Live Grand Rounds: Psychedelic Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Psychiatric Disorders
This talk will review the behavioral pharmacology and treatment of substance use disorders with psilocybin and other classic psychedelics (5HT2A agonists). Early research from the 1950s to 1970s investigated classic psychedelics, primarily LSD, in the treatment of alcoholism and cancer-related distress. Over the last 20 years research has once again investigated psychedelics in the treatment of psychiatric disorders including substance use disorders, cancer-related distress, and depression. This talk will provide a current description of this work as well as a vision for the future.
Category
  • Grand Rounds
  • Mood Disorders
  • Psychiatric Illness
Format
  • Live Webinar
Credits
  • 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
  • 1.00 Psychologists
  • 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
  • 1.00 Participation
Event date January 10, 2024
Live Grand Rounds: Bipolar II Disorder: Recognition and Treatment
Unlike bipolar I disorder (BD I), which has been extensively studied and depicted in popular literature and on screen, bipolar II disorder (BD II) is poorly understood, underdiagnosed, and insufficiently treated. This has often resulted in an over 10-year delay in diagnosis. BD II is mistakenly described a “lesser form” of BD I, despite numerous studies showing comparable illness severity and risk of suicide in these two BD subtypes. Perhaps because of its under-recognition, treatment studies of BD II are limited, and too often results from studies of patients with BD I are simply applied to those with BD II with no direct evidence supporting this practice. BD II is an understudied and unmet treatment challenge in psychiatry. This talk will provide a broad overview of BD II including differential diagnosis, course of illness, suicide risk and evidence-based treatment options.
Category
  • Grand Rounds
  • Mood Disorders
Format
  • Live Webinar
Credits
  • 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
  • 1.00 Psychologists
  • 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
  • 1.00 Participation
Event date January 17, 2024
Live Grand Rounds: Could It Be Mania? The Diagnosis and Treatment of Pediatric Onset Bipolar Disorder
The differential diagnosis of children with severe emotional dysregulation now includes bipolar disorder. Yet, the diagnosis of mania can be difficult to make because of the developmentally different presentation and high rates of comorbidity. Distinguishing bipolar depression from unipolar depression can be difficult and mania and ADHD share many symptoms. This presentation will review the diagnosis of mania in children including research addressing clinical characteristics, comorbidity, course, and treatment.
Category
  • Child & Adolescent
  • Grand Rounds
  • Mood Disorders
Format
  • Live Webinar
Credits
  • 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
  • 1.00 Psychologists
  • 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
  • 1.00 Participation
Event date January 24, 2024
Live Grand Rounds: Difficult to treat depression (DTD): Clinical Value and Research Challenges
Many patients with depression cannot be brought into a state of sustained symptom remission. Sometimes called “treatment resistant” depression, they may be better understood as “difficult to treat depressions” (DTD) because this clinical heuristic promotes the search for treatable pharmacological, psychosocial, and biological/medical obstacles to achieving or sustaining remission. Furthermore, the DTD heuristic recognizes that some depressions may be better managed by optimizing symptom control, quality of life, and daily function, rather than by conducting multiple revisions in treatment from which little, longer-term benefit may be expected. The clinical challenges (e.g., selecting assessments for treatable causes; identifying treatment sequences for specific patients) as well as the research challenges (e.g., defining types of DTD; assessing outcomes) are discussed.
Category
  • Grand Rounds
  • Mood Disorders
Format
  • Live Webinar
Credits
  • 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
  • 1.00 Psychologists
  • 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
  • 1.00 Participation
Event date January 31, 2024
Live Grand Rounds: A Systematic Approach to the Management of Difficult-to-Treat Depression
“Treatment resistant depression (TRD)” is defined when a patient’s depression has failed to respond to two consecutive adequate trails of different antidepressants. This begs the question as to who or what is “resistant”. TRD focuses on non-response, does not take into account the equally challenging situations of lack of a sustained response or intolerance/contraindication/non-acceptance of treatment. “Difficult-to-treat depression (DTD)” is an alternative, more clinically orientated, concept of depression with poor outcomes. It describes depression that continues to cause a burden to the patient despite usual treatment efforts by the clinician. Most importantly, DTD is associated with a chronic, rather than acute, illness model of care. Key to this is holistic, individualised, management identifying factors that may contribute to the poor outcome and which may be tractable. While remission of symptoms is the primary goal of treatment, if this is difficult to achieve, the focus might more appropriately shift towards optimal management of residual symptoms and most importantly improvement in psychosocial functioning and quality of life. This presentation will discuss how to manage DTD systematically using the DTD model of care to optimize not only symptomatic improvement of patients, but also reducing risks of relapse and maximizing improvements in patient’s quality of life.
Category
  • Grand Rounds
  • Mood Disorders
Format
  • Live Webinar
Credits
  • 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
  • 1.00 Psychologists
  • 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
  • 1.00 Participation
Event date February 7, 2024

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