

  • Men under 30 are 4X as likely to exhibit a behavioral problem assoc with alcohol

  • Higher rates in those who are institutionalized in general medical and psych hospitals among the elderly—estimates range 15-49%

  • Among those who begin drinking in old age—reaction to negative events, pressures of growing older such as living alone, unwanted retirement, death of a spouse

  • Prescription drugs are another issue

    • Elderly make up 13% of the population, but consume ¼ of prescription drugs
    • Risk of confusing medications, missing doses is high
    • Overprescription is also a problem


Psychosis is often associated with delirium or dementia

  • Psychosis is often associated with delirium or dementia

  • Schizophrenia actually decreases a bit—symptoms tend to diminish some with age

  • Delusional disorder which typically has a prevalence of about 3/100,000—increases in the elderly

    • Unclear about why this increase is there—researchers guess that it is related to deficiencies in hearing, social isolation, greater stress, or heightened poverty


Brain impairment in adults

  • Brain impairment in adults

  • For the most part, cell bodies and neural pathways do not regenerate

  • Impairment may involved acquired and customary skills or anosognosia—capacity or realistic self-appraisal

  • Impairment depends on

    • Nature, location, and extent of neural damage
    • Premorbid competence and personality of the individual
    • Individual’s life situation
    • Amount of time since the first appearance of the condition
  • Diffuse vs. focal damage

    • Mild to moderate diffuse damage—may impair attention; would see this type of damage with oxygen deprivation or ingestion of toxic substance like mercury
    • Person may complain of memory problems due to difficulty focusing


Focal damage is to a specific region—defined trauma, stroke

  • Focal damage is to a specific region—defined trauma, stroke

    • Frontal lobes—one of two patterns:
      • 1) behavioral inertia, apathy
      • 2) impulsivity, distractibility
    • Right parietal lobe—visual-motor coordination
    • Temporal lobe—memory, eating, sexuality, emotions (depending on part)
    • Left parietal lobe—language, writing, reading, arithmetic
  • Problems we see with brain disorders

    • Impairment of memory; including confabulation
    • Impairment of orientation (unable to locate self in time or space)
    • Impairment of learning, comprehension, and judgment
    • Impairment of emotional control or modulation
    • Apathy or emotional blunting
    • Impairment in the initiation of behavior
    • Impairment of controls over matters of propriety and ethical conduct
    • Impairment of receptive and expressive language
    • Impaired visuospatial ability


Affects 2 million in US each year

  • Affects 2 million in US each year

  • Often misdiagnosed

  • More common in kids and older adults

  • When elderly enter hospital for general medical condition, 1/10 shows symptoms of delirium. Another 10% will develop delirium in hospital.

  • But—studies show that admission docs detect only about 1/15 cases of delirium (Cameron et al 1987)

  • Acute confusional state with sudden onset, fluctuating state of awareness

    • Cognitive changes like impaired informational processing
    • Disturbances of the sleep cycle—worse at night—vivid dreams
    • May slur
    • Make perceptual errors—unfamiliar for familiar
    • Paranoid delusions in 40-70%
    • Swings in activity and mood
    • May be fever, flushed face, dilated pupils, increased heart and bp
  • Do have lucid intervals—fluctuation is key for diagnosis

  • Mortality is high—up to 40% die


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