Mnemonics in a mnutshell: 32 aids to psychiatric diagnosis

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Mnemonics in a mnutshell: 32 aids to psychiatric diagnosis

From SIG: E CAPS to CAGE and WWHHHHIMPS, mnemonics help practitioners and trainees recall important lists (such as criteria for depression, screening questions for alcoholism, or life-threatening causes of delirium, respectively). Mnemonics’ efficacy rests on the principle that grouped information is easier to remember than individual points of data.

Not everyone loves mnemonics, but recollecting diagnostic criteria is useful in clinical practice and research, on board examinations, and for insurance reimbursement. Thus, tools that assist in recalling diagnostic criteria have a role in psychiatric practice and teaching.

In this article, we present 32 mnemonics to help clinicians diagnose:

We also discuss how mnemonics improve one’s memory, based on the principles of learning theory.

How mnemonics work

A mnemonic—from the Greek word “mnemonikos” (“of memory”)—links new data with previously learned information. Mnemonics assist in learning by reducing the amount of information (“cognitive load”) that needs to be stored for long-term processing and retrieval.15

Memory, defined as the “persistence of learning in a state that can be revealed at a later time,”16 can be divided into 2 types:

  • declarative (a conscious recollection of facts, such as remembering a relative’s birthday)
  • procedural (skills-based learning, such as riding a bicycle).

Declarative memory has a conscious component and may be mediated by the medial temporal lobe and cortical association structures. Procedural memory has less of a conscious component; it may involve the basal ganglia, cerebellum, and a variety of cortical sensory-perceptive regions.17

BOX 1.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING AFFECTIVE DISORDERS

Depression
SIG: E CAPS*
Suicidal thoughts
Interests decreased
Guilt
Energy decreased
Concentration decreased
Appetite disturbance (increased or decreased)
Psychomotor changes (agitation or retardation)
Sleep disturbance (increased or decreased)
* Created by Carey Gross, MD
Dysthymia
HE’S 2 SAD2
Hopelessness
Energy loss or fatigue
Self-esteem is low
2 years minimum of depressed mood most of the day, for more days than not
Sleep is increased or decreased
Appetite is increased or decreased
Decision-making or concentration is impaired
Mania
DIG FAST
Distractibility
Indiscretion
Grandiosity
Flight of ideas
Activity increase
Sleep deficit
Talkativeness
Depression
C GASP DIE1
Concentration decreased
Guilt
Appetite
Sleep disturbance
Psychomotor agitation or retardation
Death or suicide (thoughts or acts of)
Interests decreased
Energy decreased
Hypomania
TAD HIGH
Talkative
Attention deficit
Decreased need for sleep
High self-esteem/grandiosity
Ideas that race
Goal-directed activity increased
High-risk activity
Mania
DeTeR the HIGH*
Distractibility
Talkativeness
Reckless behavior
Hyposomnia
Ideas that race
Grandiosity
Hypersexuality
* Created by Carey Gross, MD

Declarative memory can be subdivided into working memory and long-term memory.

With working memory, new items of information are held briefly so that encoding and eventual storage can take place.

Working memory guides decision-making and future planning and is intricately related to attention.18-21 Functional MRI and positron emission tomography as well as neurocognitive testing have shown that working memory tasks activate the prefrontal cortex and brain regions specific to language and visuospatial memory.

The hippocampus is thought to rapidly absorb new information, and this data is consolidated and permanently stored via the prefrontal cortex.22-26 Given the hippocampus’ limited storage capacity, new information (such as what you ate for breakfast 3 weeks ago) will disappear if it is not repeated regularly.17

Long-term memory, on the other hand, is encoded knowledge that is linked to facts learned in the past; it is consolidated in the brain and can be readily retrieved. Neuroimaging studies have demonstrated opposing patterns of activation in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, depending on whether the memory being recalled is:

  • new (high hippocampal activity, low prefrontal cortex activity)
  • old (low hippocampal activity, high prefrontal cortex activity).27

Mnemonics are thought to affect working memory by reducing the introduced cognitive load and increasing the efficiency of memory acquisition and encoding. They reduce cognitive load by grouping objects into a single verbal or visual cue that can be introduced into working memory. Learning is optimized when the load on working memory is minimized, enabling long-term memory to be facilitated.28

BOX 2.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ANXIETY DISORDERS

Generalized anxiety disorder
Worry WARTS3
Wound up
Worn-out
Absentminded
Restless
Touchy
Sleepless
Posttraumatic stress disorder
TRAUMA5
Traumatic event
Re-experience
Avoidance
Unable to function
Month or more of symptoms
Arousal increased
Anxiety disorder due to a general medical condition
Physical Diseases That Have Commonly Appeared Anxious:
Pheochromocytoma
Diabetes mellitus
Temporal lobe epilepsy
Hyperthyroidism
Carcinoid
Alcohol withdrawal
Arrhythmias
Generalized anxiety disorder
WATCHERS4
Worry
Anxiety
Tension in muscles
Concentration difficulty
Hyperarousal (or irritability)
Energy loss
Restlessness
Sleep disturbance
Posttraumatic stress disorder
DREAMS6
Disinterest in usual activities
Re-experience
Event preceding symptoms
Avoidance
Month or more of symptoms
Sympathetic arousal
 
 

 

BOX 3.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING MEDICATION ADVERSE EFFECTS

Antidepressant discontinuation syndrome
FINISH7
Flu-like symptoms
Insomnia
Nausea
Imbalance
Sensory disturbances
Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation)
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
FEVER8
Fever
Encephalopathy
Vital sign instability
Elevated WBC/CPK
Rigidity
WBC: white blood cell count
CPK: creatine phosphokinase
Serotonin syndrome
HARMED
Hyperthermia
Autonomic instability
Rigidity
Myoclonus
Encephalopathy
Diaphoresis

Mnemonics may use rhyme, music, or visual cues to enhance memory. Most mnemonics used in medical practice and education are word-based, including:

  • Acronyms—words, each letter of which stands for a particular piece of information to be recalled (such as RICE for treatment of a sprained joint: rest, ice, compression, elevation).
  • Acrostics—sentences with the first letter of each word prompting the desired recollection (such as “To Zanzibar by motor car” for the branches of the facial nerve: temporal, zygomatic, buccal, mandibular, cervical).
  • Alphabetical sequences (such as ABCDE of trauma assessment: airway, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure).29

An appropriate teaching tool?

Dozens of mnemonics addressing psychiatric diagnosis and treatment have been published, but relatively few are widely used. Psychiatric educators may resist teaching with mnemonics, believing they might erode a humanistic approach to patients by reducing psychopathology to “a laundry list” of symptoms and the art of psychiatric diagnosis to a “check-box” endeavor. Mnemonics that use humor may be rejected as irreverent or unprofessional.30 Publishing a novel mnemonic may be viewed with disdain by some as an “easy” way of padding a curriculum vitae.

BOX 4.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING PERSONALITY DISORDERS

Paranoid personality disorder
SUSPECT9
Spousal infidelity suspected
Unforgiving (bears grudges)
Suspicious
Perceives attacks (and reacts quickly)
Enemy or friend? (suspects associates and friends)
Confiding in others is feared
Threats perceived in benign events
Schizotypal personality disorder
ME PECULIAR9
Magical thinking
Experiences unusual perceptions
Paranoid ideation
Eccentric behavior or appearance
Constricted or inappropriate affect
Unusual thinking or speech
Lacks close friends
Ideas of reference
Anxiety in social situations
Rule out psychotic or pervasive developmental disorders
Borderline personality disorder
IMPULSIVE10
Impulsive
Moodiness
Paranoia or dissociation under stress
Unstable self-image
Labile intense relationships
Suicidal gestures
Inappropriate anger
Vulnerability to abandonment
Emptiness (feelings of)
Histrionic personality disorder
PRAISE ME9
Provocative or seductive behavior
Relationships considered more intimate than they are
Attention (need to be the center of)
Influenced easily
Style of speech (impressionistic, lacking detail)
Emotions (rapidly shifting, shallow)
Make up (physical appearance used to draw attention to self)
Emotions exaggerated
Narcissistic personality disorder
GRANDIOSE11
Grandiose
Requires attention
Arrogant
Need to be special
Dreams of success and power
Interpersonally exploitative
Others (unable to recognize feelings/needs of)
Sense of entitlement
Envious
Dependent personality disorder
RELIANCE9
Reassurance required
Expressing disagreement difficult
Life responsibilities assumed by others
Initiating projects difficult
Alone (feels helpless and uncomfortable when alone)
Nurturance (goes to excessive lengths to obtain)
Companionship sought urgently when a relationship ends
Exaggerated fears of being left to care for self
Schizoid personality disorder
DISTANT9
Detached or flattened affect
Indifferent to criticism or praise
Sexual experiences of little interest
Tasks done solitarily
Absence of close friends
Neither desires nor enjoys close relationships
Takes pleasure in few activities
Antisocial personality disorder
CORRUPT9
Cannot conform to law
Obligations ignored
Reckless disregard for safety
Remorseless
Underhanded (deceitful)
Planning insufficient (impulsive)
Temper (irritable and aggressive)
Borderline personality disorder
DESPAIRER*
Disturbance of identity
Emotionally labile
Suicidal behavior
Paranoia or dissociation
Abandonment (fear of)
Impulsive
Relationships unstable
Emptiness (feelings of)
Rage (inappropriate)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Histrionic personality disorder
ACTRESSS*
Appearance focused
Center of attention
Theatrical
Relationships (believed to be more intimate than they are)
Easily influenced
Seductive behavior
Shallow emotions
Speech (impressionistic and vague)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Avoidant personality disorder
CRINGES9
Criticism or rejection preoccupies thoughts in social situations
Restraint in relationships due to fear of shame
Inhibited in new relationships
Needs to be sure of being liked before engaging socially
Gets around occupational activities with need for interpersonal contact
Embarrassment prevents new activity or taking risks
Self viewed as unappealing or inferior
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
SCRIMPER*
Stubborn
Cannot discard worthless objects
Rule obsessed
Inflexible
Miserly
Perfectionistic
Excludes leisure due to devotion to work
Reluctant to delegate to others
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD

Entire Web sites exist to share mnemonics for medical education (see Related Resources). Thus it is likely that trainees are using them with or without their teachers’ supervision. Psychiatric educators need to be aware of the mnemonics their trainees are using and to:

  • screen these tools for factual errors (such as incomplete diagnostic criteria)
  • remind trainees that although mnemonics are useful, psychiatrists should approach patients as individuals without the prejudice of a potentially pejorative label.

Our methodology

In preparing this article, we gathered numerous mnemonics (some published and some novel) designed to capture the learner’s attention and impart information pertinent to psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. Whenever possible, we credited each mnemonic to its creator, but—given the difficulty in confirming authorship of (what in many cases has become) oral history—we’ve listed some mnemonics without citation.

 

 

Our list is far from complete because we likely are unaware of many mnemonics, and we have excluded some that seemed obscure, unwieldy, or redundant. We have not excluded mnemonics that some may view as pejorative but merely report their existence. Including them does not mean that we endorse them.

This article lists 32 mnemonics related to psychiatric diagnosis. Thus, it seems odd that an informal survey of >60 residents at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)/McLean Residency Training Program in Psychiatry revealed that most were aware of only 2 or 3 psychiatric mnemonics, typically:

  • SIG: E CAPS (a tool to recall the criteria for depression)
  • DIG FAST (a list of criteria for diagnosing mania)
  • WWHHHHIMPS (a tool for recalling life-threatening causes of delirium).

Although this unscientific survey may be biased because faculty or trainees at MGH created the above 3 mnemonics, it nonetheless begs the question of what qualities make a mnemonic memorable.

Learning theory provides several clues. George Miller’s classic 1956 paper, “The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information,” discussed the finding that 7 seems to be the upper limit of individual pieces of data that can be easily remembered.31 Research also has shown that recruiting the limbic system (potentially through the use of humor) aids in the recall of otherwise dry, cortical information.32,33

Intuitively, it would seem that nonrepeating letters would facilitate the recall of the linked data, allowing each letter to provide a distinct cue, without any clouding by redundancy. Of the 3 most popular psychiatric mnemonics, however, only DIG FAST fits the learning theory. It contains 7 letters, repeats no letters, and has the limbic cue of allowing the learner to imagine a person with mania digging furiously.

BOX 5.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ADDICTION DISORDERS

Substance dependence
ADDICTeD12
Activities are given up or reduced
Dependence, physical: tolerance
Dependence, physical: withdrawal
Intrapersonal (Internal) consequences, physical or psychological
Can’t cut down or control use
Time-consuming
Duration or amount of use is greater than intended
Substance abuse
WILD12
Work, school, or home role obligation failures
Interpersonal or social consequences
Legal problems
Dangerous use
Alcohol abuse
CAGE13
Have you ever felt you should CUT DOWN your drinking? Have people ANNOYED you by criticizing your drinking? Have you ever felt bad or GUILTY about your drinking? Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning to steady your nerves or get rid of a hangover (EYE-OPENER)?

SIG: E CAPS falls within the range of 7 plus or minus 2, includes a limbic cue (although often forgotten, it refers to the prescription of energy capsules for depression), but repeats the letter S.

WWHHHHIMPS, with 10 letters, exceeds the recommended range, repeats the W (appearing twice) and the H (appearing 4 times), and provides no clear limbic cue.

BOX 6.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING DELIRIUM

Causes
I WATCH DEATH
Infection
Withdrawal
Acute metabolic
Trauma
CNS pathology
Hypoxia
Deficiencies
Endocrinopathies
Acute vascular
Toxins or drugs
Heavy metals
Life-threatening causes
WWHHHHIMPS*
Wernicke’s encephalopathy
Withdrawal
Hypertensive crisis
Hypoperfusion/hypoxia of the brain
Hypoglycemia
Hyper/hypothermia
Intracranial process/infection
Metabolic/meningitis
Poisons
Status epilepticus
* Created by Gary W. Small, MD
Deliriogenic medications
ACUTE CHANGE IN MS14
Antibiotics
Cardiac drugs
Urinary incontinence drugs
Theophylline
Ethanol
Corticosteroids
H2 blockers
Antiparkinsonian drugs
Narcotics
Geriatric psychiatric drugs
ENT drugs
Insomnia drugs
NSAIDs
Muscle relaxants
Seizure medicines

It may be that recruiting the limbic system provides the greatest likelihood of recall. Recruiting this system may add increased valence to a particular mnemonic for a specific individual, but this same limbic valence may limit its usefulness in a professional context.

Related resources

  • Free searchable database of medical mnemonics. www.medicalmnemonics.com.
  • Robinson DJ. Mnemonics and more for psychiatry. Port Huron, MI: Rapid Psychler Press, 2001.
References

1. Abraham PF, Shirley ER. New mnemonic for depressive symptoms. Am J Psychiatry 2006;163(2):329-30.

2. Christman DS. “HE’S 2 SAD” detects dysthymic disorder. Current Psychiatry 2008;7(3):120.-

3. Coupland NJ. Worry WARTS have generalized anxiety disorder. Can J Psychiatry 2002;47(2):197.-

4. Berber MJ. WATCHERS: recognizing generalized anxiety disorder. J Clin Psychiatry 2000;61(6):447.-

5. Khouzam HR. A simple mnemonic for the diagnostic criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder. West J Med 2001;174(6):424.-

6. Short DD, Workman EA, Morse JH, Turner RL. Mnemonics for eight DSM-III-R disorders. Hosp Community Psychiatry 1992;43(6):642-4.

7. Berber MJ. FINISH: remembering the discontinuation syndrome. Flu-like symptoms, Insomnia, Nausea, Imbalance, Sensory disturbances, and Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation). J Clin Psychiatry 1998;59(5):255.-

8. Christensen RC. Identify neuroleptic malignant syndrome with FEVER. Current Psychiatry 2005;4(7):102.-

9. Pinkofsky HB. Mnemonics for DSM-IV personality disorders. Psychiatr Serv 1997;48(9):1197-8.

10. Senger HL. Borderline mnemonic. Am J Psychiatry 1997;154(9):1321.-

11. Kim SI, Swanson TA, Caplan JP, eds. Underground clinical vignettes step 2: psychiatry. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2007:130.

12. Bogenschutz MP, Quinn DK. Acronyms for substance use disorders. J Clin Psychiatry 2001;62(6):474-5.

13. Ewing JA. Detecting alcoholism. The CAGE questionnaire. JAMA 1984;252(14):1905-7.

14. Flaherty JH. Psychotherapeutic agents in older adults. Commonly prescribed and over-the-counter remedies: causes of confusion. Clin Geriatr Med 1998;14:101-27.

15. Sweller J. Cognitive load theory, learning difficulty, and instructional design. Learn Instr 1994;4:295-312.

16. Squire LR. Memory and brain. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1987.

17. DeLuca J, Lengenfelder J, Eslinger P. Memory and learning. In: Rizzo M, Eslinger P, eds. Principles and practice of behavioral neurology and neuropsychology. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders; 2004:251.

18. Dash PK, Moore AN, Kobori N, et al. Molecular activity underlying working memory. Learn Mem 2007;14:554-63.

19. Awh E, Vogel EK, Oh SH. Interactions between attention and working memory. Neuroscience 2006;139:201-8.

20. Knudson EI. Fundamental components of attention. Ann Rev Neurosci 2007;30:57-78.

21. Postle BR. Working memory as an emergent property of the mind and brain. Neuroscience 2006;139:23-36.

22. Fletcher PC, Henson RN. Frontal lobes and human memory: Insights from functional neuroimaging. Brain 2001;124:849-81.

23. Miller EK, Cohen JD. An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function. Ann Rev Neurosci 2001;24:167-202.

24. Schumacher EH, Lauber E, Awh E, et al. PET evidence for a modal verbal working memory system. Neuroimage 1996;3:79-88.

25. Smith EE, Jonides J, Koeppe RA. Dissociating verbal and spatial working memory using PET. Cereb Cortex 1996;6:11-20.

26. Wager TD, Smith EE. Neuroimaging studies of working memory: a meta-analysis. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 2003;3(4):255-74.

27. Frankland PW, Bontempi B. The organization of recent and remote memories. Nat Rev Neurosci 2005;6:119-30.

28. Sweller J. Cognitive load during problem solving: effects on learning. Cogn Sci 1988;12(1):257-85.

29. Beitz JM. Unleashing the power of memory: the mighty mnemonic. Nurse Educ 1997;22(2):25-9.

30. Larson EW. Criticism of mnemonic device. Am J Psychiatry 1990;147(7):963-4.

31. Miller GA. The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information. Psychol Rev 1956;63:81-97.

32. Schmidt SR. Effects of humor on sentence memory. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 1994;20(4):953-67.

33. Lippman LG, Dunn ML. Contextual connections within puns: effects on perceived humor and memory. J Gen Psychol 2000;127(2):185-97.

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Theodore A. Stern, MD
Professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School Chief, psychiatric consultation service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

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From SIG: E CAPS to CAGE and WWHHHHIMPS, mnemonics help practitioners and trainees recall important lists (such as criteria for depression, screening questions for alcoholism, or life-threatening causes of delirium, respectively). Mnemonics’ efficacy rests on the principle that grouped information is easier to remember than individual points of data.

Not everyone loves mnemonics, but recollecting diagnostic criteria is useful in clinical practice and research, on board examinations, and for insurance reimbursement. Thus, tools that assist in recalling diagnostic criteria have a role in psychiatric practice and teaching.

In this article, we present 32 mnemonics to help clinicians diagnose:

We also discuss how mnemonics improve one’s memory, based on the principles of learning theory.

How mnemonics work

A mnemonic—from the Greek word “mnemonikos” (“of memory”)—links new data with previously learned information. Mnemonics assist in learning by reducing the amount of information (“cognitive load”) that needs to be stored for long-term processing and retrieval.15

Memory, defined as the “persistence of learning in a state that can be revealed at a later time,”16 can be divided into 2 types:

  • declarative (a conscious recollection of facts, such as remembering a relative’s birthday)
  • procedural (skills-based learning, such as riding a bicycle).

Declarative memory has a conscious component and may be mediated by the medial temporal lobe and cortical association structures. Procedural memory has less of a conscious component; it may involve the basal ganglia, cerebellum, and a variety of cortical sensory-perceptive regions.17

BOX 1.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING AFFECTIVE DISORDERS

Depression
SIG: E CAPS*
Suicidal thoughts
Interests decreased
Guilt
Energy decreased
Concentration decreased
Appetite disturbance (increased or decreased)
Psychomotor changes (agitation or retardation)
Sleep disturbance (increased or decreased)
* Created by Carey Gross, MD
Dysthymia
HE’S 2 SAD2
Hopelessness
Energy loss or fatigue
Self-esteem is low
2 years minimum of depressed mood most of the day, for more days than not
Sleep is increased or decreased
Appetite is increased or decreased
Decision-making or concentration is impaired
Mania
DIG FAST
Distractibility
Indiscretion
Grandiosity
Flight of ideas
Activity increase
Sleep deficit
Talkativeness
Depression
C GASP DIE1
Concentration decreased
Guilt
Appetite
Sleep disturbance
Psychomotor agitation or retardation
Death or suicide (thoughts or acts of)
Interests decreased
Energy decreased
Hypomania
TAD HIGH
Talkative
Attention deficit
Decreased need for sleep
High self-esteem/grandiosity
Ideas that race
Goal-directed activity increased
High-risk activity
Mania
DeTeR the HIGH*
Distractibility
Talkativeness
Reckless behavior
Hyposomnia
Ideas that race
Grandiosity
Hypersexuality
* Created by Carey Gross, MD

Declarative memory can be subdivided into working memory and long-term memory.

With working memory, new items of information are held briefly so that encoding and eventual storage can take place.

Working memory guides decision-making and future planning and is intricately related to attention.18-21 Functional MRI and positron emission tomography as well as neurocognitive testing have shown that working memory tasks activate the prefrontal cortex and brain regions specific to language and visuospatial memory.

The hippocampus is thought to rapidly absorb new information, and this data is consolidated and permanently stored via the prefrontal cortex.22-26 Given the hippocampus’ limited storage capacity, new information (such as what you ate for breakfast 3 weeks ago) will disappear if it is not repeated regularly.17

Long-term memory, on the other hand, is encoded knowledge that is linked to facts learned in the past; it is consolidated in the brain and can be readily retrieved. Neuroimaging studies have demonstrated opposing patterns of activation in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, depending on whether the memory being recalled is:

  • new (high hippocampal activity, low prefrontal cortex activity)
  • old (low hippocampal activity, high prefrontal cortex activity).27

Mnemonics are thought to affect working memory by reducing the introduced cognitive load and increasing the efficiency of memory acquisition and encoding. They reduce cognitive load by grouping objects into a single verbal or visual cue that can be introduced into working memory. Learning is optimized when the load on working memory is minimized, enabling long-term memory to be facilitated.28

BOX 2.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ANXIETY DISORDERS

Generalized anxiety disorder
Worry WARTS3
Wound up
Worn-out
Absentminded
Restless
Touchy
Sleepless
Posttraumatic stress disorder
TRAUMA5
Traumatic event
Re-experience
Avoidance
Unable to function
Month or more of symptoms
Arousal increased
Anxiety disorder due to a general medical condition
Physical Diseases That Have Commonly Appeared Anxious:
Pheochromocytoma
Diabetes mellitus
Temporal lobe epilepsy
Hyperthyroidism
Carcinoid
Alcohol withdrawal
Arrhythmias
Generalized anxiety disorder
WATCHERS4
Worry
Anxiety
Tension in muscles
Concentration difficulty
Hyperarousal (or irritability)
Energy loss
Restlessness
Sleep disturbance
Posttraumatic stress disorder
DREAMS6
Disinterest in usual activities
Re-experience
Event preceding symptoms
Avoidance
Month or more of symptoms
Sympathetic arousal
 
 

 

BOX 3.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING MEDICATION ADVERSE EFFECTS

Antidepressant discontinuation syndrome
FINISH7
Flu-like symptoms
Insomnia
Nausea
Imbalance
Sensory disturbances
Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation)
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
FEVER8
Fever
Encephalopathy
Vital sign instability
Elevated WBC/CPK
Rigidity
WBC: white blood cell count
CPK: creatine phosphokinase
Serotonin syndrome
HARMED
Hyperthermia
Autonomic instability
Rigidity
Myoclonus
Encephalopathy
Diaphoresis

Mnemonics may use rhyme, music, or visual cues to enhance memory. Most mnemonics used in medical practice and education are word-based, including:

  • Acronyms—words, each letter of which stands for a particular piece of information to be recalled (such as RICE for treatment of a sprained joint: rest, ice, compression, elevation).
  • Acrostics—sentences with the first letter of each word prompting the desired recollection (such as “To Zanzibar by motor car” for the branches of the facial nerve: temporal, zygomatic, buccal, mandibular, cervical).
  • Alphabetical sequences (such as ABCDE of trauma assessment: airway, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure).29

An appropriate teaching tool?

Dozens of mnemonics addressing psychiatric diagnosis and treatment have been published, but relatively few are widely used. Psychiatric educators may resist teaching with mnemonics, believing they might erode a humanistic approach to patients by reducing psychopathology to “a laundry list” of symptoms and the art of psychiatric diagnosis to a “check-box” endeavor. Mnemonics that use humor may be rejected as irreverent or unprofessional.30 Publishing a novel mnemonic may be viewed with disdain by some as an “easy” way of padding a curriculum vitae.

BOX 4.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING PERSONALITY DISORDERS

Paranoid personality disorder
SUSPECT9
Spousal infidelity suspected
Unforgiving (bears grudges)
Suspicious
Perceives attacks (and reacts quickly)
Enemy or friend? (suspects associates and friends)
Confiding in others is feared
Threats perceived in benign events
Schizotypal personality disorder
ME PECULIAR9
Magical thinking
Experiences unusual perceptions
Paranoid ideation
Eccentric behavior or appearance
Constricted or inappropriate affect
Unusual thinking or speech
Lacks close friends
Ideas of reference
Anxiety in social situations
Rule out psychotic or pervasive developmental disorders
Borderline personality disorder
IMPULSIVE10
Impulsive
Moodiness
Paranoia or dissociation under stress
Unstable self-image
Labile intense relationships
Suicidal gestures
Inappropriate anger
Vulnerability to abandonment
Emptiness (feelings of)
Histrionic personality disorder
PRAISE ME9
Provocative or seductive behavior
Relationships considered more intimate than they are
Attention (need to be the center of)
Influenced easily
Style of speech (impressionistic, lacking detail)
Emotions (rapidly shifting, shallow)
Make up (physical appearance used to draw attention to self)
Emotions exaggerated
Narcissistic personality disorder
GRANDIOSE11
Grandiose
Requires attention
Arrogant
Need to be special
Dreams of success and power
Interpersonally exploitative
Others (unable to recognize feelings/needs of)
Sense of entitlement
Envious
Dependent personality disorder
RELIANCE9
Reassurance required
Expressing disagreement difficult
Life responsibilities assumed by others
Initiating projects difficult
Alone (feels helpless and uncomfortable when alone)
Nurturance (goes to excessive lengths to obtain)
Companionship sought urgently when a relationship ends
Exaggerated fears of being left to care for self
Schizoid personality disorder
DISTANT9
Detached or flattened affect
Indifferent to criticism or praise
Sexual experiences of little interest
Tasks done solitarily
Absence of close friends
Neither desires nor enjoys close relationships
Takes pleasure in few activities
Antisocial personality disorder
CORRUPT9
Cannot conform to law
Obligations ignored
Reckless disregard for safety
Remorseless
Underhanded (deceitful)
Planning insufficient (impulsive)
Temper (irritable and aggressive)
Borderline personality disorder
DESPAIRER*
Disturbance of identity
Emotionally labile
Suicidal behavior
Paranoia or dissociation
Abandonment (fear of)
Impulsive
Relationships unstable
Emptiness (feelings of)
Rage (inappropriate)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Histrionic personality disorder
ACTRESSS*
Appearance focused
Center of attention
Theatrical
Relationships (believed to be more intimate than they are)
Easily influenced
Seductive behavior
Shallow emotions
Speech (impressionistic and vague)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Avoidant personality disorder
CRINGES9
Criticism or rejection preoccupies thoughts in social situations
Restraint in relationships due to fear of shame
Inhibited in new relationships
Needs to be sure of being liked before engaging socially
Gets around occupational activities with need for interpersonal contact
Embarrassment prevents new activity or taking risks
Self viewed as unappealing or inferior
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
SCRIMPER*
Stubborn
Cannot discard worthless objects
Rule obsessed
Inflexible
Miserly
Perfectionistic
Excludes leisure due to devotion to work
Reluctant to delegate to others
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD

Entire Web sites exist to share mnemonics for medical education (see Related Resources). Thus it is likely that trainees are using them with or without their teachers’ supervision. Psychiatric educators need to be aware of the mnemonics their trainees are using and to:

  • screen these tools for factual errors (such as incomplete diagnostic criteria)
  • remind trainees that although mnemonics are useful, psychiatrists should approach patients as individuals without the prejudice of a potentially pejorative label.

Our methodology

In preparing this article, we gathered numerous mnemonics (some published and some novel) designed to capture the learner’s attention and impart information pertinent to psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. Whenever possible, we credited each mnemonic to its creator, but—given the difficulty in confirming authorship of (what in many cases has become) oral history—we’ve listed some mnemonics without citation.

 

 

Our list is far from complete because we likely are unaware of many mnemonics, and we have excluded some that seemed obscure, unwieldy, or redundant. We have not excluded mnemonics that some may view as pejorative but merely report their existence. Including them does not mean that we endorse them.

This article lists 32 mnemonics related to psychiatric diagnosis. Thus, it seems odd that an informal survey of >60 residents at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)/McLean Residency Training Program in Psychiatry revealed that most were aware of only 2 or 3 psychiatric mnemonics, typically:

  • SIG: E CAPS (a tool to recall the criteria for depression)
  • DIG FAST (a list of criteria for diagnosing mania)
  • WWHHHHIMPS (a tool for recalling life-threatening causes of delirium).

Although this unscientific survey may be biased because faculty or trainees at MGH created the above 3 mnemonics, it nonetheless begs the question of what qualities make a mnemonic memorable.

Learning theory provides several clues. George Miller’s classic 1956 paper, “The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information,” discussed the finding that 7 seems to be the upper limit of individual pieces of data that can be easily remembered.31 Research also has shown that recruiting the limbic system (potentially through the use of humor) aids in the recall of otherwise dry, cortical information.32,33

Intuitively, it would seem that nonrepeating letters would facilitate the recall of the linked data, allowing each letter to provide a distinct cue, without any clouding by redundancy. Of the 3 most popular psychiatric mnemonics, however, only DIG FAST fits the learning theory. It contains 7 letters, repeats no letters, and has the limbic cue of allowing the learner to imagine a person with mania digging furiously.

BOX 5.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ADDICTION DISORDERS

Substance dependence
ADDICTeD12
Activities are given up or reduced
Dependence, physical: tolerance
Dependence, physical: withdrawal
Intrapersonal (Internal) consequences, physical or psychological
Can’t cut down or control use
Time-consuming
Duration or amount of use is greater than intended
Substance abuse
WILD12
Work, school, or home role obligation failures
Interpersonal or social consequences
Legal problems
Dangerous use
Alcohol abuse
CAGE13
Have you ever felt you should CUT DOWN your drinking? Have people ANNOYED you by criticizing your drinking? Have you ever felt bad or GUILTY about your drinking? Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning to steady your nerves or get rid of a hangover (EYE-OPENER)?

SIG: E CAPS falls within the range of 7 plus or minus 2, includes a limbic cue (although often forgotten, it refers to the prescription of energy capsules for depression), but repeats the letter S.

WWHHHHIMPS, with 10 letters, exceeds the recommended range, repeats the W (appearing twice) and the H (appearing 4 times), and provides no clear limbic cue.

BOX 6.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING DELIRIUM

Causes
I WATCH DEATH
Infection
Withdrawal
Acute metabolic
Trauma
CNS pathology
Hypoxia
Deficiencies
Endocrinopathies
Acute vascular
Toxins or drugs
Heavy metals
Life-threatening causes
WWHHHHIMPS*
Wernicke’s encephalopathy
Withdrawal
Hypertensive crisis
Hypoperfusion/hypoxia of the brain
Hypoglycemia
Hyper/hypothermia
Intracranial process/infection
Metabolic/meningitis
Poisons
Status epilepticus
* Created by Gary W. Small, MD
Deliriogenic medications
ACUTE CHANGE IN MS14
Antibiotics
Cardiac drugs
Urinary incontinence drugs
Theophylline
Ethanol
Corticosteroids
H2 blockers
Antiparkinsonian drugs
Narcotics
Geriatric psychiatric drugs
ENT drugs
Insomnia drugs
NSAIDs
Muscle relaxants
Seizure medicines

It may be that recruiting the limbic system provides the greatest likelihood of recall. Recruiting this system may add increased valence to a particular mnemonic for a specific individual, but this same limbic valence may limit its usefulness in a professional context.

Related resources

  • Free searchable database of medical mnemonics. www.medicalmnemonics.com.
  • Robinson DJ. Mnemonics and more for psychiatry. Port Huron, MI: Rapid Psychler Press, 2001.

From SIG: E CAPS to CAGE and WWHHHHIMPS, mnemonics help practitioners and trainees recall important lists (such as criteria for depression, screening questions for alcoholism, or life-threatening causes of delirium, respectively). Mnemonics’ efficacy rests on the principle that grouped information is easier to remember than individual points of data.

Not everyone loves mnemonics, but recollecting diagnostic criteria is useful in clinical practice and research, on board examinations, and for insurance reimbursement. Thus, tools that assist in recalling diagnostic criteria have a role in psychiatric practice and teaching.

In this article, we present 32 mnemonics to help clinicians diagnose:

We also discuss how mnemonics improve one’s memory, based on the principles of learning theory.

How mnemonics work

A mnemonic—from the Greek word “mnemonikos” (“of memory”)—links new data with previously learned information. Mnemonics assist in learning by reducing the amount of information (“cognitive load”) that needs to be stored for long-term processing and retrieval.15

Memory, defined as the “persistence of learning in a state that can be revealed at a later time,”16 can be divided into 2 types:

  • declarative (a conscious recollection of facts, such as remembering a relative’s birthday)
  • procedural (skills-based learning, such as riding a bicycle).

Declarative memory has a conscious component and may be mediated by the medial temporal lobe and cortical association structures. Procedural memory has less of a conscious component; it may involve the basal ganglia, cerebellum, and a variety of cortical sensory-perceptive regions.17

BOX 1.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING AFFECTIVE DISORDERS

Depression
SIG: E CAPS*
Suicidal thoughts
Interests decreased
Guilt
Energy decreased
Concentration decreased
Appetite disturbance (increased or decreased)
Psychomotor changes (agitation or retardation)
Sleep disturbance (increased or decreased)
* Created by Carey Gross, MD
Dysthymia
HE’S 2 SAD2
Hopelessness
Energy loss or fatigue
Self-esteem is low
2 years minimum of depressed mood most of the day, for more days than not
Sleep is increased or decreased
Appetite is increased or decreased
Decision-making or concentration is impaired
Mania
DIG FAST
Distractibility
Indiscretion
Grandiosity
Flight of ideas
Activity increase
Sleep deficit
Talkativeness
Depression
C GASP DIE1
Concentration decreased
Guilt
Appetite
Sleep disturbance
Psychomotor agitation or retardation
Death or suicide (thoughts or acts of)
Interests decreased
Energy decreased
Hypomania
TAD HIGH
Talkative
Attention deficit
Decreased need for sleep
High self-esteem/grandiosity
Ideas that race
Goal-directed activity increased
High-risk activity
Mania
DeTeR the HIGH*
Distractibility
Talkativeness
Reckless behavior
Hyposomnia
Ideas that race
Grandiosity
Hypersexuality
* Created by Carey Gross, MD

Declarative memory can be subdivided into working memory and long-term memory.

With working memory, new items of information are held briefly so that encoding and eventual storage can take place.

Working memory guides decision-making and future planning and is intricately related to attention.18-21 Functional MRI and positron emission tomography as well as neurocognitive testing have shown that working memory tasks activate the prefrontal cortex and brain regions specific to language and visuospatial memory.

The hippocampus is thought to rapidly absorb new information, and this data is consolidated and permanently stored via the prefrontal cortex.22-26 Given the hippocampus’ limited storage capacity, new information (such as what you ate for breakfast 3 weeks ago) will disappear if it is not repeated regularly.17

Long-term memory, on the other hand, is encoded knowledge that is linked to facts learned in the past; it is consolidated in the brain and can be readily retrieved. Neuroimaging studies have demonstrated opposing patterns of activation in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, depending on whether the memory being recalled is:

  • new (high hippocampal activity, low prefrontal cortex activity)
  • old (low hippocampal activity, high prefrontal cortex activity).27

Mnemonics are thought to affect working memory by reducing the introduced cognitive load and increasing the efficiency of memory acquisition and encoding. They reduce cognitive load by grouping objects into a single verbal or visual cue that can be introduced into working memory. Learning is optimized when the load on working memory is minimized, enabling long-term memory to be facilitated.28

BOX 2.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ANXIETY DISORDERS

Generalized anxiety disorder
Worry WARTS3
Wound up
Worn-out
Absentminded
Restless
Touchy
Sleepless
Posttraumatic stress disorder
TRAUMA5
Traumatic event
Re-experience
Avoidance
Unable to function
Month or more of symptoms
Arousal increased
Anxiety disorder due to a general medical condition
Physical Diseases That Have Commonly Appeared Anxious:
Pheochromocytoma
Diabetes mellitus
Temporal lobe epilepsy
Hyperthyroidism
Carcinoid
Alcohol withdrawal
Arrhythmias
Generalized anxiety disorder
WATCHERS4
Worry
Anxiety
Tension in muscles
Concentration difficulty
Hyperarousal (or irritability)
Energy loss
Restlessness
Sleep disturbance
Posttraumatic stress disorder
DREAMS6
Disinterest in usual activities
Re-experience
Event preceding symptoms
Avoidance
Month or more of symptoms
Sympathetic arousal
 
 

 

BOX 3.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING MEDICATION ADVERSE EFFECTS

Antidepressant discontinuation syndrome
FINISH7
Flu-like symptoms
Insomnia
Nausea
Imbalance
Sensory disturbances
Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation)
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
FEVER8
Fever
Encephalopathy
Vital sign instability
Elevated WBC/CPK
Rigidity
WBC: white blood cell count
CPK: creatine phosphokinase
Serotonin syndrome
HARMED
Hyperthermia
Autonomic instability
Rigidity
Myoclonus
Encephalopathy
Diaphoresis

Mnemonics may use rhyme, music, or visual cues to enhance memory. Most mnemonics used in medical practice and education are word-based, including:

  • Acronyms—words, each letter of which stands for a particular piece of information to be recalled (such as RICE for treatment of a sprained joint: rest, ice, compression, elevation).
  • Acrostics—sentences with the first letter of each word prompting the desired recollection (such as “To Zanzibar by motor car” for the branches of the facial nerve: temporal, zygomatic, buccal, mandibular, cervical).
  • Alphabetical sequences (such as ABCDE of trauma assessment: airway, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure).29

An appropriate teaching tool?

Dozens of mnemonics addressing psychiatric diagnosis and treatment have been published, but relatively few are widely used. Psychiatric educators may resist teaching with mnemonics, believing they might erode a humanistic approach to patients by reducing psychopathology to “a laundry list” of symptoms and the art of psychiatric diagnosis to a “check-box” endeavor. Mnemonics that use humor may be rejected as irreverent or unprofessional.30 Publishing a novel mnemonic may be viewed with disdain by some as an “easy” way of padding a curriculum vitae.

BOX 4.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING PERSONALITY DISORDERS

Paranoid personality disorder
SUSPECT9
Spousal infidelity suspected
Unforgiving (bears grudges)
Suspicious
Perceives attacks (and reacts quickly)
Enemy or friend? (suspects associates and friends)
Confiding in others is feared
Threats perceived in benign events
Schizotypal personality disorder
ME PECULIAR9
Magical thinking
Experiences unusual perceptions
Paranoid ideation
Eccentric behavior or appearance
Constricted or inappropriate affect
Unusual thinking or speech
Lacks close friends
Ideas of reference
Anxiety in social situations
Rule out psychotic or pervasive developmental disorders
Borderline personality disorder
IMPULSIVE10
Impulsive
Moodiness
Paranoia or dissociation under stress
Unstable self-image
Labile intense relationships
Suicidal gestures
Inappropriate anger
Vulnerability to abandonment
Emptiness (feelings of)
Histrionic personality disorder
PRAISE ME9
Provocative or seductive behavior
Relationships considered more intimate than they are
Attention (need to be the center of)
Influenced easily
Style of speech (impressionistic, lacking detail)
Emotions (rapidly shifting, shallow)
Make up (physical appearance used to draw attention to self)
Emotions exaggerated
Narcissistic personality disorder
GRANDIOSE11
Grandiose
Requires attention
Arrogant
Need to be special
Dreams of success and power
Interpersonally exploitative
Others (unable to recognize feelings/needs of)
Sense of entitlement
Envious
Dependent personality disorder
RELIANCE9
Reassurance required
Expressing disagreement difficult
Life responsibilities assumed by others
Initiating projects difficult
Alone (feels helpless and uncomfortable when alone)
Nurturance (goes to excessive lengths to obtain)
Companionship sought urgently when a relationship ends
Exaggerated fears of being left to care for self
Schizoid personality disorder
DISTANT9
Detached or flattened affect
Indifferent to criticism or praise
Sexual experiences of little interest
Tasks done solitarily
Absence of close friends
Neither desires nor enjoys close relationships
Takes pleasure in few activities
Antisocial personality disorder
CORRUPT9
Cannot conform to law
Obligations ignored
Reckless disregard for safety
Remorseless
Underhanded (deceitful)
Planning insufficient (impulsive)
Temper (irritable and aggressive)
Borderline personality disorder
DESPAIRER*
Disturbance of identity
Emotionally labile
Suicidal behavior
Paranoia or dissociation
Abandonment (fear of)
Impulsive
Relationships unstable
Emptiness (feelings of)
Rage (inappropriate)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Histrionic personality disorder
ACTRESSS*
Appearance focused
Center of attention
Theatrical
Relationships (believed to be more intimate than they are)
Easily influenced
Seductive behavior
Shallow emotions
Speech (impressionistic and vague)
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD
Avoidant personality disorder
CRINGES9
Criticism or rejection preoccupies thoughts in social situations
Restraint in relationships due to fear of shame
Inhibited in new relationships
Needs to be sure of being liked before engaging socially
Gets around occupational activities with need for interpersonal contact
Embarrassment prevents new activity or taking risks
Self viewed as unappealing or inferior
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
SCRIMPER*
Stubborn
Cannot discard worthless objects
Rule obsessed
Inflexible
Miserly
Perfectionistic
Excludes leisure due to devotion to work
Reluctant to delegate to others
* Created by Jason P. Caplan, MD

Entire Web sites exist to share mnemonics for medical education (see Related Resources). Thus it is likely that trainees are using them with or without their teachers’ supervision. Psychiatric educators need to be aware of the mnemonics their trainees are using and to:

  • screen these tools for factual errors (such as incomplete diagnostic criteria)
  • remind trainees that although mnemonics are useful, psychiatrists should approach patients as individuals without the prejudice of a potentially pejorative label.

Our methodology

In preparing this article, we gathered numerous mnemonics (some published and some novel) designed to capture the learner’s attention and impart information pertinent to psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. Whenever possible, we credited each mnemonic to its creator, but—given the difficulty in confirming authorship of (what in many cases has become) oral history—we’ve listed some mnemonics without citation.

 

 

Our list is far from complete because we likely are unaware of many mnemonics, and we have excluded some that seemed obscure, unwieldy, or redundant. We have not excluded mnemonics that some may view as pejorative but merely report their existence. Including them does not mean that we endorse them.

This article lists 32 mnemonics related to psychiatric diagnosis. Thus, it seems odd that an informal survey of >60 residents at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)/McLean Residency Training Program in Psychiatry revealed that most were aware of only 2 or 3 psychiatric mnemonics, typically:

  • SIG: E CAPS (a tool to recall the criteria for depression)
  • DIG FAST (a list of criteria for diagnosing mania)
  • WWHHHHIMPS (a tool for recalling life-threatening causes of delirium).

Although this unscientific survey may be biased because faculty or trainees at MGH created the above 3 mnemonics, it nonetheless begs the question of what qualities make a mnemonic memorable.

Learning theory provides several clues. George Miller’s classic 1956 paper, “The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information,” discussed the finding that 7 seems to be the upper limit of individual pieces of data that can be easily remembered.31 Research also has shown that recruiting the limbic system (potentially through the use of humor) aids in the recall of otherwise dry, cortical information.32,33

Intuitively, it would seem that nonrepeating letters would facilitate the recall of the linked data, allowing each letter to provide a distinct cue, without any clouding by redundancy. Of the 3 most popular psychiatric mnemonics, however, only DIG FAST fits the learning theory. It contains 7 letters, repeats no letters, and has the limbic cue of allowing the learner to imagine a person with mania digging furiously.

BOX 5.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING ADDICTION DISORDERS

Substance dependence
ADDICTeD12
Activities are given up or reduced
Dependence, physical: tolerance
Dependence, physical: withdrawal
Intrapersonal (Internal) consequences, physical or psychological
Can’t cut down or control use
Time-consuming
Duration or amount of use is greater than intended
Substance abuse
WILD12
Work, school, or home role obligation failures
Interpersonal or social consequences
Legal problems
Dangerous use
Alcohol abuse
CAGE13
Have you ever felt you should CUT DOWN your drinking? Have people ANNOYED you by criticizing your drinking? Have you ever felt bad or GUILTY about your drinking? Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning to steady your nerves or get rid of a hangover (EYE-OPENER)?

SIG: E CAPS falls within the range of 7 plus or minus 2, includes a limbic cue (although often forgotten, it refers to the prescription of energy capsules for depression), but repeats the letter S.

WWHHHHIMPS, with 10 letters, exceeds the recommended range, repeats the W (appearing twice) and the H (appearing 4 times), and provides no clear limbic cue.

BOX 6.

MNEMONICS FOR DIAGNOSING DELIRIUM

Causes
I WATCH DEATH
Infection
Withdrawal
Acute metabolic
Trauma
CNS pathology
Hypoxia
Deficiencies
Endocrinopathies
Acute vascular
Toxins or drugs
Heavy metals
Life-threatening causes
WWHHHHIMPS*
Wernicke’s encephalopathy
Withdrawal
Hypertensive crisis
Hypoperfusion/hypoxia of the brain
Hypoglycemia
Hyper/hypothermia
Intracranial process/infection
Metabolic/meningitis
Poisons
Status epilepticus
* Created by Gary W. Small, MD
Deliriogenic medications
ACUTE CHANGE IN MS14
Antibiotics
Cardiac drugs
Urinary incontinence drugs
Theophylline
Ethanol
Corticosteroids
H2 blockers
Antiparkinsonian drugs
Narcotics
Geriatric psychiatric drugs
ENT drugs
Insomnia drugs
NSAIDs
Muscle relaxants
Seizure medicines

It may be that recruiting the limbic system provides the greatest likelihood of recall. Recruiting this system may add increased valence to a particular mnemonic for a specific individual, but this same limbic valence may limit its usefulness in a professional context.

Related resources

  • Free searchable database of medical mnemonics. www.medicalmnemonics.com.
  • Robinson DJ. Mnemonics and more for psychiatry. Port Huron, MI: Rapid Psychler Press, 2001.
References

1. Abraham PF, Shirley ER. New mnemonic for depressive symptoms. Am J Psychiatry 2006;163(2):329-30.

2. Christman DS. “HE’S 2 SAD” detects dysthymic disorder. Current Psychiatry 2008;7(3):120.-

3. Coupland NJ. Worry WARTS have generalized anxiety disorder. Can J Psychiatry 2002;47(2):197.-

4. Berber MJ. WATCHERS: recognizing generalized anxiety disorder. J Clin Psychiatry 2000;61(6):447.-

5. Khouzam HR. A simple mnemonic for the diagnostic criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder. West J Med 2001;174(6):424.-

6. Short DD, Workman EA, Morse JH, Turner RL. Mnemonics for eight DSM-III-R disorders. Hosp Community Psychiatry 1992;43(6):642-4.

7. Berber MJ. FINISH: remembering the discontinuation syndrome. Flu-like symptoms, Insomnia, Nausea, Imbalance, Sensory disturbances, and Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation). J Clin Psychiatry 1998;59(5):255.-

8. Christensen RC. Identify neuroleptic malignant syndrome with FEVER. Current Psychiatry 2005;4(7):102.-

9. Pinkofsky HB. Mnemonics for DSM-IV personality disorders. Psychiatr Serv 1997;48(9):1197-8.

10. Senger HL. Borderline mnemonic. Am J Psychiatry 1997;154(9):1321.-

11. Kim SI, Swanson TA, Caplan JP, eds. Underground clinical vignettes step 2: psychiatry. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2007:130.

12. Bogenschutz MP, Quinn DK. Acronyms for substance use disorders. J Clin Psychiatry 2001;62(6):474-5.

13. Ewing JA. Detecting alcoholism. The CAGE questionnaire. JAMA 1984;252(14):1905-7.

14. Flaherty JH. Psychotherapeutic agents in older adults. Commonly prescribed and over-the-counter remedies: causes of confusion. Clin Geriatr Med 1998;14:101-27.

15. Sweller J. Cognitive load theory, learning difficulty, and instructional design. Learn Instr 1994;4:295-312.

16. Squire LR. Memory and brain. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1987.

17. DeLuca J, Lengenfelder J, Eslinger P. Memory and learning. In: Rizzo M, Eslinger P, eds. Principles and practice of behavioral neurology and neuropsychology. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders; 2004:251.

18. Dash PK, Moore AN, Kobori N, et al. Molecular activity underlying working memory. Learn Mem 2007;14:554-63.

19. Awh E, Vogel EK, Oh SH. Interactions between attention and working memory. Neuroscience 2006;139:201-8.

20. Knudson EI. Fundamental components of attention. Ann Rev Neurosci 2007;30:57-78.

21. Postle BR. Working memory as an emergent property of the mind and brain. Neuroscience 2006;139:23-36.

22. Fletcher PC, Henson RN. Frontal lobes and human memory: Insights from functional neuroimaging. Brain 2001;124:849-81.

23. Miller EK, Cohen JD. An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function. Ann Rev Neurosci 2001;24:167-202.

24. Schumacher EH, Lauber E, Awh E, et al. PET evidence for a modal verbal working memory system. Neuroimage 1996;3:79-88.

25. Smith EE, Jonides J, Koeppe RA. Dissociating verbal and spatial working memory using PET. Cereb Cortex 1996;6:11-20.

26. Wager TD, Smith EE. Neuroimaging studies of working memory: a meta-analysis. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 2003;3(4):255-74.

27. Frankland PW, Bontempi B. The organization of recent and remote memories. Nat Rev Neurosci 2005;6:119-30.

28. Sweller J. Cognitive load during problem solving: effects on learning. Cogn Sci 1988;12(1):257-85.

29. Beitz JM. Unleashing the power of memory: the mighty mnemonic. Nurse Educ 1997;22(2):25-9.

30. Larson EW. Criticism of mnemonic device. Am J Psychiatry 1990;147(7):963-4.

31. Miller GA. The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information. Psychol Rev 1956;63:81-97.

32. Schmidt SR. Effects of humor on sentence memory. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 1994;20(4):953-67.

33. Lippman LG, Dunn ML. Contextual connections within puns: effects on perceived humor and memory. J Gen Psychol 2000;127(2):185-97.

References

1. Abraham PF, Shirley ER. New mnemonic for depressive symptoms. Am J Psychiatry 2006;163(2):329-30.

2. Christman DS. “HE’S 2 SAD” detects dysthymic disorder. Current Psychiatry 2008;7(3):120.-

3. Coupland NJ. Worry WARTS have generalized anxiety disorder. Can J Psychiatry 2002;47(2):197.-

4. Berber MJ. WATCHERS: recognizing generalized anxiety disorder. J Clin Psychiatry 2000;61(6):447.-

5. Khouzam HR. A simple mnemonic for the diagnostic criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder. West J Med 2001;174(6):424.-

6. Short DD, Workman EA, Morse JH, Turner RL. Mnemonics for eight DSM-III-R disorders. Hosp Community Psychiatry 1992;43(6):642-4.

7. Berber MJ. FINISH: remembering the discontinuation syndrome. Flu-like symptoms, Insomnia, Nausea, Imbalance, Sensory disturbances, and Hyperarousal (anxiety/agitation). J Clin Psychiatry 1998;59(5):255.-

8. Christensen RC. Identify neuroleptic malignant syndrome with FEVER. Current Psychiatry 2005;4(7):102.-

9. Pinkofsky HB. Mnemonics for DSM-IV personality disorders. Psychiatr Serv 1997;48(9):1197-8.

10. Senger HL. Borderline mnemonic. Am J Psychiatry 1997;154(9):1321.-

11. Kim SI, Swanson TA, Caplan JP, eds. Underground clinical vignettes step 2: psychiatry. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2007:130.

12. Bogenschutz MP, Quinn DK. Acronyms for substance use disorders. J Clin Psychiatry 2001;62(6):474-5.

13. Ewing JA. Detecting alcoholism. The CAGE questionnaire. JAMA 1984;252(14):1905-7.

14. Flaherty JH. Psychotherapeutic agents in older adults. Commonly prescribed and over-the-counter remedies: causes of confusion. Clin Geriatr Med 1998;14:101-27.

15. Sweller J. Cognitive load theory, learning difficulty, and instructional design. Learn Instr 1994;4:295-312.

16. Squire LR. Memory and brain. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1987.

17. DeLuca J, Lengenfelder J, Eslinger P. Memory and learning. In: Rizzo M, Eslinger P, eds. Principles and practice of behavioral neurology and neuropsychology. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders; 2004:251.

18. Dash PK, Moore AN, Kobori N, et al. Molecular activity underlying working memory. Learn Mem 2007;14:554-63.

19. Awh E, Vogel EK, Oh SH. Interactions between attention and working memory. Neuroscience 2006;139:201-8.

20. Knudson EI. Fundamental components of attention. Ann Rev Neurosci 2007;30:57-78.

21. Postle BR. Working memory as an emergent property of the mind and brain. Neuroscience 2006;139:23-36.

22. Fletcher PC, Henson RN. Frontal lobes and human memory: Insights from functional neuroimaging. Brain 2001;124:849-81.

23. Miller EK, Cohen JD. An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function. Ann Rev Neurosci 2001;24:167-202.

24. Schumacher EH, Lauber E, Awh E, et al. PET evidence for a modal verbal working memory system. Neuroimage 1996;3:79-88.

25. Smith EE, Jonides J, Koeppe RA. Dissociating verbal and spatial working memory using PET. Cereb Cortex 1996;6:11-20.

26. Wager TD, Smith EE. Neuroimaging studies of working memory: a meta-analysis. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 2003;3(4):255-74.

27. Frankland PW, Bontempi B. The organization of recent and remote memories. Nat Rev Neurosci 2005;6:119-30.

28. Sweller J. Cognitive load during problem solving: effects on learning. Cogn Sci 1988;12(1):257-85.

29. Beitz JM. Unleashing the power of memory: the mighty mnemonic. Nurse Educ 1997;22(2):25-9.

30. Larson EW. Criticism of mnemonic device. Am J Psychiatry 1990;147(7):963-4.

31. Miller GA. The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information. Psychol Rev 1956;63:81-97.

32. Schmidt SR. Effects of humor on sentence memory. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 1994;20(4):953-67.

33. Lippman LG, Dunn ML. Contextual connections within puns: effects on perceived humor and memory. J Gen Psychol 2000;127(2):185-97.

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Factitious illness: A 3-step consultation-liaison approach

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Factitious illness: A 3-step consultation-liaison approach

Ms. J, age 33, arrives at the emergency department (ED) complaining of chest pain and shortness of breath—symptoms she says are similar to those she had during episodes of pulmonary embolism. Routine laboratory workup, including chest CT and ultrasound of the lower extremities, indicate a very low likelihood of PE, but she insists that she be admitted.

SEE THE WEBCAST

Hear Dr. Stern's insights on recognizing and treating Munchausen's syndrome. Click here.

On the medical floor, nursing staff note that Ms. J appears short of breath only when directly observed. Medical records reveal multiple visits to other hospitals with repeated requests for admission. When gently confronted, she maintains she will die
if she is not treated.

Has your hospital’s medical staff ever been puzzled by a patient’s inconsistent presentation or unsettled by a concern that he or she was not being straightforward with them? Have they suspected that a patient such as Ms. J may be voluntarily producing his or her symptoms?

This article suggests a 3-step approach by which the consultation-liaison psychiatrist can help medical staff identify and manage patients with factitious illness.

Cardinal features

In factitious illness, the patient’s symptoms are:

  • under voluntary control and consciously produced
  • not a direct result of a medical or psychiatric condition
  • produced to assume the sick role (not to accrue secondary gain—a core feature of malingering).
Patients with factitious illness tend to present with realistic scenarios that suggest a physical or psychological disorder.

CASE: Self-inflicted injury

Ms. H, age 50, surprises even the most seasoned clinicians when she presents to the ED with brain parenchyma herniating from an open wound in her skull. She denies having picked at her scalp and does not endorse a history of obsessive-compulsive disorder or trichotillomania.

On the medical floor, however, she is seen picking at the wound, which leaves blood on her protective mittens. Surgical repair is repeatedly attempted, and her case is complicated by chronic infections and a nonhealing wound.

Clinical presentation

Factitious disorder presents 3 diagnostic and treatment challenges for a hospital’s medical staff:

  • To recognize and treat (even self-inflicted) serious medical conditions that can be life-threatening.
  • To orchestrate appropriate diagnostic evaluation. (Remember that factitious illness is a diagnosis of exclusion.)
  • To handle countertransference reactions to patients that can be intense; physicians may experience anger, frustration, resignation, and hatred.
You can help medical staff manage these patients’ behaviors and minimize barriers to care by explaining the disorder as a manifestation of psychiatric suffering.

CASE: ‘Suicidal’ but not depressed

Mr. B, age 48, presents to the ED with thoughts of suicide and profoundly depressed mood. On examination, however, he does not appear depressed. He repeatedly requests food, cigarettes, and assistance in finding shelter, which lead to concern that his main goal is secondary gain. However, because Mr. B has a history of serious suicide attempts—including some while an inpatient—the ED physician is reluctant to dismiss his complaints and unsure about how to proceed.

3-step diagnostic approach

Treating factitious illness is predicated upon making the correct diagnosis, which requires the medical team to investigate and gather data from collateral sources, such as outside hospital medical records and other providers. The diagnostic process can be summarized in 3 steps:

Step 1. Determine whether the patient has an identifiable medical or psychiatric problem that could explain the symptoms.

Step 2. Determine whether the symptoms are consciously or unconsciously produced. Somatoform disorders—such as conversion disorder and somatization disorder, for example—are thought to result from processes outside the patient’s control.

Step 3. Distinguish if the motivation is to obtain the sick role (consider factitious illness) or if material benefits are the goal (consider malingering). Both motivations may be operative in a given patient.

Medical evaluation. Certain aspects of the patient’s medical presentation can steer the physician to making a diagnosis of factitious illness (Table 1).1 For patients with physical symptoms, staff should order standard evaluations based on clinical judgment (such as ECG and cardiac markers to evaluate chest discomfort). Sometimes somatized symptoms are superimposed on an identifiable physical problem, and effective management includes treating both the medical illness and its created counterpart.2

Table 1

Medical clues to a patient with factitious illness

Vague symptom history that frays upon examination
Irritability and evasiveness with continued questioning
Familiarity with hospital procedures and protocols (some patients have received medical training)
Multiple scars as evidence of past procedures and hospitalizations
Acceptance of painful medical procedures without complaint
Itinerant lives devoid of close personal relationships
Failure to accurately identify themselves
Lack of a verifiable history
Source: Reference 1
 

 

Psychiatric evaluation. Physicians should think of factitious psychiatric illness when:

  • a patient’s behavior is notably different when he believes he is being directly observed and when he believes he is alone3
  • psychiatric symptoms do not readily fit into diagnostic categories (such as a vague mix of memory loss, suicidal thoughts, and psychosis)
  • the patient is suggestible or provides a diffusely positive review of systems (for example, he may report additional symptoms after having observed other patients).

When evaluating a patient with suspected factitious psychiatric symptoms, perform a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation to identify an Axis I or II disorder. Rule out possibilities such as dementia associated with complaints of memory loss, psychosis associated with reports of hallucinations, or affective symptoms or Axis II pathology associated with thoughts of suicide. Patients with factitious disorder often have an underlying psychiatric illness such as a personality disorder, but the Axis II disorder does not fully explain the presenting complaint.

The psychiatric presentations of Munchausen syndrome can be especially complicated, as they are usually associated with less objective evidence than are medical presentations (Box).4-10 Clarity of the history and diagnosis may be in the eye of the beholder.

Admission characteristics

Somatic complaints. Chaos often surrounds the hospitalized patient with factitious illness. The ED commonly is their gateway, and they tend to arrive in the evening or on weekends when less experienced staff are on call.11

Box

Factitious disorder:
Presentation severity ranges up to Munchausen syndrome

Munchausen syndrome—a particularly severe factitious illness—is characterized by peregrination, recurrent presentations, and pseudologia fantastica (stories that seem outrageously exaggerated).4 In 1951, Asher named this syndrome for Baron von Münchhausen, an 18th century Prussian officer who wandered from city to city creating tall tales about his life.5

Munchausen by proxy, in which a parent is responsible for producing illness in a child, may lead to extensive medical evaluations and treatment.

After more than 50 years, factitious illness continues to draw scientific and clinical attention. A search of PubMed over the last 10 years found nearly 500 citations. Presentations included:

  • symptomatic bradycardia caused by beta-blocker ingestion6
  • refractory hypoglycemia caused by surreptitious insulin injections7
  • false reports of aortic dissection8
  • recurrent episodes of self-harm including bilateral blindness from ocular trauma9
  • fabricated sweat chloride test results in a patient claiming to have cystic fibrosis.10
Because the patients’ somatic complaints predominate, the ED physician must complete a full evaluation, even if aspects of the history are inconsistent. Patients tend to appeal to physicians’ nurturing qualities in an attempt to have them provide care and attention.12

Escalating demands. During the hospital stay, patients with factitious illness may make repeated requests for care, which may escalate into demands if their needs are not met.13 At this point, staff often start to experience negative countertransference reactions. As medical tests reveal little to no evidence of an organic basis for their symptoms and no cohesive psychiatric diagnosis is reached, patients may complain of misdiagnosis and mistreatment.13

Patients usually leave before psychiatric consultation can be obtained, and the underlying suffering that led to their factitious complaints remains unaddressed. Typically, patients are lost to follow-up until the next presentation at another hospital, where the process begins again.

What motivates patients?

The motivation behind factitious presentations can be bewildering. Asher’s paper on Munchausen syndrome described several possible reasons for patients’ behavior, such as desire to be the center of attention, holding a grudge against the medical profession, drug seeking, looking for shelter, and running from police.5 This list, however, includes correlates of secondary gain, which with today’s psychiatric nomenclature would lead to a diagnosis of malingering.

Psychological factors. Some clinicians have tried to address underlying psychiatric factors, but data on evaluation and management are limited because these patients usually eschew psychiatric examination. Although the patient is voluntarily producing the symptoms, unconscious psychological factors are at play and are an essential part of the picture.14

When assessed, patients appear to have lived rootless lives with few attachments, which may have been the result of sadistic and unsatisfying relationships with authority figures of their youth.15,16 Their grandiosity and distortion of the truth suggest a narcissistic need to overcome feelings of incompetence or impotence.17 Their ambivalent relationship to hospitals and physicians may reflect a need for caretaking, arising from early relationships and past caretakers.

Lastly, there is a component of masochism; this makes some individuals (erroneously) believe that if you don’t inflict pain you don’t care about them.13

 

 

Treatment challenges

Because patients with factitious disorder are not easily studied, no particular treatment is well-supported in the literature. Approaches that have been reported include preventing patients from being re-admitted to medical facilities, admitting patients for psychiatric treatment, and providing outpatient therapies such as individual psychodynamic psychotherapy, behavioral modification, and group psychotherapy.18

Other management strategies suggested in the literature include:

  • reframing cognitive distortions
  • drawing up a set of realistic hospitalization goals (with a written contract)
  • maximizing the therapeutic alliance
  • avoiding team splitting
  • minimizing iatrogenic harm.19
Whatever the treatment, educate the medical staff about this complex disorder (Table 2), including the hazards of premature and unsubstantiated interventions or painful procedures. Also help them manage countertransference reactions. Provide an outlet for the staff’s intense emotions, and help them place such emotions into a therapeutic context.

Table 2

Recommended care for a patient with factitious illness

Fully investigate all medical and psychiatric complaints, especially if physical safety is threatened
Maintain a healthy skepticism about unusual or illogical presentations while attempting to preserve an empathic connection with the patient
Be aware of countertransference reactions, as they may provide valuable insight about the underlying cause of the patient’s symptoms
Realize that psychiatric symptoms and medical presentations fall on a continuum from conscious to unconscious; at times there may be a mix of motivations
Report all findings nonjudgmentally, both to the patient and in medical documentation
Confront patients? The efficacy and style of confronting patients with factitious illness have been hotly debated. Although no consensus has emerged, an empathic, nonthreatening confrontation may help the patient accept much-needed psychiatric care.13

Nevertheless, prepare the physician for the patient to respond to confrontation with denial and resistance because he or she feels exposed and humiliated. If the physician makes it clear that ongoing medical care will still be available—even if the symptoms are fabricated—the patient may be more willing to accept psychiatric treatment.13

Related resources

  • Barsky AJ, Stern TA, Greenberg DB, Cassem NH. Functional somatic symptoms and somatoform disorders. In: Stern TA, Fricchione GL, Cassem NH, et al, eds. The Massachusetts General Hospital handbook of general hospital psychiatry 5th ed. Philadelphia: Mosby/Elsevier; 2004:269-91.
  • Elwyn TS, Ahmed I. Factitious disorder. EMedicine from WebMD. Last updated April 13, 2006. www.emedicine.com/med/topic3125.htm.
References

1. Stern T. Malingering, factitious illness, and somatization. In: Hyman S, ed. Manual of psychiatric emergencies. Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1988;23:217-25.-

2. Turner J, Reid S. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet. 2002;359:346-9.

3. Popli A, Prakash S, Dewan M. Factitious disorders with psychological symptoms. J Clin Psychiatry 1992;53:9.-

4. Huffman J, Stern T. The diagnosis and treatment of Munchausen’s syndrome. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 2003;25:358-63.

5. Asher R. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:339-41.

6. Steinwender C, Hofmann R, Kypta A, Leisch F. Recurrent symptomatic bradycardia due to secret ingestion of beta-blockers—a rare manifestation of cardiac Munchausen syndrome. Wien Klon Wochenschr 2005;117(18):647-50.

7. Bretz S, Richards J. Munchausen syndrome presenting acutely in the emergency department. J Emerg Med 2000;18(4):417-20.

8. Hopkins R, Harrington C, Poppas A. Munchausen syndrome simulating acute aortic dissection. Ann Thorac Surg 2006;81(4):1497-99.

9. Salvo M, Pinna A, Milia P, Carta F. Ocular Munchausen syndrome resulting in bilateral blindness. Eur J Ophthalmol 2006;16(4):654-56.

10. Highland K, Flume P. A “story” of a woman with cystic fibrosis. Chest 2002;121(5):1704-7.

11. Stretton J. Munchausen syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:474.-

12. Stern T. Munchausen’s syndrome revisited. Psychosomatics 1980;21(4):329-36.

13. Stern T. Factitious disorders. In: Hyman S, Jenike M, eds. Manual of clinical problems in psychiatry Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1990;21:190-4.

14. Greenacre P. The imposter. Psychoanal Q 1958;27:359-82.

15. Cramer B, Gershberg M, Stern M. Munchausen syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1971;24:573-8.

16. Ford C. The Munchausen syndrome: a report of four new cases and a review of psychodynamic considerations. Psychiatry Med 1973;4:31-45.

17. Bursten B. On Munchausen’s syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1965;13:261-8.

18. Yassa R. Munchausen’s syndrome: a successfully treated case. Psychosomatics 1978;19:242.-

19. Gregory RJ, Jindal S. Factitious disorder on an inpatient psychiatry ward. Am J Orthopsychiatry 2006;76(1):31-6.

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Ms. J, age 33, arrives at the emergency department (ED) complaining of chest pain and shortness of breath—symptoms she says are similar to those she had during episodes of pulmonary embolism. Routine laboratory workup, including chest CT and ultrasound of the lower extremities, indicate a very low likelihood of PE, but she insists that she be admitted.

SEE THE WEBCAST

Hear Dr. Stern's insights on recognizing and treating Munchausen's syndrome. Click here.

On the medical floor, nursing staff note that Ms. J appears short of breath only when directly observed. Medical records reveal multiple visits to other hospitals with repeated requests for admission. When gently confronted, she maintains she will die
if she is not treated.

Has your hospital’s medical staff ever been puzzled by a patient’s inconsistent presentation or unsettled by a concern that he or she was not being straightforward with them? Have they suspected that a patient such as Ms. J may be voluntarily producing his or her symptoms?

This article suggests a 3-step approach by which the consultation-liaison psychiatrist can help medical staff identify and manage patients with factitious illness.

Cardinal features

In factitious illness, the patient’s symptoms are:

  • under voluntary control and consciously produced
  • not a direct result of a medical or psychiatric condition
  • produced to assume the sick role (not to accrue secondary gain—a core feature of malingering).
Patients with factitious illness tend to present with realistic scenarios that suggest a physical or psychological disorder.

CASE: Self-inflicted injury

Ms. H, age 50, surprises even the most seasoned clinicians when she presents to the ED with brain parenchyma herniating from an open wound in her skull. She denies having picked at her scalp and does not endorse a history of obsessive-compulsive disorder or trichotillomania.

On the medical floor, however, she is seen picking at the wound, which leaves blood on her protective mittens. Surgical repair is repeatedly attempted, and her case is complicated by chronic infections and a nonhealing wound.

Clinical presentation

Factitious disorder presents 3 diagnostic and treatment challenges for a hospital’s medical staff:

  • To recognize and treat (even self-inflicted) serious medical conditions that can be life-threatening.
  • To orchestrate appropriate diagnostic evaluation. (Remember that factitious illness is a diagnosis of exclusion.)
  • To handle countertransference reactions to patients that can be intense; physicians may experience anger, frustration, resignation, and hatred.
You can help medical staff manage these patients’ behaviors and minimize barriers to care by explaining the disorder as a manifestation of psychiatric suffering.

CASE: ‘Suicidal’ but not depressed

Mr. B, age 48, presents to the ED with thoughts of suicide and profoundly depressed mood. On examination, however, he does not appear depressed. He repeatedly requests food, cigarettes, and assistance in finding shelter, which lead to concern that his main goal is secondary gain. However, because Mr. B has a history of serious suicide attempts—including some while an inpatient—the ED physician is reluctant to dismiss his complaints and unsure about how to proceed.

3-step diagnostic approach

Treating factitious illness is predicated upon making the correct diagnosis, which requires the medical team to investigate and gather data from collateral sources, such as outside hospital medical records and other providers. The diagnostic process can be summarized in 3 steps:

Step 1. Determine whether the patient has an identifiable medical or psychiatric problem that could explain the symptoms.

Step 2. Determine whether the symptoms are consciously or unconsciously produced. Somatoform disorders—such as conversion disorder and somatization disorder, for example—are thought to result from processes outside the patient’s control.

Step 3. Distinguish if the motivation is to obtain the sick role (consider factitious illness) or if material benefits are the goal (consider malingering). Both motivations may be operative in a given patient.

Medical evaluation. Certain aspects of the patient’s medical presentation can steer the physician to making a diagnosis of factitious illness (Table 1).1 For patients with physical symptoms, staff should order standard evaluations based on clinical judgment (such as ECG and cardiac markers to evaluate chest discomfort). Sometimes somatized symptoms are superimposed on an identifiable physical problem, and effective management includes treating both the medical illness and its created counterpart.2

Table 1

Medical clues to a patient with factitious illness

Vague symptom history that frays upon examination
Irritability and evasiveness with continued questioning
Familiarity with hospital procedures and protocols (some patients have received medical training)
Multiple scars as evidence of past procedures and hospitalizations
Acceptance of painful medical procedures without complaint
Itinerant lives devoid of close personal relationships
Failure to accurately identify themselves
Lack of a verifiable history
Source: Reference 1
 

 

Psychiatric evaluation. Physicians should think of factitious psychiatric illness when:

  • a patient’s behavior is notably different when he believes he is being directly observed and when he believes he is alone3
  • psychiatric symptoms do not readily fit into diagnostic categories (such as a vague mix of memory loss, suicidal thoughts, and psychosis)
  • the patient is suggestible or provides a diffusely positive review of systems (for example, he may report additional symptoms after having observed other patients).

When evaluating a patient with suspected factitious psychiatric symptoms, perform a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation to identify an Axis I or II disorder. Rule out possibilities such as dementia associated with complaints of memory loss, psychosis associated with reports of hallucinations, or affective symptoms or Axis II pathology associated with thoughts of suicide. Patients with factitious disorder often have an underlying psychiatric illness such as a personality disorder, but the Axis II disorder does not fully explain the presenting complaint.

The psychiatric presentations of Munchausen syndrome can be especially complicated, as they are usually associated with less objective evidence than are medical presentations (Box).4-10 Clarity of the history and diagnosis may be in the eye of the beholder.

Admission characteristics

Somatic complaints. Chaos often surrounds the hospitalized patient with factitious illness. The ED commonly is their gateway, and they tend to arrive in the evening or on weekends when less experienced staff are on call.11

Box

Factitious disorder:
Presentation severity ranges up to Munchausen syndrome

Munchausen syndrome—a particularly severe factitious illness—is characterized by peregrination, recurrent presentations, and pseudologia fantastica (stories that seem outrageously exaggerated).4 In 1951, Asher named this syndrome for Baron von Münchhausen, an 18th century Prussian officer who wandered from city to city creating tall tales about his life.5

Munchausen by proxy, in which a parent is responsible for producing illness in a child, may lead to extensive medical evaluations and treatment.

After more than 50 years, factitious illness continues to draw scientific and clinical attention. A search of PubMed over the last 10 years found nearly 500 citations. Presentations included:

  • symptomatic bradycardia caused by beta-blocker ingestion6
  • refractory hypoglycemia caused by surreptitious insulin injections7
  • false reports of aortic dissection8
  • recurrent episodes of self-harm including bilateral blindness from ocular trauma9
  • fabricated sweat chloride test results in a patient claiming to have cystic fibrosis.10
Because the patients’ somatic complaints predominate, the ED physician must complete a full evaluation, even if aspects of the history are inconsistent. Patients tend to appeal to physicians’ nurturing qualities in an attempt to have them provide care and attention.12

Escalating demands. During the hospital stay, patients with factitious illness may make repeated requests for care, which may escalate into demands if their needs are not met.13 At this point, staff often start to experience negative countertransference reactions. As medical tests reveal little to no evidence of an organic basis for their symptoms and no cohesive psychiatric diagnosis is reached, patients may complain of misdiagnosis and mistreatment.13

Patients usually leave before psychiatric consultation can be obtained, and the underlying suffering that led to their factitious complaints remains unaddressed. Typically, patients are lost to follow-up until the next presentation at another hospital, where the process begins again.

What motivates patients?

The motivation behind factitious presentations can be bewildering. Asher’s paper on Munchausen syndrome described several possible reasons for patients’ behavior, such as desire to be the center of attention, holding a grudge against the medical profession, drug seeking, looking for shelter, and running from police.5 This list, however, includes correlates of secondary gain, which with today’s psychiatric nomenclature would lead to a diagnosis of malingering.

Psychological factors. Some clinicians have tried to address underlying psychiatric factors, but data on evaluation and management are limited because these patients usually eschew psychiatric examination. Although the patient is voluntarily producing the symptoms, unconscious psychological factors are at play and are an essential part of the picture.14

When assessed, patients appear to have lived rootless lives with few attachments, which may have been the result of sadistic and unsatisfying relationships with authority figures of their youth.15,16 Their grandiosity and distortion of the truth suggest a narcissistic need to overcome feelings of incompetence or impotence.17 Their ambivalent relationship to hospitals and physicians may reflect a need for caretaking, arising from early relationships and past caretakers.

Lastly, there is a component of masochism; this makes some individuals (erroneously) believe that if you don’t inflict pain you don’t care about them.13

 

 

Treatment challenges

Because patients with factitious disorder are not easily studied, no particular treatment is well-supported in the literature. Approaches that have been reported include preventing patients from being re-admitted to medical facilities, admitting patients for psychiatric treatment, and providing outpatient therapies such as individual psychodynamic psychotherapy, behavioral modification, and group psychotherapy.18

Other management strategies suggested in the literature include:

  • reframing cognitive distortions
  • drawing up a set of realistic hospitalization goals (with a written contract)
  • maximizing the therapeutic alliance
  • avoiding team splitting
  • minimizing iatrogenic harm.19
Whatever the treatment, educate the medical staff about this complex disorder (Table 2), including the hazards of premature and unsubstantiated interventions or painful procedures. Also help them manage countertransference reactions. Provide an outlet for the staff’s intense emotions, and help them place such emotions into a therapeutic context.

Table 2

Recommended care for a patient with factitious illness

Fully investigate all medical and psychiatric complaints, especially if physical safety is threatened
Maintain a healthy skepticism about unusual or illogical presentations while attempting to preserve an empathic connection with the patient
Be aware of countertransference reactions, as they may provide valuable insight about the underlying cause of the patient’s symptoms
Realize that psychiatric symptoms and medical presentations fall on a continuum from conscious to unconscious; at times there may be a mix of motivations
Report all findings nonjudgmentally, both to the patient and in medical documentation
Confront patients? The efficacy and style of confronting patients with factitious illness have been hotly debated. Although no consensus has emerged, an empathic, nonthreatening confrontation may help the patient accept much-needed psychiatric care.13

Nevertheless, prepare the physician for the patient to respond to confrontation with denial and resistance because he or she feels exposed and humiliated. If the physician makes it clear that ongoing medical care will still be available—even if the symptoms are fabricated—the patient may be more willing to accept psychiatric treatment.13

Related resources

  • Barsky AJ, Stern TA, Greenberg DB, Cassem NH. Functional somatic symptoms and somatoform disorders. In: Stern TA, Fricchione GL, Cassem NH, et al, eds. The Massachusetts General Hospital handbook of general hospital psychiatry 5th ed. Philadelphia: Mosby/Elsevier; 2004:269-91.
  • Elwyn TS, Ahmed I. Factitious disorder. EMedicine from WebMD. Last updated April 13, 2006. www.emedicine.com/med/topic3125.htm.

Ms. J, age 33, arrives at the emergency department (ED) complaining of chest pain and shortness of breath—symptoms she says are similar to those she had during episodes of pulmonary embolism. Routine laboratory workup, including chest CT and ultrasound of the lower extremities, indicate a very low likelihood of PE, but she insists that she be admitted.

SEE THE WEBCAST

Hear Dr. Stern's insights on recognizing and treating Munchausen's syndrome. Click here.

On the medical floor, nursing staff note that Ms. J appears short of breath only when directly observed. Medical records reveal multiple visits to other hospitals with repeated requests for admission. When gently confronted, she maintains she will die
if she is not treated.

Has your hospital’s medical staff ever been puzzled by a patient’s inconsistent presentation or unsettled by a concern that he or she was not being straightforward with them? Have they suspected that a patient such as Ms. J may be voluntarily producing his or her symptoms?

This article suggests a 3-step approach by which the consultation-liaison psychiatrist can help medical staff identify and manage patients with factitious illness.

Cardinal features

In factitious illness, the patient’s symptoms are:

  • under voluntary control and consciously produced
  • not a direct result of a medical or psychiatric condition
  • produced to assume the sick role (not to accrue secondary gain—a core feature of malingering).
Patients with factitious illness tend to present with realistic scenarios that suggest a physical or psychological disorder.

CASE: Self-inflicted injury

Ms. H, age 50, surprises even the most seasoned clinicians when she presents to the ED with brain parenchyma herniating from an open wound in her skull. She denies having picked at her scalp and does not endorse a history of obsessive-compulsive disorder or trichotillomania.

On the medical floor, however, she is seen picking at the wound, which leaves blood on her protective mittens. Surgical repair is repeatedly attempted, and her case is complicated by chronic infections and a nonhealing wound.

Clinical presentation

Factitious disorder presents 3 diagnostic and treatment challenges for a hospital’s medical staff:

  • To recognize and treat (even self-inflicted) serious medical conditions that can be life-threatening.
  • To orchestrate appropriate diagnostic evaluation. (Remember that factitious illness is a diagnosis of exclusion.)
  • To handle countertransference reactions to patients that can be intense; physicians may experience anger, frustration, resignation, and hatred.
You can help medical staff manage these patients’ behaviors and minimize barriers to care by explaining the disorder as a manifestation of psychiatric suffering.

CASE: ‘Suicidal’ but not depressed

Mr. B, age 48, presents to the ED with thoughts of suicide and profoundly depressed mood. On examination, however, he does not appear depressed. He repeatedly requests food, cigarettes, and assistance in finding shelter, which lead to concern that his main goal is secondary gain. However, because Mr. B has a history of serious suicide attempts—including some while an inpatient—the ED physician is reluctant to dismiss his complaints and unsure about how to proceed.

3-step diagnostic approach

Treating factitious illness is predicated upon making the correct diagnosis, which requires the medical team to investigate and gather data from collateral sources, such as outside hospital medical records and other providers. The diagnostic process can be summarized in 3 steps:

Step 1. Determine whether the patient has an identifiable medical or psychiatric problem that could explain the symptoms.

Step 2. Determine whether the symptoms are consciously or unconsciously produced. Somatoform disorders—such as conversion disorder and somatization disorder, for example—are thought to result from processes outside the patient’s control.

Step 3. Distinguish if the motivation is to obtain the sick role (consider factitious illness) or if material benefits are the goal (consider malingering). Both motivations may be operative in a given patient.

Medical evaluation. Certain aspects of the patient’s medical presentation can steer the physician to making a diagnosis of factitious illness (Table 1).1 For patients with physical symptoms, staff should order standard evaluations based on clinical judgment (such as ECG and cardiac markers to evaluate chest discomfort). Sometimes somatized symptoms are superimposed on an identifiable physical problem, and effective management includes treating both the medical illness and its created counterpart.2

Table 1

Medical clues to a patient with factitious illness

Vague symptom history that frays upon examination
Irritability and evasiveness with continued questioning
Familiarity with hospital procedures and protocols (some patients have received medical training)
Multiple scars as evidence of past procedures and hospitalizations
Acceptance of painful medical procedures without complaint
Itinerant lives devoid of close personal relationships
Failure to accurately identify themselves
Lack of a verifiable history
Source: Reference 1
 

 

Psychiatric evaluation. Physicians should think of factitious psychiatric illness when:

  • a patient’s behavior is notably different when he believes he is being directly observed and when he believes he is alone3
  • psychiatric symptoms do not readily fit into diagnostic categories (such as a vague mix of memory loss, suicidal thoughts, and psychosis)
  • the patient is suggestible or provides a diffusely positive review of systems (for example, he may report additional symptoms after having observed other patients).

When evaluating a patient with suspected factitious psychiatric symptoms, perform a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation to identify an Axis I or II disorder. Rule out possibilities such as dementia associated with complaints of memory loss, psychosis associated with reports of hallucinations, or affective symptoms or Axis II pathology associated with thoughts of suicide. Patients with factitious disorder often have an underlying psychiatric illness such as a personality disorder, but the Axis II disorder does not fully explain the presenting complaint.

The psychiatric presentations of Munchausen syndrome can be especially complicated, as they are usually associated with less objective evidence than are medical presentations (Box).4-10 Clarity of the history and diagnosis may be in the eye of the beholder.

Admission characteristics

Somatic complaints. Chaos often surrounds the hospitalized patient with factitious illness. The ED commonly is their gateway, and they tend to arrive in the evening or on weekends when less experienced staff are on call.11

Box

Factitious disorder:
Presentation severity ranges up to Munchausen syndrome

Munchausen syndrome—a particularly severe factitious illness—is characterized by peregrination, recurrent presentations, and pseudologia fantastica (stories that seem outrageously exaggerated).4 In 1951, Asher named this syndrome for Baron von Münchhausen, an 18th century Prussian officer who wandered from city to city creating tall tales about his life.5

Munchausen by proxy, in which a parent is responsible for producing illness in a child, may lead to extensive medical evaluations and treatment.

After more than 50 years, factitious illness continues to draw scientific and clinical attention. A search of PubMed over the last 10 years found nearly 500 citations. Presentations included:

  • symptomatic bradycardia caused by beta-blocker ingestion6
  • refractory hypoglycemia caused by surreptitious insulin injections7
  • false reports of aortic dissection8
  • recurrent episodes of self-harm including bilateral blindness from ocular trauma9
  • fabricated sweat chloride test results in a patient claiming to have cystic fibrosis.10
Because the patients’ somatic complaints predominate, the ED physician must complete a full evaluation, even if aspects of the history are inconsistent. Patients tend to appeal to physicians’ nurturing qualities in an attempt to have them provide care and attention.12

Escalating demands. During the hospital stay, patients with factitious illness may make repeated requests for care, which may escalate into demands if their needs are not met.13 At this point, staff often start to experience negative countertransference reactions. As medical tests reveal little to no evidence of an organic basis for their symptoms and no cohesive psychiatric diagnosis is reached, patients may complain of misdiagnosis and mistreatment.13

Patients usually leave before psychiatric consultation can be obtained, and the underlying suffering that led to their factitious complaints remains unaddressed. Typically, patients are lost to follow-up until the next presentation at another hospital, where the process begins again.

What motivates patients?

The motivation behind factitious presentations can be bewildering. Asher’s paper on Munchausen syndrome described several possible reasons for patients’ behavior, such as desire to be the center of attention, holding a grudge against the medical profession, drug seeking, looking for shelter, and running from police.5 This list, however, includes correlates of secondary gain, which with today’s psychiatric nomenclature would lead to a diagnosis of malingering.

Psychological factors. Some clinicians have tried to address underlying psychiatric factors, but data on evaluation and management are limited because these patients usually eschew psychiatric examination. Although the patient is voluntarily producing the symptoms, unconscious psychological factors are at play and are an essential part of the picture.14

When assessed, patients appear to have lived rootless lives with few attachments, which may have been the result of sadistic and unsatisfying relationships with authority figures of their youth.15,16 Their grandiosity and distortion of the truth suggest a narcissistic need to overcome feelings of incompetence or impotence.17 Their ambivalent relationship to hospitals and physicians may reflect a need for caretaking, arising from early relationships and past caretakers.

Lastly, there is a component of masochism; this makes some individuals (erroneously) believe that if you don’t inflict pain you don’t care about them.13

 

 

Treatment challenges

Because patients with factitious disorder are not easily studied, no particular treatment is well-supported in the literature. Approaches that have been reported include preventing patients from being re-admitted to medical facilities, admitting patients for psychiatric treatment, and providing outpatient therapies such as individual psychodynamic psychotherapy, behavioral modification, and group psychotherapy.18

Other management strategies suggested in the literature include:

  • reframing cognitive distortions
  • drawing up a set of realistic hospitalization goals (with a written contract)
  • maximizing the therapeutic alliance
  • avoiding team splitting
  • minimizing iatrogenic harm.19
Whatever the treatment, educate the medical staff about this complex disorder (Table 2), including the hazards of premature and unsubstantiated interventions or painful procedures. Also help them manage countertransference reactions. Provide an outlet for the staff’s intense emotions, and help them place such emotions into a therapeutic context.

Table 2

Recommended care for a patient with factitious illness

Fully investigate all medical and psychiatric complaints, especially if physical safety is threatened
Maintain a healthy skepticism about unusual or illogical presentations while attempting to preserve an empathic connection with the patient
Be aware of countertransference reactions, as they may provide valuable insight about the underlying cause of the patient’s symptoms
Realize that psychiatric symptoms and medical presentations fall on a continuum from conscious to unconscious; at times there may be a mix of motivations
Report all findings nonjudgmentally, both to the patient and in medical documentation
Confront patients? The efficacy and style of confronting patients with factitious illness have been hotly debated. Although no consensus has emerged, an empathic, nonthreatening confrontation may help the patient accept much-needed psychiatric care.13

Nevertheless, prepare the physician for the patient to respond to confrontation with denial and resistance because he or she feels exposed and humiliated. If the physician makes it clear that ongoing medical care will still be available—even if the symptoms are fabricated—the patient may be more willing to accept psychiatric treatment.13

Related resources

  • Barsky AJ, Stern TA, Greenberg DB, Cassem NH. Functional somatic symptoms and somatoform disorders. In: Stern TA, Fricchione GL, Cassem NH, et al, eds. The Massachusetts General Hospital handbook of general hospital psychiatry 5th ed. Philadelphia: Mosby/Elsevier; 2004:269-91.
  • Elwyn TS, Ahmed I. Factitious disorder. EMedicine from WebMD. Last updated April 13, 2006. www.emedicine.com/med/topic3125.htm.
References

1. Stern T. Malingering, factitious illness, and somatization. In: Hyman S, ed. Manual of psychiatric emergencies. Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1988;23:217-25.-

2. Turner J, Reid S. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet. 2002;359:346-9.

3. Popli A, Prakash S, Dewan M. Factitious disorders with psychological symptoms. J Clin Psychiatry 1992;53:9.-

4. Huffman J, Stern T. The diagnosis and treatment of Munchausen’s syndrome. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 2003;25:358-63.

5. Asher R. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:339-41.

6. Steinwender C, Hofmann R, Kypta A, Leisch F. Recurrent symptomatic bradycardia due to secret ingestion of beta-blockers—a rare manifestation of cardiac Munchausen syndrome. Wien Klon Wochenschr 2005;117(18):647-50.

7. Bretz S, Richards J. Munchausen syndrome presenting acutely in the emergency department. J Emerg Med 2000;18(4):417-20.

8. Hopkins R, Harrington C, Poppas A. Munchausen syndrome simulating acute aortic dissection. Ann Thorac Surg 2006;81(4):1497-99.

9. Salvo M, Pinna A, Milia P, Carta F. Ocular Munchausen syndrome resulting in bilateral blindness. Eur J Ophthalmol 2006;16(4):654-56.

10. Highland K, Flume P. A “story” of a woman with cystic fibrosis. Chest 2002;121(5):1704-7.

11. Stretton J. Munchausen syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:474.-

12. Stern T. Munchausen’s syndrome revisited. Psychosomatics 1980;21(4):329-36.

13. Stern T. Factitious disorders. In: Hyman S, Jenike M, eds. Manual of clinical problems in psychiatry Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1990;21:190-4.

14. Greenacre P. The imposter. Psychoanal Q 1958;27:359-82.

15. Cramer B, Gershberg M, Stern M. Munchausen syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1971;24:573-8.

16. Ford C. The Munchausen syndrome: a report of four new cases and a review of psychodynamic considerations. Psychiatry Med 1973;4:31-45.

17. Bursten B. On Munchausen’s syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1965;13:261-8.

18. Yassa R. Munchausen’s syndrome: a successfully treated case. Psychosomatics 1978;19:242.-

19. Gregory RJ, Jindal S. Factitious disorder on an inpatient psychiatry ward. Am J Orthopsychiatry 2006;76(1):31-6.

References

1. Stern T. Malingering, factitious illness, and somatization. In: Hyman S, ed. Manual of psychiatric emergencies. Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1988;23:217-25.-

2. Turner J, Reid S. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet. 2002;359:346-9.

3. Popli A, Prakash S, Dewan M. Factitious disorders with psychological symptoms. J Clin Psychiatry 1992;53:9.-

4. Huffman J, Stern T. The diagnosis and treatment of Munchausen’s syndrome. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 2003;25:358-63.

5. Asher R. Munchausen’s syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:339-41.

6. Steinwender C, Hofmann R, Kypta A, Leisch F. Recurrent symptomatic bradycardia due to secret ingestion of beta-blockers—a rare manifestation of cardiac Munchausen syndrome. Wien Klon Wochenschr 2005;117(18):647-50.

7. Bretz S, Richards J. Munchausen syndrome presenting acutely in the emergency department. J Emerg Med 2000;18(4):417-20.

8. Hopkins R, Harrington C, Poppas A. Munchausen syndrome simulating acute aortic dissection. Ann Thorac Surg 2006;81(4):1497-99.

9. Salvo M, Pinna A, Milia P, Carta F. Ocular Munchausen syndrome resulting in bilateral blindness. Eur J Ophthalmol 2006;16(4):654-56.

10. Highland K, Flume P. A “story” of a woman with cystic fibrosis. Chest 2002;121(5):1704-7.

11. Stretton J. Munchausen syndrome. Lancet 1951;1:474.-

12. Stern T. Munchausen’s syndrome revisited. Psychosomatics 1980;21(4):329-36.

13. Stern T. Factitious disorders. In: Hyman S, Jenike M, eds. Manual of clinical problems in psychiatry Boston: Little, Brown, and Co; 1990;21:190-4.

14. Greenacre P. The imposter. Psychoanal Q 1958;27:359-82.

15. Cramer B, Gershberg M, Stern M. Munchausen syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1971;24:573-8.

16. Ford C. The Munchausen syndrome: a report of four new cases and a review of psychodynamic considerations. Psychiatry Med 1973;4:31-45.

17. Bursten B. On Munchausen’s syndrome. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1965;13:261-8.

18. Yassa R. Munchausen’s syndrome: a successfully treated case. Psychosomatics 1978;19:242.-

19. Gregory RJ, Jindal S. Factitious disorder on an inpatient psychiatry ward. Am J Orthopsychiatry 2006;76(1):31-6.

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Newly diagnosed hypertension and depressive symptoms: How would you treat?

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Newly diagnosed hypertension and depressive symptoms: How would you treat?

 

A 56-year-old man who has had borderline hypertension for 2 to 3 years presents at a regularly scheduled office visit with blood pressure of 149/91 mm Hg.

Medical history

 

  • No other significant medical or psychiatric problems
  • Married, with 2 teenaged children
  • Employed as an administrator for an insurance company (>50 hrs/wk)
  • Drinks 3 to 4 alcoholic beverages/wk
  • Does not smoke
  • Enjoys fishing and other outdoor activities
  • Both parents had hypertension; father also had peripheral vascular disease

Examination

 

  • Patient is in no acute distress
  • Approximately 30 pounds over ideal body weight
  • Other vital signs are normal
  • Normal retinal examination, no carotid bruits, and clear lungs. Cardiac rate and rhythm are regular; no abdominal bruits
  • Laboratory studies reveal normal renal function; cholesterol, 184 mg/dL; low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, 129 mg/dL; high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, 55 mg/dL; triglycerides, 163 mg/dL. Electrocardiogram shows no current or prior evidence of ischemia or left-ventricular strain.

Additional information is required in a number of domains. Blood pressure readings should be repeated to make an accurate diagnosis of hypertension. While the patient may have hypertension, only a single blood pressure reading is elevated. The Joint National Committee on Blood Pressure (JNC 7) specifications1 state that 2 such readings on different days are needed to confirm a diagnosis of hypertension. The symptoms of claudication should be investigated. Physical examination should focus on auscultation for bruits and on the examination of eye grounds to further investigate the possibility of peripheral vascular disease (PVD). In addition, a lipid profile should be drawn. While guidelines are conflicting, consideration should be given to assessing a fasting glucose, potassium, and renal function. Other tests, such as a C-reactive protein, are more controversial.2

The patient opts for drug treatment of his hypertension, and begins taking atenolol 50 mg/d (in addition to aspirin 81 mg/d). He is scheduled to follow-up by phone in 1 week to assure compliance and in 3 months in the office.

 

FOLLOW-UP CARE

On a return visit to the office 3 months later, the patient reports the recent onset of fatigue.

Q: What is the differential diagnosis of the patient’s symptoms? What additional information might you like to know? A:__________________________________

____________________________________

On further questioning he reports that he initially tolerated the beta-blocker without problem, but more recently has experienced low energy and poor sleep (with early morning awakening); he acknowledges decreases in libido, interest in pleasurable activities (eg, hunting, fishing), and his ability to concentrate. He has gained 5 to 10 pounds in the last month.

Although he denies feeling “sad,” he says his emotions seem “flat.” He denies having thoughts of suicide, increased anxiety, symptoms of hypomania, or psychotic symptoms. He describes a mild increase in stress at work, and he feels that the process of preparing for his son to go to college had been “a big burden.” He says there are no other stressors.

The patient’s alcohol use has not changed significantly, and he reports being compliant with his new medication regimen.

When his father died 6 years earlier, he experienced similar symptoms; at no other time have such symptoms occurred. The patient reports no other new physical symptoms, and his physical examination is essentially unchanged from the exam conducted 3 months earlier. His vital signs are normal, including a blood pressure of 128/84 mm Hg.

Consider the differential diagnosis of the patient’s abnormal mood and neurovegetative symptoms. In the primary care setting, the differential diagnosis of depressed mood is broad (Table 1 ), including medical disorders and a variety of psychiatric syndromes.

Medical conditions to consider include a medication induced side effect, hypothyroidism (a metabolic masquerader of depression), anemia, sleep disorder (eg, sleep apnea), and alcohol abuse. PVD should also be considered—his symptoms may be secondary to poor perfusion of the cerebral cortex.

TABLE 1

Partial differential diagnosis of depressed mood and neurovegetative symptoms

 

General medical conditions
Endocrine: hypothyroidism, Cushing’s syndrome
Hematologic: anemia
Nutritional: vitamin B12 deficiency
Neurologic: movement disorders (eg, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease), head trauma, seizure disorders
Vascular: peripheral vascular disease, cerebrovascular accident
Sleep disorders: sleep apnea, narcolepsy
Neoplastic: pancreatic, lung, central nervous system neoplasms
Substance abuse disorders
Alcohol, benzodiazepine, or barbiturate dependence
Cocaine or amphetamine withdrawal
Psychiatric disorders
Major depressive disorder
Dysthymia
Adjustment disorder with depressed mood
Bipolar disorder

 

Q: When are depressive symptoms serious enough to warrant treatment?

What effects might beta-blockers be having on his mood, energy level, and libido?

You call a psychiatrist colleague for an informal consultation.

Psychiatrist’s comments

It is important to distinguish major depression from other, less severe depressive syndromes. In major depression, 5 out of 9 symptoms (including depressed mood or anhedonia) are present most of the day nearly every day for 2 weeks.

 

 

With adjustment disorder and so-called minor depression, symptoms are fewer or less persistent (Table 2).

This distinction is important, as antidepressants are effective for major depression, but they have not yet been shown effective for adjustment disorders or minor depression. Major depression is the “hypertension of mental illness in primary care”—common, often undiagnosed, and associated with poor outcomes. Therefore, accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment for major depression are essential.

Given the possibility of a depressive syndrome, gather further information to determine the duration of ongoing symptoms, and obtain answers to a short questionnaire (eg, the Beck Depression Inventory [BDI]3 or the PHQ-94). Elicit a family history of mood disorder, or personal history suggestive of thyroid dysfunction, a sleep disorder, or alcohol or drug abuse. Order a complete blood count (CBC) to evaluate for anemia, a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to evaluate for hypothyroidism, and, if indicated by history, a sleep study.

Beta-blockers and depression. The patient’s symptoms developed in the context of beta-blocker therapy. From the 1970s through the 1990s, the lore was that beta-blockers caused depression and should be avoided in patients with a history of depression. Because of this, many patients with myocardial infarction (MI) and congestive heart failure (CHF) have been denied treatment with beta-blockers when otherwise indicated.

Fortunately, a recent rigorous academic study of this issue was conducted by Ko and colleagues5 to rationally guide treatment. This study involved a meta-analysis of 15 randomized controlled trials of beta-blocker therapy in patients with MI, CHF, or hypertension; the authors found that beta-blockers were associated with a slight (though statistically significant) increase in fatigue and sexual dysfunction, and that their use was not associated with depressive symptoms. This is the best review to date of beta-blockers and depression, and it debunks the myth that beta-blockers cause depression—a myth that has prevented many post-MI patients from receiving much-needed beta-blocker therapy. In short, although idiosyncratic reactions are possible, it is unlikely the patient’s use of atenolol caused his apparent depressive symptoms.

TABLE 2

Major depression, minor depression, and adjustment disorder

 

Major depressive disorder
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 5 (out of 9) depressive symptoms, and resulting in functional impairment.
Minor depression (research criteria)
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 2 to 4 depressive symptoms, and without history of major depressive disorder.
Adjustment disorder
Mood or anxiety symptoms occur within 3 months of a stressful life event. Such symptoms are in excess of the symptoms that would normally be expected as a result of the event or impair function. The symptoms do not meet criteria for major depressive disorder, bereavement, or another major psychiatric disorder.
Source: Adapted from DSM-IV.14

Further primary care evaluation

The patient has no cold intolerance or other symptoms of thyroid dysfunction. He does report a long history of snoring, confirmed by his wife. However, he did not notice feeling more fatigued after starting atenolol.Nonetheless, you switch his antihypertensive medication from atenolol to hydrochlorothiazide. In addition, you order a CBC, serum chemistries, a thyroid panel, and a sleep study. The patient is told to return for a follow-up appointment in 2 weeks and to call before that if symptoms worsen.

 

Q: Is this recommended course of treatment reasonable? What other options are available for the patient?

A:_______________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

In this situation, the evidence (depressive symptoms in the context of good blood-pressure control) was insufficient to justify a switch from a beta-blocker to hydrochlorothiazide. One could argue that the switch was reasonable regardless of his depressive symptoms; the most recent guidelines from JNC 71 indicate that thiazide diuretics are first-line therapy for hypertension in patients without CAD, and that beta-blockers are not the first-line agent in the patient’s clinical situation.

But discontinuing atenolol because of ongoing depressive symptoms is not supported. The patient may well need a beta-blocker in the future (eg, if he were to develop CAD). By prematurely concluding that the beta-blocker caused adverse effects, we may be denying him an important treatment down the road.

Option 1: 2-week drug holiday

If there was concern that the patient was having an idiosyncratic reaction to atenolol, or if he developed substantial fatigue or sexual dysfunction, a 2-week drug holiday could be conducted while carefully monitoring blood pressure and depressive symptoms. Atenolol could then be restarted to identify a temporal relationship between the symptoms and the medication.

Option 2: Treat for depression

 

 

Another option would be to treat the patient as if his symptoms represented depression. Exhibiting 4 of the necessary diagnostic criteria, the patient nearly qualifies for a diagnosis of current major depression. An antidepressant could be started, exercise could be prescribed, or a referral could be made for psychotherapy. However, again there is insufficient evidence that his subsyndromal depression will respond to standard treatments designed for major depressive disorder.

The patient returns as scheduled 2 weeks later. He has tolerated the change in blood pressure medications without difficulty, but he is experiencing persistent anhedonia, terminal insomnia, and low levels of concentration, energy, and libido. He has felt increasingly hopeless and worthless over the past 2 weeks, though he denies having thoughts of suicide. Results on CBC, serum chemistries, thyroid panel, and sleep study are all unremarkable.

The patient now clearly meets criteria for a major depressive episode. As a first step, he should be educated about depression. An excellent self-help book is Getting Your Life Back by Wright and Basco.6 The patient should be taught to monitor his symptoms with the BDI3 or the PHQ-94 to better assess the severity of the current episode, to monitor changes in his symptoms, and to rapidly identify relapses.

Most physicians would start an antidepressant, unless the patient had significant objections. Other treatment options, alone or in concert with antidepressant treatment, include exercise or psychotherapy. The patient is an excellent candidate for exercise, given that he has 3 risk factors for CAD: hypertension, a sedentary lifestyle, and obesity (4, if you include depression). Exercising for at least 30 minutes, 2 to 3 times per week, would likely benefit his physical and mental health. In addition to its cardiac benefits, exercise 3 times weekly was found in at least one trial to be as effective as sertraline in treating major depression in outpatients.7

Choosing an antidepressant. A number of factors should be considered in choosing antidepressants, including efficacy, side effect profile, and cost. Table 3 outlines some of the main considerations in the choice of antidepressants for this patient. Note that tricyclic antidepressants are not listed, being contraindicated in CAD because of their tendency to contribute to arrhythmias in the post-MI period. In this patient’s case, mirtazapine should be avoided because of the possibility of weight gain; venlafaxine should be avoided because of hypertension. Sertraline would be an appropriate choice, given that it has been relatively well-studied in persons with CAD.

The patient begins treatment with fluoxetine (10 mg/d, which is then increased to 20 mg/d after several days). His depressive symptoms gradually diminish; he achieves a “50%” reduction of symptoms at follow-up visit 3 weeks later. Two months after fluoxetine was initiated, the patient is nearly euthymic, reporting only 2 depressive symptoms, and is again engaging in usual recreational activities.

TABLE 3

A comparison of antidepressants in the treatment of depressed patients in cardiac populations

 

MedicationClass/mechanismRisks/side effectsBenefits
CitalopramSSRI Low cost, minimal drug-drug interactions
EscitalopramSSRINewest/least studied agentLow cost, minimal drug-drug interactions, possibly faster onset and fewer side effects
FluoxetineSSRILong half-life, more drug-drug interactions 
ParoxetineSSRISedation, mild anticholinergic effects 
SertralineSSRISedation, mildBest studied in CAD; few drug interactions
MirtazapineAtypical antidepressant (5HT2, 5HT3, and alpha2 refceptor blockade)Sedation, weight gain, possible elevation of lipidsNo sexual dysfunction
VenlafaxineSelective serotonin and norepinephrine receptor blockadeElevated blood pressure in 13% at doses of 300 mg or greater 
BupropionIncreases noradrenergic and dopaminergic activityInitial anxietyNo sexual dysfunction
SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; CAD, coronary artery disease

 

Conclusions

Q: Is depression, like hypertension, a risk factor for the development of coronary artery disease (CAD)? A:____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________

Whether depression is a risk factor for CAD depends on how one defines a risk factor and whether one is discussing “major” or “minor” risk factors. At least 15 narrative reviews have been written on the relationship between depression and heart disease, but none has examined the epidemiologic evidence for depression as a major risk factor for CAD (Table 4).8

In looking at the 7 main epidemiologic criteria for a risk factor, depression does very well on 4: strength of association, consistency, dose-response effect, and predictability. Numerous studies have shown that depression is clearly and consistently associated with the development of CAD, and that clinical depression appears to predict CAD more robustly than does depressed mood alone.9-12

On 2 of the criteria, specificity and biological plausibility, there is fair evidence for depression as a CAD risk factor. We do not yet know the relative importance of recurrent major depression, dysthymia, BDI scores of 10 or greater, or some other marker of depression as predictors of CAD.

Because mild depressive symptoms may predict CAD, it is unclear what levels of depression increase the risk of CAD and require intervention. Excellent work exists regarding the development of plausible mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD; however, these mechanisms have yet to be proven. Therefore, the evidence in this domain can only be rated as fair.

 

 

Finally, the evidence is incomplete for one important criterion: response to treatment. Only one study has been designed to examine the effect of depression treatments on cardiac risk reduction. This study (the ENRICHD trial13) was a treatment study of post-MI depression that found that cognitive-behavioral therapy did not have a significant impact on reducing recurrent cardiac events.

Based on the most stringent epidemiologic criteria, depression is almost, but not quite, a risk factor for CAD. However, depression is a minor risk factor for CAD, and may someday be considered a major risk factor. While the mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD have not yet been established, the association between depression and subsequent CAD likely occurs via 2 pathways.

The first pathway is behavioral. Patients with depression have diminished self-care, possibly increasing other CAD risk factors such as smoking, poor diet/hyperlipidemia, diabetes, physical inactivity, and obesity.

The second pathway by which depression may lead to CAD is neuroendocrine. Hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and hyperactive sympathomedullary activity may result in elevated cytokine levels, platelet activation, and vascular damage, thereby contributing to CAD.8

TABLE 4

Depression as a risk factor for CAD: a “report card”8

 

Risk factorStrength of evidence
Strength of associationGood
PredictabilityGood
SpecificityFair
ConsistencyGood
Dose-response effectGood
Biological plausibilityFair
Response to treatmentIncomplete

 

Family physician commentary

This case illustrates several important points in the management of depressive symptoms in the family practice setting.

First, patients may present with subsyndromal depressive illness; there is, as yet, no evidence that antidepressants are beneficial in this population, and they expose patients to side effects such as sexual dysfunction.

Second, practitioners in general should not shy away from using beta-blockers where indicated for patients with cardiovascular disease and depression; the link between beta-blockers and depression seems minimal at best.

Third, when patients do present with the syndrome of major depression, it is important to evaluate potential medical contributors (eg, obstructive sleep apnea) when appropriate, and to treat with adequate doses of antidepressants for an adequate duration.

Fourth, the potential effects of depression on the development of CAD give family physicians yet another reason to remain vigilant for the presence of depression in all patients.

Should the FP treat independently? This discussion then leads to the question of when an informal or formal psychiatric consultation is indicated for the treatment of a depressed patient, and when the FP may wish to handle the case independently. The short answer is, of course, “it depends.” As with all areas of medical specialty, FPs will have varying levels of comfort, knowledge, and experience in the treatment of psychiatric disorders, and this will often affect the threshold for obtaining consultation. Furthermore, the number of psychiatric consultants—and thus the opportunity for consultations—varies widely depending on practice location.

Value of informal consultations. In general, FPs are well-equipped to handle patients with uncomplicated major depressive disorder or dysthymia without suicidal ideation or psychotic features. Informal consultation may be useful in cases (as in this case) when it is difficult to distinguish whether the patient meets criteria for major depressive disorder (and therefore requires treatment) or has subthreshold depressive symptoms. In addition, informal consultation can be useful when there is a question about antidepressant agent selection in a specific clinical situation. Finally, informal consultation may be of benefit when there are comorbid psychiatric illnesses, for example, coexisting panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder.

Opting for formal consultation. Formal psychiatric consultation is often useful when there is a mood disorder with suicidal ideation or psychotic features, when the disorder has been refractory to 2 or more adequate trials of an antidepressant, when there is a question of bipolar disorder (for which monotherapy with antidepressants is contraindicated) or substance use disorder, or for progressively worsening depression despite treatment.

Billing and coding. The logistics of billing for the treatment of comorbid psychiatric disorders by primary care physicians vary with the type of payer and from state to state. Because it is often impractical to modify billing procedures with each patient, it is useful for each practice to develop general billing guidelines for psychiatric disorders billed to Medicaid, Medicare, and the most common managed care organizations in the practice. In general, the physician caring for the patient described in this report would bill for hypertension and depression and get paid under the primary diagnosis of hypertension. When in doubt about whether to bill for a psychiatric disorder, primary care clinicians may include the relevant physical symptom in the billing codes, such as fatigue, headache, insomnia and bill under that code.

· Acknowledgments ·

Portions of this article were presented at the Association of Medicine and Psychiatry Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, November 19, 2003.

References

 

1. Chobanian AV, Bakris GL, Black HR, et al. The Seventh Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Pressure: the JNC 7 report. JAMA. 2003;289:2560-2572.

2. Danesh J, Wheeler JG, Hirschfield GM, et al. C-reactive protein and other circulating markers of inflammation in the prediction of coronary heart disease. N Engl J Med 2004;350:1387-1397.

3. Beck AT. Beck Depression Inventory. In: Test Critiques, Vol II,. Deyser DJ, Sweetland RC (eds). Kansas City, Mo: Test Corporation of America; 1985;83-87.

4. Spitzer RL, Kroenke K, Williams JB. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. J Gen Intern Med 2001;16:606-613.

5. Ko DT, Hebert PR, Coffey CS, et al. Beta-blocker therapy and symptoms of depression, fatigue, and sexual dysfunction. JAMA. 2002;288:351-357.

6. Basco MR, Wright JH. Getting Your Life Back: The complete Guide to Recovery from Depression. New York: Touchstone; 2002;

7. Blumenthal JA, Babyak MA, Moore KA, et al. Effects of exercise training on older patients with major depression. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159:2349-2356.

8. Wulsin LR. Is depression a major risk factor for coronary disease? A systematic review of the epidemiologic evidence. Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2004;12:79-93.

9. Barefoot JC, Helms MJ, Mark DB, et al. Depression and long-term mortality risk in patients with coronary artery disease. Am J Cardiol. 1996;78:613-617.

10. Anda R, Williamson D, Jones D, et al. Depressed affect, hopelessness, and the risk of ischemic heart disease in a cohort of U.S. adults. Epidemiology 1993;4:285-294.

11. Ford DE, Mead LA, Chang PF, et al. Depression is a risk factor for coronary artery disease in men: the Precursors Study. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:1422-1426.

12. Rugulies R. Depression as a predictor for coronary heart disease. a review and meta-analysis. Am J Prev Med 2002;23:51-61.

13. Berkman LF, Blumenthal J, Burg M, et al. Effects of treating depression and low perceived social support on clinical events after myocardial infarction: the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Randomized Trial. JAMA 2003;289:3106-3116.

14. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th ed.Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1994.

Drug brand names

 

  • Atenolol • Tenormin
  • Bupropion • Wellbutrin
  • Citalopram • Celexa
  • Escitalopram • Lexapro
  • Fluoxetine • Prozac
  • Hydrochlorothiazide • Esidrix, HydroDIURIL, Oretic
  • Mirtazapine • Remeron
  • Paroxetine • Paxil
  • Sertraline • Zoloft
  • Venlafaxine • Effexor
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Jeff C. Huffman, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston

Lawson R. Wulsin, MD
Departments of Psychiatry and Family Medicine, University of Cincinnati

Theodore A. Stern, MD
Psychiatry Consultation Service, Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston

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Jeff C. Huffman, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston

Lawson R. Wulsin, MD
Departments of Psychiatry and Family Medicine, University of Cincinnati

Theodore A. Stern, MD
Psychiatry Consultation Service, Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston

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Jeff C. Huffman, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston

Lawson R. Wulsin, MD
Departments of Psychiatry and Family Medicine, University of Cincinnati

Theodore A. Stern, MD
Psychiatry Consultation Service, Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston

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A 56-year-old man who has had borderline hypertension for 2 to 3 years presents at a regularly scheduled office visit with blood pressure of 149/91 mm Hg.

Medical history

 

  • No other significant medical or psychiatric problems
  • Married, with 2 teenaged children
  • Employed as an administrator for an insurance company (>50 hrs/wk)
  • Drinks 3 to 4 alcoholic beverages/wk
  • Does not smoke
  • Enjoys fishing and other outdoor activities
  • Both parents had hypertension; father also had peripheral vascular disease

Examination

 

  • Patient is in no acute distress
  • Approximately 30 pounds over ideal body weight
  • Other vital signs are normal
  • Normal retinal examination, no carotid bruits, and clear lungs. Cardiac rate and rhythm are regular; no abdominal bruits
  • Laboratory studies reveal normal renal function; cholesterol, 184 mg/dL; low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, 129 mg/dL; high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, 55 mg/dL; triglycerides, 163 mg/dL. Electrocardiogram shows no current or prior evidence of ischemia or left-ventricular strain.

Additional information is required in a number of domains. Blood pressure readings should be repeated to make an accurate diagnosis of hypertension. While the patient may have hypertension, only a single blood pressure reading is elevated. The Joint National Committee on Blood Pressure (JNC 7) specifications1 state that 2 such readings on different days are needed to confirm a diagnosis of hypertension. The symptoms of claudication should be investigated. Physical examination should focus on auscultation for bruits and on the examination of eye grounds to further investigate the possibility of peripheral vascular disease (PVD). In addition, a lipid profile should be drawn. While guidelines are conflicting, consideration should be given to assessing a fasting glucose, potassium, and renal function. Other tests, such as a C-reactive protein, are more controversial.2

The patient opts for drug treatment of his hypertension, and begins taking atenolol 50 mg/d (in addition to aspirin 81 mg/d). He is scheduled to follow-up by phone in 1 week to assure compliance and in 3 months in the office.

 

FOLLOW-UP CARE

On a return visit to the office 3 months later, the patient reports the recent onset of fatigue.

Q: What is the differential diagnosis of the patient’s symptoms? What additional information might you like to know? A:__________________________________

____________________________________

On further questioning he reports that he initially tolerated the beta-blocker without problem, but more recently has experienced low energy and poor sleep (with early morning awakening); he acknowledges decreases in libido, interest in pleasurable activities (eg, hunting, fishing), and his ability to concentrate. He has gained 5 to 10 pounds in the last month.

Although he denies feeling “sad,” he says his emotions seem “flat.” He denies having thoughts of suicide, increased anxiety, symptoms of hypomania, or psychotic symptoms. He describes a mild increase in stress at work, and he feels that the process of preparing for his son to go to college had been “a big burden.” He says there are no other stressors.

The patient’s alcohol use has not changed significantly, and he reports being compliant with his new medication regimen.

When his father died 6 years earlier, he experienced similar symptoms; at no other time have such symptoms occurred. The patient reports no other new physical symptoms, and his physical examination is essentially unchanged from the exam conducted 3 months earlier. His vital signs are normal, including a blood pressure of 128/84 mm Hg.

Consider the differential diagnosis of the patient’s abnormal mood and neurovegetative symptoms. In the primary care setting, the differential diagnosis of depressed mood is broad (Table 1 ), including medical disorders and a variety of psychiatric syndromes.

Medical conditions to consider include a medication induced side effect, hypothyroidism (a metabolic masquerader of depression), anemia, sleep disorder (eg, sleep apnea), and alcohol abuse. PVD should also be considered—his symptoms may be secondary to poor perfusion of the cerebral cortex.

TABLE 1

Partial differential diagnosis of depressed mood and neurovegetative symptoms

 

General medical conditions
Endocrine: hypothyroidism, Cushing’s syndrome
Hematologic: anemia
Nutritional: vitamin B12 deficiency
Neurologic: movement disorders (eg, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease), head trauma, seizure disorders
Vascular: peripheral vascular disease, cerebrovascular accident
Sleep disorders: sleep apnea, narcolepsy
Neoplastic: pancreatic, lung, central nervous system neoplasms
Substance abuse disorders
Alcohol, benzodiazepine, or barbiturate dependence
Cocaine or amphetamine withdrawal
Psychiatric disorders
Major depressive disorder
Dysthymia
Adjustment disorder with depressed mood
Bipolar disorder

 

Q: When are depressive symptoms serious enough to warrant treatment?

What effects might beta-blockers be having on his mood, energy level, and libido?

You call a psychiatrist colleague for an informal consultation.

Psychiatrist’s comments

It is important to distinguish major depression from other, less severe depressive syndromes. In major depression, 5 out of 9 symptoms (including depressed mood or anhedonia) are present most of the day nearly every day for 2 weeks.

 

 

With adjustment disorder and so-called minor depression, symptoms are fewer or less persistent (Table 2).

This distinction is important, as antidepressants are effective for major depression, but they have not yet been shown effective for adjustment disorders or minor depression. Major depression is the “hypertension of mental illness in primary care”—common, often undiagnosed, and associated with poor outcomes. Therefore, accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment for major depression are essential.

Given the possibility of a depressive syndrome, gather further information to determine the duration of ongoing symptoms, and obtain answers to a short questionnaire (eg, the Beck Depression Inventory [BDI]3 or the PHQ-94). Elicit a family history of mood disorder, or personal history suggestive of thyroid dysfunction, a sleep disorder, or alcohol or drug abuse. Order a complete blood count (CBC) to evaluate for anemia, a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to evaluate for hypothyroidism, and, if indicated by history, a sleep study.

Beta-blockers and depression. The patient’s symptoms developed in the context of beta-blocker therapy. From the 1970s through the 1990s, the lore was that beta-blockers caused depression and should be avoided in patients with a history of depression. Because of this, many patients with myocardial infarction (MI) and congestive heart failure (CHF) have been denied treatment with beta-blockers when otherwise indicated.

Fortunately, a recent rigorous academic study of this issue was conducted by Ko and colleagues5 to rationally guide treatment. This study involved a meta-analysis of 15 randomized controlled trials of beta-blocker therapy in patients with MI, CHF, or hypertension; the authors found that beta-blockers were associated with a slight (though statistically significant) increase in fatigue and sexual dysfunction, and that their use was not associated with depressive symptoms. This is the best review to date of beta-blockers and depression, and it debunks the myth that beta-blockers cause depression—a myth that has prevented many post-MI patients from receiving much-needed beta-blocker therapy. In short, although idiosyncratic reactions are possible, it is unlikely the patient’s use of atenolol caused his apparent depressive symptoms.

TABLE 2

Major depression, minor depression, and adjustment disorder

 

Major depressive disorder
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 5 (out of 9) depressive symptoms, and resulting in functional impairment.
Minor depression (research criteria)
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 2 to 4 depressive symptoms, and without history of major depressive disorder.
Adjustment disorder
Mood or anxiety symptoms occur within 3 months of a stressful life event. Such symptoms are in excess of the symptoms that would normally be expected as a result of the event or impair function. The symptoms do not meet criteria for major depressive disorder, bereavement, or another major psychiatric disorder.
Source: Adapted from DSM-IV.14

Further primary care evaluation

The patient has no cold intolerance or other symptoms of thyroid dysfunction. He does report a long history of snoring, confirmed by his wife. However, he did not notice feeling more fatigued after starting atenolol.Nonetheless, you switch his antihypertensive medication from atenolol to hydrochlorothiazide. In addition, you order a CBC, serum chemistries, a thyroid panel, and a sleep study. The patient is told to return for a follow-up appointment in 2 weeks and to call before that if symptoms worsen.

 

Q: Is this recommended course of treatment reasonable? What other options are available for the patient?

A:_______________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

In this situation, the evidence (depressive symptoms in the context of good blood-pressure control) was insufficient to justify a switch from a beta-blocker to hydrochlorothiazide. One could argue that the switch was reasonable regardless of his depressive symptoms; the most recent guidelines from JNC 71 indicate that thiazide diuretics are first-line therapy for hypertension in patients without CAD, and that beta-blockers are not the first-line agent in the patient’s clinical situation.

But discontinuing atenolol because of ongoing depressive symptoms is not supported. The patient may well need a beta-blocker in the future (eg, if he were to develop CAD). By prematurely concluding that the beta-blocker caused adverse effects, we may be denying him an important treatment down the road.

Option 1: 2-week drug holiday

If there was concern that the patient was having an idiosyncratic reaction to atenolol, or if he developed substantial fatigue or sexual dysfunction, a 2-week drug holiday could be conducted while carefully monitoring blood pressure and depressive symptoms. Atenolol could then be restarted to identify a temporal relationship between the symptoms and the medication.

Option 2: Treat for depression

 

 

Another option would be to treat the patient as if his symptoms represented depression. Exhibiting 4 of the necessary diagnostic criteria, the patient nearly qualifies for a diagnosis of current major depression. An antidepressant could be started, exercise could be prescribed, or a referral could be made for psychotherapy. However, again there is insufficient evidence that his subsyndromal depression will respond to standard treatments designed for major depressive disorder.

The patient returns as scheduled 2 weeks later. He has tolerated the change in blood pressure medications without difficulty, but he is experiencing persistent anhedonia, terminal insomnia, and low levels of concentration, energy, and libido. He has felt increasingly hopeless and worthless over the past 2 weeks, though he denies having thoughts of suicide. Results on CBC, serum chemistries, thyroid panel, and sleep study are all unremarkable.

The patient now clearly meets criteria for a major depressive episode. As a first step, he should be educated about depression. An excellent self-help book is Getting Your Life Back by Wright and Basco.6 The patient should be taught to monitor his symptoms with the BDI3 or the PHQ-94 to better assess the severity of the current episode, to monitor changes in his symptoms, and to rapidly identify relapses.

Most physicians would start an antidepressant, unless the patient had significant objections. Other treatment options, alone or in concert with antidepressant treatment, include exercise or psychotherapy. The patient is an excellent candidate for exercise, given that he has 3 risk factors for CAD: hypertension, a sedentary lifestyle, and obesity (4, if you include depression). Exercising for at least 30 minutes, 2 to 3 times per week, would likely benefit his physical and mental health. In addition to its cardiac benefits, exercise 3 times weekly was found in at least one trial to be as effective as sertraline in treating major depression in outpatients.7

Choosing an antidepressant. A number of factors should be considered in choosing antidepressants, including efficacy, side effect profile, and cost. Table 3 outlines some of the main considerations in the choice of antidepressants for this patient. Note that tricyclic antidepressants are not listed, being contraindicated in CAD because of their tendency to contribute to arrhythmias in the post-MI period. In this patient’s case, mirtazapine should be avoided because of the possibility of weight gain; venlafaxine should be avoided because of hypertension. Sertraline would be an appropriate choice, given that it has been relatively well-studied in persons with CAD.

The patient begins treatment with fluoxetine (10 mg/d, which is then increased to 20 mg/d after several days). His depressive symptoms gradually diminish; he achieves a “50%” reduction of symptoms at follow-up visit 3 weeks later. Two months after fluoxetine was initiated, the patient is nearly euthymic, reporting only 2 depressive symptoms, and is again engaging in usual recreational activities.

TABLE 3

A comparison of antidepressants in the treatment of depressed patients in cardiac populations

 

MedicationClass/mechanismRisks/side effectsBenefits
CitalopramSSRI Low cost, minimal drug-drug interactions
EscitalopramSSRINewest/least studied agentLow cost, minimal drug-drug interactions, possibly faster onset and fewer side effects
FluoxetineSSRILong half-life, more drug-drug interactions 
ParoxetineSSRISedation, mild anticholinergic effects 
SertralineSSRISedation, mildBest studied in CAD; few drug interactions
MirtazapineAtypical antidepressant (5HT2, 5HT3, and alpha2 refceptor blockade)Sedation, weight gain, possible elevation of lipidsNo sexual dysfunction
VenlafaxineSelective serotonin and norepinephrine receptor blockadeElevated blood pressure in 13% at doses of 300 mg or greater 
BupropionIncreases noradrenergic and dopaminergic activityInitial anxietyNo sexual dysfunction
SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; CAD, coronary artery disease

 

Conclusions

Q: Is depression, like hypertension, a risk factor for the development of coronary artery disease (CAD)? A:____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________

Whether depression is a risk factor for CAD depends on how one defines a risk factor and whether one is discussing “major” or “minor” risk factors. At least 15 narrative reviews have been written on the relationship between depression and heart disease, but none has examined the epidemiologic evidence for depression as a major risk factor for CAD (Table 4).8

In looking at the 7 main epidemiologic criteria for a risk factor, depression does very well on 4: strength of association, consistency, dose-response effect, and predictability. Numerous studies have shown that depression is clearly and consistently associated with the development of CAD, and that clinical depression appears to predict CAD more robustly than does depressed mood alone.9-12

On 2 of the criteria, specificity and biological plausibility, there is fair evidence for depression as a CAD risk factor. We do not yet know the relative importance of recurrent major depression, dysthymia, BDI scores of 10 or greater, or some other marker of depression as predictors of CAD.

Because mild depressive symptoms may predict CAD, it is unclear what levels of depression increase the risk of CAD and require intervention. Excellent work exists regarding the development of plausible mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD; however, these mechanisms have yet to be proven. Therefore, the evidence in this domain can only be rated as fair.

 

 

Finally, the evidence is incomplete for one important criterion: response to treatment. Only one study has been designed to examine the effect of depression treatments on cardiac risk reduction. This study (the ENRICHD trial13) was a treatment study of post-MI depression that found that cognitive-behavioral therapy did not have a significant impact on reducing recurrent cardiac events.

Based on the most stringent epidemiologic criteria, depression is almost, but not quite, a risk factor for CAD. However, depression is a minor risk factor for CAD, and may someday be considered a major risk factor. While the mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD have not yet been established, the association between depression and subsequent CAD likely occurs via 2 pathways.

The first pathway is behavioral. Patients with depression have diminished self-care, possibly increasing other CAD risk factors such as smoking, poor diet/hyperlipidemia, diabetes, physical inactivity, and obesity.

The second pathway by which depression may lead to CAD is neuroendocrine. Hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and hyperactive sympathomedullary activity may result in elevated cytokine levels, platelet activation, and vascular damage, thereby contributing to CAD.8

TABLE 4

Depression as a risk factor for CAD: a “report card”8

 

Risk factorStrength of evidence
Strength of associationGood
PredictabilityGood
SpecificityFair
ConsistencyGood
Dose-response effectGood
Biological plausibilityFair
Response to treatmentIncomplete

 

Family physician commentary

This case illustrates several important points in the management of depressive symptoms in the family practice setting.

First, patients may present with subsyndromal depressive illness; there is, as yet, no evidence that antidepressants are beneficial in this population, and they expose patients to side effects such as sexual dysfunction.

Second, practitioners in general should not shy away from using beta-blockers where indicated for patients with cardiovascular disease and depression; the link between beta-blockers and depression seems minimal at best.

Third, when patients do present with the syndrome of major depression, it is important to evaluate potential medical contributors (eg, obstructive sleep apnea) when appropriate, and to treat with adequate doses of antidepressants for an adequate duration.

Fourth, the potential effects of depression on the development of CAD give family physicians yet another reason to remain vigilant for the presence of depression in all patients.

Should the FP treat independently? This discussion then leads to the question of when an informal or formal psychiatric consultation is indicated for the treatment of a depressed patient, and when the FP may wish to handle the case independently. The short answer is, of course, “it depends.” As with all areas of medical specialty, FPs will have varying levels of comfort, knowledge, and experience in the treatment of psychiatric disorders, and this will often affect the threshold for obtaining consultation. Furthermore, the number of psychiatric consultants—and thus the opportunity for consultations—varies widely depending on practice location.

Value of informal consultations. In general, FPs are well-equipped to handle patients with uncomplicated major depressive disorder or dysthymia without suicidal ideation or psychotic features. Informal consultation may be useful in cases (as in this case) when it is difficult to distinguish whether the patient meets criteria for major depressive disorder (and therefore requires treatment) or has subthreshold depressive symptoms. In addition, informal consultation can be useful when there is a question about antidepressant agent selection in a specific clinical situation. Finally, informal consultation may be of benefit when there are comorbid psychiatric illnesses, for example, coexisting panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder.

Opting for formal consultation. Formal psychiatric consultation is often useful when there is a mood disorder with suicidal ideation or psychotic features, when the disorder has been refractory to 2 or more adequate trials of an antidepressant, when there is a question of bipolar disorder (for which monotherapy with antidepressants is contraindicated) or substance use disorder, or for progressively worsening depression despite treatment.

Billing and coding. The logistics of billing for the treatment of comorbid psychiatric disorders by primary care physicians vary with the type of payer and from state to state. Because it is often impractical to modify billing procedures with each patient, it is useful for each practice to develop general billing guidelines for psychiatric disorders billed to Medicaid, Medicare, and the most common managed care organizations in the practice. In general, the physician caring for the patient described in this report would bill for hypertension and depression and get paid under the primary diagnosis of hypertension. When in doubt about whether to bill for a psychiatric disorder, primary care clinicians may include the relevant physical symptom in the billing codes, such as fatigue, headache, insomnia and bill under that code.

· Acknowledgments ·

Portions of this article were presented at the Association of Medicine and Psychiatry Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, November 19, 2003.

 

A 56-year-old man who has had borderline hypertension for 2 to 3 years presents at a regularly scheduled office visit with blood pressure of 149/91 mm Hg.

Medical history

 

  • No other significant medical or psychiatric problems
  • Married, with 2 teenaged children
  • Employed as an administrator for an insurance company (>50 hrs/wk)
  • Drinks 3 to 4 alcoholic beverages/wk
  • Does not smoke
  • Enjoys fishing and other outdoor activities
  • Both parents had hypertension; father also had peripheral vascular disease

Examination

 

  • Patient is in no acute distress
  • Approximately 30 pounds over ideal body weight
  • Other vital signs are normal
  • Normal retinal examination, no carotid bruits, and clear lungs. Cardiac rate and rhythm are regular; no abdominal bruits
  • Laboratory studies reveal normal renal function; cholesterol, 184 mg/dL; low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, 129 mg/dL; high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, 55 mg/dL; triglycerides, 163 mg/dL. Electrocardiogram shows no current or prior evidence of ischemia or left-ventricular strain.

Additional information is required in a number of domains. Blood pressure readings should be repeated to make an accurate diagnosis of hypertension. While the patient may have hypertension, only a single blood pressure reading is elevated. The Joint National Committee on Blood Pressure (JNC 7) specifications1 state that 2 such readings on different days are needed to confirm a diagnosis of hypertension. The symptoms of claudication should be investigated. Physical examination should focus on auscultation for bruits and on the examination of eye grounds to further investigate the possibility of peripheral vascular disease (PVD). In addition, a lipid profile should be drawn. While guidelines are conflicting, consideration should be given to assessing a fasting glucose, potassium, and renal function. Other tests, such as a C-reactive protein, are more controversial.2

The patient opts for drug treatment of his hypertension, and begins taking atenolol 50 mg/d (in addition to aspirin 81 mg/d). He is scheduled to follow-up by phone in 1 week to assure compliance and in 3 months in the office.

 

FOLLOW-UP CARE

On a return visit to the office 3 months later, the patient reports the recent onset of fatigue.

Q: What is the differential diagnosis of the patient’s symptoms? What additional information might you like to know? A:__________________________________

____________________________________

On further questioning he reports that he initially tolerated the beta-blocker without problem, but more recently has experienced low energy and poor sleep (with early morning awakening); he acknowledges decreases in libido, interest in pleasurable activities (eg, hunting, fishing), and his ability to concentrate. He has gained 5 to 10 pounds in the last month.

Although he denies feeling “sad,” he says his emotions seem “flat.” He denies having thoughts of suicide, increased anxiety, symptoms of hypomania, or psychotic symptoms. He describes a mild increase in stress at work, and he feels that the process of preparing for his son to go to college had been “a big burden.” He says there are no other stressors.

The patient’s alcohol use has not changed significantly, and he reports being compliant with his new medication regimen.

When his father died 6 years earlier, he experienced similar symptoms; at no other time have such symptoms occurred. The patient reports no other new physical symptoms, and his physical examination is essentially unchanged from the exam conducted 3 months earlier. His vital signs are normal, including a blood pressure of 128/84 mm Hg.

Consider the differential diagnosis of the patient’s abnormal mood and neurovegetative symptoms. In the primary care setting, the differential diagnosis of depressed mood is broad (Table 1 ), including medical disorders and a variety of psychiatric syndromes.

Medical conditions to consider include a medication induced side effect, hypothyroidism (a metabolic masquerader of depression), anemia, sleep disorder (eg, sleep apnea), and alcohol abuse. PVD should also be considered—his symptoms may be secondary to poor perfusion of the cerebral cortex.

TABLE 1

Partial differential diagnosis of depressed mood and neurovegetative symptoms

 

General medical conditions
Endocrine: hypothyroidism, Cushing’s syndrome
Hematologic: anemia
Nutritional: vitamin B12 deficiency
Neurologic: movement disorders (eg, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease), head trauma, seizure disorders
Vascular: peripheral vascular disease, cerebrovascular accident
Sleep disorders: sleep apnea, narcolepsy
Neoplastic: pancreatic, lung, central nervous system neoplasms
Substance abuse disorders
Alcohol, benzodiazepine, or barbiturate dependence
Cocaine or amphetamine withdrawal
Psychiatric disorders
Major depressive disorder
Dysthymia
Adjustment disorder with depressed mood
Bipolar disorder

 

Q: When are depressive symptoms serious enough to warrant treatment?

What effects might beta-blockers be having on his mood, energy level, and libido?

You call a psychiatrist colleague for an informal consultation.

Psychiatrist’s comments

It is important to distinguish major depression from other, less severe depressive syndromes. In major depression, 5 out of 9 symptoms (including depressed mood or anhedonia) are present most of the day nearly every day for 2 weeks.

 

 

With adjustment disorder and so-called minor depression, symptoms are fewer or less persistent (Table 2).

This distinction is important, as antidepressants are effective for major depression, but they have not yet been shown effective for adjustment disorders or minor depression. Major depression is the “hypertension of mental illness in primary care”—common, often undiagnosed, and associated with poor outcomes. Therefore, accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment for major depression are essential.

Given the possibility of a depressive syndrome, gather further information to determine the duration of ongoing symptoms, and obtain answers to a short questionnaire (eg, the Beck Depression Inventory [BDI]3 or the PHQ-94). Elicit a family history of mood disorder, or personal history suggestive of thyroid dysfunction, a sleep disorder, or alcohol or drug abuse. Order a complete blood count (CBC) to evaluate for anemia, a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to evaluate for hypothyroidism, and, if indicated by history, a sleep study.

Beta-blockers and depression. The patient’s symptoms developed in the context of beta-blocker therapy. From the 1970s through the 1990s, the lore was that beta-blockers caused depression and should be avoided in patients with a history of depression. Because of this, many patients with myocardial infarction (MI) and congestive heart failure (CHF) have been denied treatment with beta-blockers when otherwise indicated.

Fortunately, a recent rigorous academic study of this issue was conducted by Ko and colleagues5 to rationally guide treatment. This study involved a meta-analysis of 15 randomized controlled trials of beta-blocker therapy in patients with MI, CHF, or hypertension; the authors found that beta-blockers were associated with a slight (though statistically significant) increase in fatigue and sexual dysfunction, and that their use was not associated with depressive symptoms. This is the best review to date of beta-blockers and depression, and it debunks the myth that beta-blockers cause depression—a myth that has prevented many post-MI patients from receiving much-needed beta-blocker therapy. In short, although idiosyncratic reactions are possible, it is unlikely the patient’s use of atenolol caused his apparent depressive symptoms.

TABLE 2

Major depression, minor depression, and adjustment disorder

 

Major depressive disorder
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 5 (out of 9) depressive symptoms, and resulting in functional impairment.
Minor depression (research criteria)
Requires depressed mood or loss of interest/pleasure (anhedonia) most of the day, nearly every day for 2 weeks, with a total of 2 to 4 depressive symptoms, and without history of major depressive disorder.
Adjustment disorder
Mood or anxiety symptoms occur within 3 months of a stressful life event. Such symptoms are in excess of the symptoms that would normally be expected as a result of the event or impair function. The symptoms do not meet criteria for major depressive disorder, bereavement, or another major psychiatric disorder.
Source: Adapted from DSM-IV.14

Further primary care evaluation

The patient has no cold intolerance or other symptoms of thyroid dysfunction. He does report a long history of snoring, confirmed by his wife. However, he did not notice feeling more fatigued after starting atenolol.Nonetheless, you switch his antihypertensive medication from atenolol to hydrochlorothiazide. In addition, you order a CBC, serum chemistries, a thyroid panel, and a sleep study. The patient is told to return for a follow-up appointment in 2 weeks and to call before that if symptoms worsen.

 

Q: Is this recommended course of treatment reasonable? What other options are available for the patient?

A:_______________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

_________________________________________

In this situation, the evidence (depressive symptoms in the context of good blood-pressure control) was insufficient to justify a switch from a beta-blocker to hydrochlorothiazide. One could argue that the switch was reasonable regardless of his depressive symptoms; the most recent guidelines from JNC 71 indicate that thiazide diuretics are first-line therapy for hypertension in patients without CAD, and that beta-blockers are not the first-line agent in the patient’s clinical situation.

But discontinuing atenolol because of ongoing depressive symptoms is not supported. The patient may well need a beta-blocker in the future (eg, if he were to develop CAD). By prematurely concluding that the beta-blocker caused adverse effects, we may be denying him an important treatment down the road.

Option 1: 2-week drug holiday

If there was concern that the patient was having an idiosyncratic reaction to atenolol, or if he developed substantial fatigue or sexual dysfunction, a 2-week drug holiday could be conducted while carefully monitoring blood pressure and depressive symptoms. Atenolol could then be restarted to identify a temporal relationship between the symptoms and the medication.

Option 2: Treat for depression

 

 

Another option would be to treat the patient as if his symptoms represented depression. Exhibiting 4 of the necessary diagnostic criteria, the patient nearly qualifies for a diagnosis of current major depression. An antidepressant could be started, exercise could be prescribed, or a referral could be made for psychotherapy. However, again there is insufficient evidence that his subsyndromal depression will respond to standard treatments designed for major depressive disorder.

The patient returns as scheduled 2 weeks later. He has tolerated the change in blood pressure medications without difficulty, but he is experiencing persistent anhedonia, terminal insomnia, and low levels of concentration, energy, and libido. He has felt increasingly hopeless and worthless over the past 2 weeks, though he denies having thoughts of suicide. Results on CBC, serum chemistries, thyroid panel, and sleep study are all unremarkable.

The patient now clearly meets criteria for a major depressive episode. As a first step, he should be educated about depression. An excellent self-help book is Getting Your Life Back by Wright and Basco.6 The patient should be taught to monitor his symptoms with the BDI3 or the PHQ-94 to better assess the severity of the current episode, to monitor changes in his symptoms, and to rapidly identify relapses.

Most physicians would start an antidepressant, unless the patient had significant objections. Other treatment options, alone or in concert with antidepressant treatment, include exercise or psychotherapy. The patient is an excellent candidate for exercise, given that he has 3 risk factors for CAD: hypertension, a sedentary lifestyle, and obesity (4, if you include depression). Exercising for at least 30 minutes, 2 to 3 times per week, would likely benefit his physical and mental health. In addition to its cardiac benefits, exercise 3 times weekly was found in at least one trial to be as effective as sertraline in treating major depression in outpatients.7

Choosing an antidepressant. A number of factors should be considered in choosing antidepressants, including efficacy, side effect profile, and cost. Table 3 outlines some of the main considerations in the choice of antidepressants for this patient. Note that tricyclic antidepressants are not listed, being contraindicated in CAD because of their tendency to contribute to arrhythmias in the post-MI period. In this patient’s case, mirtazapine should be avoided because of the possibility of weight gain; venlafaxine should be avoided because of hypertension. Sertraline would be an appropriate choice, given that it has been relatively well-studied in persons with CAD.

The patient begins treatment with fluoxetine (10 mg/d, which is then increased to 20 mg/d after several days). His depressive symptoms gradually diminish; he achieves a “50%” reduction of symptoms at follow-up visit 3 weeks later. Two months after fluoxetine was initiated, the patient is nearly euthymic, reporting only 2 depressive symptoms, and is again engaging in usual recreational activities.

TABLE 3

A comparison of antidepressants in the treatment of depressed patients in cardiac populations

 

MedicationClass/mechanismRisks/side effectsBenefits
CitalopramSSRI Low cost, minimal drug-drug interactions
EscitalopramSSRINewest/least studied agentLow cost, minimal drug-drug interactions, possibly faster onset and fewer side effects
FluoxetineSSRILong half-life, more drug-drug interactions 
ParoxetineSSRISedation, mild anticholinergic effects 
SertralineSSRISedation, mildBest studied in CAD; few drug interactions
MirtazapineAtypical antidepressant (5HT2, 5HT3, and alpha2 refceptor blockade)Sedation, weight gain, possible elevation of lipidsNo sexual dysfunction
VenlafaxineSelective serotonin and norepinephrine receptor blockadeElevated blood pressure in 13% at doses of 300 mg or greater 
BupropionIncreases noradrenergic and dopaminergic activityInitial anxietyNo sexual dysfunction
SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; CAD, coronary artery disease

 

Conclusions

Q: Is depression, like hypertension, a risk factor for the development of coronary artery disease (CAD)? A:____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________

Whether depression is a risk factor for CAD depends on how one defines a risk factor and whether one is discussing “major” or “minor” risk factors. At least 15 narrative reviews have been written on the relationship between depression and heart disease, but none has examined the epidemiologic evidence for depression as a major risk factor for CAD (Table 4).8

In looking at the 7 main epidemiologic criteria for a risk factor, depression does very well on 4: strength of association, consistency, dose-response effect, and predictability. Numerous studies have shown that depression is clearly and consistently associated with the development of CAD, and that clinical depression appears to predict CAD more robustly than does depressed mood alone.9-12

On 2 of the criteria, specificity and biological plausibility, there is fair evidence for depression as a CAD risk factor. We do not yet know the relative importance of recurrent major depression, dysthymia, BDI scores of 10 or greater, or some other marker of depression as predictors of CAD.

Because mild depressive symptoms may predict CAD, it is unclear what levels of depression increase the risk of CAD and require intervention. Excellent work exists regarding the development of plausible mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD; however, these mechanisms have yet to be proven. Therefore, the evidence in this domain can only be rated as fair.

 

 

Finally, the evidence is incomplete for one important criterion: response to treatment. Only one study has been designed to examine the effect of depression treatments on cardiac risk reduction. This study (the ENRICHD trial13) was a treatment study of post-MI depression that found that cognitive-behavioral therapy did not have a significant impact on reducing recurrent cardiac events.

Based on the most stringent epidemiologic criteria, depression is almost, but not quite, a risk factor for CAD. However, depression is a minor risk factor for CAD, and may someday be considered a major risk factor. While the mechanisms by which depression may lead to CAD have not yet been established, the association between depression and subsequent CAD likely occurs via 2 pathways.

The first pathway is behavioral. Patients with depression have diminished self-care, possibly increasing other CAD risk factors such as smoking, poor diet/hyperlipidemia, diabetes, physical inactivity, and obesity.

The second pathway by which depression may lead to CAD is neuroendocrine. Hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and hyperactive sympathomedullary activity may result in elevated cytokine levels, platelet activation, and vascular damage, thereby contributing to CAD.8

TABLE 4

Depression as a risk factor for CAD: a “report card”8

 

Risk factorStrength of evidence
Strength of associationGood
PredictabilityGood
SpecificityFair
ConsistencyGood
Dose-response effectGood
Biological plausibilityFair
Response to treatmentIncomplete

 

Family physician commentary

This case illustrates several important points in the management of depressive symptoms in the family practice setting.

First, patients may present with subsyndromal depressive illness; there is, as yet, no evidence that antidepressants are beneficial in this population, and they expose patients to side effects such as sexual dysfunction.

Second, practitioners in general should not shy away from using beta-blockers where indicated for patients with cardiovascular disease and depression; the link between beta-blockers and depression seems minimal at best.

Third, when patients do present with the syndrome of major depression, it is important to evaluate potential medical contributors (eg, obstructive sleep apnea) when appropriate, and to treat with adequate doses of antidepressants for an adequate duration.

Fourth, the potential effects of depression on the development of CAD give family physicians yet another reason to remain vigilant for the presence of depression in all patients.

Should the FP treat independently? This discussion then leads to the question of when an informal or formal psychiatric consultation is indicated for the treatment of a depressed patient, and when the FP may wish to handle the case independently. The short answer is, of course, “it depends.” As with all areas of medical specialty, FPs will have varying levels of comfort, knowledge, and experience in the treatment of psychiatric disorders, and this will often affect the threshold for obtaining consultation. Furthermore, the number of psychiatric consultants—and thus the opportunity for consultations—varies widely depending on practice location.

Value of informal consultations. In general, FPs are well-equipped to handle patients with uncomplicated major depressive disorder or dysthymia without suicidal ideation or psychotic features. Informal consultation may be useful in cases (as in this case) when it is difficult to distinguish whether the patient meets criteria for major depressive disorder (and therefore requires treatment) or has subthreshold depressive symptoms. In addition, informal consultation can be useful when there is a question about antidepressant agent selection in a specific clinical situation. Finally, informal consultation may be of benefit when there are comorbid psychiatric illnesses, for example, coexisting panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and major depressive disorder.

Opting for formal consultation. Formal psychiatric consultation is often useful when there is a mood disorder with suicidal ideation or psychotic features, when the disorder has been refractory to 2 or more adequate trials of an antidepressant, when there is a question of bipolar disorder (for which monotherapy with antidepressants is contraindicated) or substance use disorder, or for progressively worsening depression despite treatment.

Billing and coding. The logistics of billing for the treatment of comorbid psychiatric disorders by primary care physicians vary with the type of payer and from state to state. Because it is often impractical to modify billing procedures with each patient, it is useful for each practice to develop general billing guidelines for psychiatric disorders billed to Medicaid, Medicare, and the most common managed care organizations in the practice. In general, the physician caring for the patient described in this report would bill for hypertension and depression and get paid under the primary diagnosis of hypertension. When in doubt about whether to bill for a psychiatric disorder, primary care clinicians may include the relevant physical symptom in the billing codes, such as fatigue, headache, insomnia and bill under that code.

· Acknowledgments ·

Portions of this article were presented at the Association of Medicine and Psychiatry Annual Meeting, San Diego, California, November 19, 2003.

References

 

1. Chobanian AV, Bakris GL, Black HR, et al. The Seventh Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Pressure: the JNC 7 report. JAMA. 2003;289:2560-2572.

2. Danesh J, Wheeler JG, Hirschfield GM, et al. C-reactive protein and other circulating markers of inflammation in the prediction of coronary heart disease. N Engl J Med 2004;350:1387-1397.

3. Beck AT. Beck Depression Inventory. In: Test Critiques, Vol II,. Deyser DJ, Sweetland RC (eds). Kansas City, Mo: Test Corporation of America; 1985;83-87.

4. Spitzer RL, Kroenke K, Williams JB. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. J Gen Intern Med 2001;16:606-613.

5. Ko DT, Hebert PR, Coffey CS, et al. Beta-blocker therapy and symptoms of depression, fatigue, and sexual dysfunction. JAMA. 2002;288:351-357.

6. Basco MR, Wright JH. Getting Your Life Back: The complete Guide to Recovery from Depression. New York: Touchstone; 2002;

7. Blumenthal JA, Babyak MA, Moore KA, et al. Effects of exercise training on older patients with major depression. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159:2349-2356.

8. Wulsin LR. Is depression a major risk factor for coronary disease? A systematic review of the epidemiologic evidence. Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2004;12:79-93.

9. Barefoot JC, Helms MJ, Mark DB, et al. Depression and long-term mortality risk in patients with coronary artery disease. Am J Cardiol. 1996;78:613-617.

10. Anda R, Williamson D, Jones D, et al. Depressed affect, hopelessness, and the risk of ischemic heart disease in a cohort of U.S. adults. Epidemiology 1993;4:285-294.

11. Ford DE, Mead LA, Chang PF, et al. Depression is a risk factor for coronary artery disease in men: the Precursors Study. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:1422-1426.

12. Rugulies R. Depression as a predictor for coronary heart disease. a review and meta-analysis. Am J Prev Med 2002;23:51-61.

13. Berkman LF, Blumenthal J, Burg M, et al. Effects of treating depression and low perceived social support on clinical events after myocardial infarction: the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Randomized Trial. JAMA 2003;289:3106-3116.

14. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th ed.Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1994.

Drug brand names

 

  • Atenolol • Tenormin
  • Bupropion • Wellbutrin
  • Citalopram • Celexa
  • Escitalopram • Lexapro
  • Fluoxetine • Prozac
  • Hydrochlorothiazide • Esidrix, HydroDIURIL, Oretic
  • Mirtazapine • Remeron
  • Paroxetine • Paxil
  • Sertraline • Zoloft
  • Venlafaxine • Effexor
References

 

1. Chobanian AV, Bakris GL, Black HR, et al. The Seventh Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Pressure: the JNC 7 report. JAMA. 2003;289:2560-2572.

2. Danesh J, Wheeler JG, Hirschfield GM, et al. C-reactive protein and other circulating markers of inflammation in the prediction of coronary heart disease. N Engl J Med 2004;350:1387-1397.

3. Beck AT. Beck Depression Inventory. In: Test Critiques, Vol II,. Deyser DJ, Sweetland RC (eds). Kansas City, Mo: Test Corporation of America; 1985;83-87.

4. Spitzer RL, Kroenke K, Williams JB. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. J Gen Intern Med 2001;16:606-613.

5. Ko DT, Hebert PR, Coffey CS, et al. Beta-blocker therapy and symptoms of depression, fatigue, and sexual dysfunction. JAMA. 2002;288:351-357.

6. Basco MR, Wright JH. Getting Your Life Back: The complete Guide to Recovery from Depression. New York: Touchstone; 2002;

7. Blumenthal JA, Babyak MA, Moore KA, et al. Effects of exercise training on older patients with major depression. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159:2349-2356.

8. Wulsin LR. Is depression a major risk factor for coronary disease? A systematic review of the epidemiologic evidence. Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2004;12:79-93.

9. Barefoot JC, Helms MJ, Mark DB, et al. Depression and long-term mortality risk in patients with coronary artery disease. Am J Cardiol. 1996;78:613-617.

10. Anda R, Williamson D, Jones D, et al. Depressed affect, hopelessness, and the risk of ischemic heart disease in a cohort of U.S. adults. Epidemiology 1993;4:285-294.

11. Ford DE, Mead LA, Chang PF, et al. Depression is a risk factor for coronary artery disease in men: the Precursors Study. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:1422-1426.

12. Rugulies R. Depression as a predictor for coronary heart disease. a review and meta-analysis. Am J Prev Med 2002;23:51-61.

13. Berkman LF, Blumenthal J, Burg M, et al. Effects of treating depression and low perceived social support on clinical events after myocardial infarction: the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Randomized Trial. JAMA 2003;289:3106-3116.

14. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th ed.Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1994.

Drug brand names

 

  • Atenolol • Tenormin
  • Bupropion • Wellbutrin
  • Citalopram • Celexa
  • Escitalopram • Lexapro
  • Fluoxetine • Prozac
  • Hydrochlorothiazide • Esidrix, HydroDIURIL, Oretic
  • Mirtazapine • Remeron
  • Paroxetine • Paxil
  • Sertraline • Zoloft
  • Venlafaxine • Effexor
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