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summary - جامعة بابل
summary - جامعة بابل

... in response of psychological factors and a single cause is unlikely. Objectives: To estimate the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in IBS-patients and to evaluate the effect of different demographic factors on its frequency. Methods: This is a cross sectional study that enrolled 55 patients with I ...
Chapter Fourteen: Psychological Disorders Describe and evaluate
Chapter Fourteen: Psychological Disorders Describe and evaluate

... Chapter Fourteen: Psychological Disorders Describe and evaluate the medical model of abnormal behavior. Explain the most commonly used criteria of abnormality. List three stereotypes of people with psychological disorders. List the five diagnostic axes of DSM-IV. Discuss estimates of the prevalence ...
Persistent inability to experience positive events
Persistent inability to experience positive events

... • Note: Changes from DSM-IV-TR criteria are noted in italics. DSM-IV-TR criteria specify that the person’s response to the initial trauma involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror. Criterion D is new to DSM5; the numbing symptoms noted in this category were formerly considered as evidence of av ...
Clinical Practice Guideline for Identification and Treatment
Clinical Practice Guideline for Identification and Treatment

... A practitioner should review reports from a school-based multidisciplinary evaluations and assessments where they exist, from teachers or other school-based professionals; guidance counselors, coaches or leaders of community activities. Assessment should rule out medical causes or coexisting conditi ...
Click to Sample
Click to Sample

... A. Yes. Based on this information, anxiety disorders are probably heritable B. Maybe, but it could be because anxious people behave in a way that means that their relatives are more likely to become anxious C. Maybe, but it could be because of the shared environment between relatives that makes them ...
Psychological Disorders
Psychological Disorders

... and presents a better prognosis for recovery with no recurrance. This is not true for gradual onset schizophrenia. IV. Long-term outcome studies regarding schizophrenia indicate that recovery may be more rapid in developing countries than in the U.S., Europe, or Russia. This may be due to greater ac ...
(CMHD): Slide set - National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health
(CMHD): Slide set - National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health

... slides from this point on are for use by the presenter. For information, the stepped-care table on slide 16 contains action buttons that link to more detailed content (which is stored within slides 25-28). Action buttons only operate when the presentation is in slide show view. The presenter will ne ...
Ch. 18 Section 4: Somatoform Disorders
Ch. 18 Section 4: Somatoform Disorders

... investigated biological factors in mood disorders. Mood disorders, like anxiety disorders, tend to occur more often in the close relatives of affected individuals than they do in the general population. Between 20 and 25 percent of people with mood disorders have a family member who is affected by a ...
Health-PPT - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs
Health-PPT - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs

... talking loudly to no one in particular, is often using words that people around her find unintelligible, and is occasionally barking. When later questioned about her behaviour, she reports that she was talking with a man who had recently died and had briefly been possessed by the spirit of a dog. ...
A mood disorder - Mater Academy Lakes High School
A mood disorder - Mater Academy Lakes High School

... Depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day Little interest or pleasure in almost all activities Significant changes in weight or appetite Sleeping more or less than usually. Lacks serotonin and norepinephrine neurotransmitters. Agitated or decreased level of activity Feelings of worthlessness ...
TAP3_LecturePowerPointSlides_Module31
TAP3_LecturePowerPointSlides_Module31

... • A mood disorder in which a person, for no apparent reason, experiences at least two weeks of – depressed moods, – diminished interest in activities, and – other symptoms, such as feelings of worthlessness. ...
Powerpoint 31 - Mater Academy Lakes High School
Powerpoint 31 - Mater Academy Lakes High School

... • A mood disorder in which a person, for no apparent reason, experiences at least two weeks of – depressed moods, – diminished interest in activities, and – other symptoms, such as feelings of worthlessness. ...
Abnormal Psychology
Abnormal Psychology

... recurrent and persistent thoughts, impulses, or images that are experienced, at some time during the disturbance, as intrusive and inappropriate and that cause marked anxiety or distress the thoughts, impulses, or images are not simply excessive worries about real-life problems the person attempts t ...
Mental Health Diagnosis Training
Mental Health Diagnosis Training

... symptoms, including suicidal ideation. Tonya seems to display a lot of negative thinking and cognitive distortions. For example, she believes that “nobody” likes her and that s/he will “never” be successful in school. Her math teacher often compliments her work, but Tonya dismisses the teacher’s com ...
Plenary Presentation - O'Brien 2013
Plenary Presentation - O'Brien 2013

... Note: This disorder is distinct from Internet gambling, which is included under gambling disorder. 2. Withdrawal symptoms when Internet gaming is taken away. (These symptoms are typically described as irritability, anxiety, or sadness, but there are no physical signs of pharmacological withdrawal.) ...
Psychiatric Disorders in Primary Care
Psychiatric Disorders in Primary Care

... Use support system, resources, suicide prevention Inform family, significant other, close friend Close follow-up Referral to mental health provider If unable to contract or at imminent risk refer for emergency psychiatric assessment. ...
Aggression as a Symptom of Mood
Aggression as a Symptom of Mood

... pervasive developmental disorders (PDD) is unknown but available evidence suggests that it may be as high or possibly even higher than in the general population. Clinic-based studies suggest that depression is the most common psychiatric disorder in PDD, with rates between 30-37% (Ghaziuddin, Ghaziu ...
Psychological Disorders
Psychological Disorders

... to hear voices and checked into a mental health facility then acted normally. Their normal actions taken to be abnormal once they were labeled schizophrenic. ...
The Oppositional Defiant Child
The Oppositional Defiant Child

... don’t always follow the same trajectory. • Disorder is more predictable and implies an underlying cause. It is also a separate category that doesn’t overlap with many other conditions. • In the case of ODD it seems more like a syndrome than a disorder and this is important because we diagnose and tr ...
Mood (s. Affective) Disorders - Viktor`s Notes for the Neurosurgery
Mood (s. Affective) Disorders - Viktor`s Notes for the Neurosurgery

... - interaction of GENETIC, BIOLOGIC and PSYCHOSOCIAL factors determines which individuals will develop mood disorders. Historical concept - EXOGENOUS-ENDOGENOUS DICHOTOMY - endogenous depression (caused by biologic factors) and exogenous depression (caused by loss or other environmental stresses) ...
A Case Report on Somatoform Disorder: Colorful Visual Hallucinations
A Case Report on Somatoform Disorder: Colorful Visual Hallucinations

... The term somatoform drives from the Greek soma for body, and somatoform disorders encompass mind-body interaction in which the brain, in ways still well not understood, sends various signals that impinge on the patient’s awareness, indicating a serious problem in the body [1]. The somatoform disorde ...
NOT the same as Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder
NOT the same as Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder

... Comorbidity is common across the anxiety disorders Major depression is the most common secondary diagnosis About half of patients have two or more secondary diagnoses Comorbidity suggests • Common factors • A relation between anxiety and depression ...
W02 - Psychology
W02 - Psychology

... 14. The percentage of military discharges for psychiatric reasons was highest in: a. World War 2.* b. Korean War. c. Vietnam War. d. Persian Gulf War. e. Equal percentage in all wars. 15. According to current military thinking, it is preferable to treat soldiers suffering from combat exhaustion: a. ...
Developmental Psychopathology
Developmental Psychopathology

... Deficit in development of peer relationships appropriate to developmental level. Lack of spontaneous sharing of things or activities with others. Lack of social or emotional reciprocity. B. Impairment in communication as manifest by at least one of the following: Delay in or total lack of spoken lan ...
Psychological Disorders - BowkerPsych
Psychological Disorders - BowkerPsych

... • A mood disorder in which the person alternates between the hopelessness of depression and the overexcited and unreasonably optimistic state of mania • Formerly called manic-depressive disorder • Many times will follow a cyclical ...
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Schizoaffective disorder



Schizoaffective disorder (abbreviated as SZA or SAD) is a mental disorder characterized by abnormal thought processes and deregulated emotions. The diagnosis is made when the patient has features of both schizophrenia and a mood disorder—either bipolar disorder or depression—but does not strictly meet diagnostic criteria for either alone. The bipolar type is distinguished by symptoms of mania, hypomania, or mixed episode; the depressive type by symptoms of depression only. Common symptoms of the disorder include hallucinations, paranoid delusions, and disorganized speech and thinking. The onset of symptoms usually begins in young adulthood, currently with an uncertain lifetime prevalence because the disorder was redefined, but DSM-IV prevalence estimates were less than 1 percent of the population, in the range of 0.5 to 0.8 percent. Diagnosis is based on observed behavior and the patient's reported experiences.Genetics, neurobiology, early and current environment, behavioral, social, and experiential components appear to be important contributory factors; some recreational and prescription drugs may cause or worsen symptoms. No single isolated organic cause has been found, but extensive evidence exists for abnormalities in the metabolism of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), dopamine, and glutamic acid in people with schizophrenia, psychotic mood disorders, and schizoaffective disorder. People with schizoaffective disorder are likely to have co-occurring conditions, including anxiety disorders and substance use disorder. Social problems such as long-term unemployment, poverty and homelessness are common. The average life expectancy of people with the disorder is shorter than those without it, due to increased physical health problems from an absence of health promoting behaviors including a sedentary lifestyle, and a higher suicide rate.The mainstay of current treatment is antipsychotic medication combined with mood stabilizer medication or antidepressant medication, or both. There is growing concern by some researchers that antidepressants may increase psychosis, mania, and long-term mood episode cycling in the disorder. When there is risk to self or others, usually early in treatment, brief hospitalization may be necessary. Psychiatric rehabilitation, psychotherapy, and vocational rehabilitation are very important for recovery of higher psychosocial function. As a group, people with schizoaffective disorder diagnosed using DSM-IV and ICD-10 criteria have a better outcome than people with schizophrenia, but have variable individual psychosocial functional outcomes compared to people with mood disorders, from worse to the same. Outcomes for people with DSM-5 diagnosed schizoaffective disorder depend on data from prospective cohort studies, which haven't been completed yet.In DSM-5 and ICD-9 (which is being revised to ICD-10, to be published in 2015), schizoaffective disorder is in the same diagnostic class as schizophrenia, but not in the same class as mood disorders. The diagnosis was introduced in 1933, and its definition was slightly changed in the DSM-5, published in May 2013, because the DSM-IV schizoaffective disorder definition leads to excessive misdiagnosis. The changes made to the schizoaffective disorder definition were intended to make the DSM-5 diagnosis more consistent (or reliable), and to substantially reduce the use of the diagnosis. Additionally, the DSM-5 schizoaffective disorder diagnosis can no longer be used for first episode psychosis.
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