Question 2
You are working in the adolescent mental health inpatient ward. Tara is a 17-year-old girl, who
 was admitted to the ward last night from the emergency department (ED). In the ED she was
 described as being agitated, angry and threatening. Her parents brought her in and are very
 concerned about her. No significant medical issues were identified during assessment in the ED
 and she was admitted to the adolescent ward for assessment and management.
 Her parents said that her behaviour had changed about 3 months ago. She was a good natured
 and sociable person up until then; she had been good in her studies and was also good in sports.
 However, in the last few months she had not being doing well school and had in fact stopped
 attending for the last few weeks. She performed poorly in her last school test about 2 months ago.
 She had become withdrawn and isolated. Her parents suspected she had been going out with a
 group of friends who were using alcohol and cannabis, but had stopped this social contact, often
 now using cannabis by herself. They reported that she has been behaving oddly also, more
 recently.
 Her paternal uncle is reported to have had schizophrenia and needed to be hospitalised on
 several occasions. Tara is the second of three children to her parents and lives in an intact family.
 There is no history of any significant medical issues in the past and Tara has not had any contact
 with mental health services before.
 Your registrar is away on training today and your consultant has requested that you review this
 patient urgently and then discuss with him. The patient has been insisting on going home and
 ward staff are concerned.
 Your tasks are to:
  Elicit further relevant information from the examiner regarding Tara’s presentation in order to
    help you understand her current difficulties, including risks to herself and/or others
  Develop an appropriate management plan for her and describe that to the examiner, focusing
    upon immediate and medium to longer-term issues that would require attention
Provisional Diagnosis
First Episode Psychosis in the context of cannabis use and family history of schizophrenia
*Diagnostic criteria for brief psychotic episode
            >1/4 POSITIVE symptoms of criterion A for at least >1 day but <1 month with
           at least one of (1), (2) or (3)
                      Hallucinations (1)
                      Delusions (2)
                      Formal Thought Disorder (3)
                      Catatonic behaviour/grossly disorganise (4)
                      Negative symptoms – affective flattening, alogia, anhedonia, avolition,
               asociality
Differential Diagnoses:
   Psychotic Disorders
              Drug-induced psychosis
              Schizophreniform disorder
              Schizoaffective disorder
              Schizophrenia
   Mood disorders
              Bipolar Affective Disorder
              Major Depressive Episode
   Personality Disorders
              Cluster A: paranoid, schizotypal, schizoid
   Organic causes
              Space occupying lesion
              Head trauma
              Electrolyte abnormalities
              Hypothyroidism
              Cancer/Infection
Approach:
When talking to Tara and her family I would use a non-judgmental, open-minded and
collaborative approach.
It is important to consider the safety of all parties involves in the assessment:
 Sit close to the exit - >2m away from the patient
 Have appropriate security/duress alarm
 Be prepared to de-escalate the situation if need be (verbal and security
Assessment and management:
   History/collateral, risk assessment, examination (MSE)
   For the sake of being thorough it may be appropriate to repeat physical examination (in
    the presence of parents/chaperone) and review investigations completed to exclude
    organic cause
   Management should be done according to the biopsychosocial framework
Clinical History (from patient and collateral obtained from parents)
History of Presenting Complaint
 Initially attempt to take a history from Tara
              Symptoms of depression (M-SIGECAPS 5/9 for more than 2 weeks)
             Mood
             Sleep
             Interest
             Guilt
             Energy
             Concentration
             Appetite
             Psychomotor changes
             Suicidality
             Symptoms of mania (GST-PAID 3/7 for more than 1 week)
            Grandiosity
            Sleep – feeling rested after only 3 hours
            Talkative (pressured, hard to interrupt)
            Pleasurable activities, painful consequences – disinhibition
            Activity – social/sexual/psychomotor agitation
            Ideas (flight of) – lots of ideas, how many do you accomplish
            Distractible
            Note that hypomanic episodes are the same but last 2-4 days and do not
           cause social/occupational dysfunction
             Symptoms of anxiety *waTCH-ERS (3/6 for 6 months)
            Worry
            Anxiety
            Tension in muscles
            Concentration difficulty
            Hyperarousal – irritability
            Energy decreased
            Restlessness
            Sleep disturbances
             Ask about psychotic symptoms (delusions, A/V hallucinations, thought
       disorder)
             Screen for organic causes (illness, drug intoxication/withdrawal)
             Screen for impairment in social, occupation or other important areas of
       functioning)
Risk assessment
 Offer to do a HCR-20 for assessing risk of violence
 Screen for deliberate self-harm, suicidal and homicidal ideation/activity
               Risk to self (suicide, impulsive, auditory hallucinations, isolation, reputation,
        financial harm)
             Females attempt suicide 4x more often than men
             Assess suicidal: ideation/plan/intent/access/prior action/protective factors
               Risk to others (homicidal ideation/activity)
 Vulnerability (lack of insight, any dependents)
 Risk of absconding/non-compliance (any hx of non-compliance, poor insight/judgement)
Screen substance/drug-induced or organic causes
 Alcohol/drugs
 Pain medications
Past Psychiatric Hx
 Including medications (past or ongoing)
 Including previous inpatient/outpatient services
Medical History
   Medical conditions and medications
   Surgeries
   Allergies
Substance History (D&A)
 Important to ask about cigarettes and coffee
 CAGE – cutting down, annoyed about commends, guilty, eye-opener
Developmental Hx
 Anxiety/temperament
 Abuse/domestic violence or any other trauma
           Prenatal and perinatal
           Early childhood (to age 3)
           Middle childhood (to age 11)
           Late childhood (to age 18)
Forensic Hx (arrests, convictions, sentences)
Family Hx (especially of psychiatric illness)
Psychosocial Hx (HEADSS)
 Home
             Family structure
             Any abuse/trauma
             Religious beliefs
 Education/Employment
             Performance in school
 Activity
             Exercise and Eating
             Extracurriculars
             Friend groups
 Drugs
             Illicit drugs
             Alcohol
             Cigarettes/Vaping
 Sexuality
             Relationships
             Sexual activity/orientation
             Gender
 Suicidality
             Discussed previously
Collaborative Hx
 Parents
 GP
Examination
Mental State Examination
ABSEPTICJ
 Appearance
             Age/Sex
             BMI
             Ethnicity
             Self-neglect, evidence of self-harm
 Behaviour
             Eye contact
             Facial expressions
             Mannerisms
             Level of arousal
             Engagement
             Cooperation/attitude to examiner
             Psychomotor activity – akathisia, catatonia
 Speech – rate, tone, volume, fluency, slurring/stuttering/accents
 Emotions
             Mood
             Affect – type, range, appropriateness, congruence with mood
 Perceptual state
             Hallucinations – auditory, visual, olfactory, tactile, gustatory
             Derealisation
             Depersonalisation
 Thought Form – derailment, tangentiality, flight of ideas, incoherence, neologisms,
   thought-blocking, perseveration, echolalia, poverty of thought, poverty of content
 Thought Content
             Delusions
             Obsessions/Compulsions
 Insight
             Do you think there’s anything wrong with you at the moment?
             Do you think your parents/friends would say that there’s something different
      about you?
 Cognition
             Consciousness – alert/intoxicated
             Orientation – time, place, person
             Attention and concentration – serial 7s
             Short-term memory
             Formal MMSE
 Judgement
Physical Examination
 Constitutional symptoms or infection or malignancy
 Signs of hypothyroidism
 Signs of O/D and Intoxication
Investigations
   Screen
              Bedside – urinalysis, drug screen +/- ECG (baseline QT before starting
        antipsychotic + assess metabolic syndrome)
              Laboratory – FBC, EUC/CMP, LFT, TFTs, BSL, blood alcohol levels
              Imaging – CT head or MRI
              Consider LP if considering CNS infection or EEG if seizure history
Management
Given that schizophrenia is a neurodegenerative disorder, it is paramount that individuals
with first episode psychosis receive early intervention.
Short-Term – relieve current symptoms
 Biological
             2nd generation atypical antipsychotics (aripiprazole, quetiapine, olanzapine,
       amisulpride, risperidone)
           Aripiprazole 2.5mg PO OD
                     Up-titrate after 2 weeks to 10-15mg  maximum of 30mg
           Quetiapine – 25mg PO BD
                     Up-titrate after 3+ days to 150mg BD
                     Continue to up-titrate as tolerated  400-800mg daily
           Ensure vitals, metabolic screen, ECG taken prior to commencement of anti-
          psychotics
             +/- anxiolytics for agitation/anxiety/insomnia (SSRI) for 2-6 weeks
             Withdrawal
           Cannabis – supportive treatment
           Alcohol – thiamine, benzos
 Psychological
             Counselling
 Social – early psychosis intervention program
Medium Term
 Biological
             Anti-psychotic treatment
           Follow-up and monitoring for efficacy and side-effects
           If not working 6 weeks after up-titrating to therapeutic dose – taper + add
          new medication
           Consider Clozapine/ECT in treatment-resistant psychosis
             Monitoring and Optimising smoking, nutrition, alcohol, physical activity risk
      factors and metabolic status
 Psychological
             Psychoeducation
             Family intervention
             CBT
                Management of substance use
                CBT, group therapy, support groups, motivational interviewing
   Social
                Case management and linked with early psychosis intervention program
                Monitor performance at school and functioning
                Involvement of GP – mental health plan and management plan
Long-Term
   Biological
              Optimise co-morbidities
              Maintaining lifestyle modifications (nil drug-use, improved sleep, diet and
        exercise)
   Follow-up
              Monitoring for worsening behaviour/aggression, suicidal ideation and
        substance use
              Psychologist referral