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... diagnosis has also been changed to add specifiers, which include a specifier for mixed episodes and a specifier for anxiety. Although the technical aspects of diagnosis may be complex when comparing patient symptoms and symptom duration, bipolar disorder, whichever form it may take, can lead to seri ...
DIAGNOSIS
DIAGNOSIS

... (5) exaggerated startle response E. Duration of the disturbance (Criteria B, C, D) is more than 1 month. F. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas. Specifiers: »Specifiers allow clinicians to define more uniform groups w ...
Low self-compassion in patients with somatoform disorder
Low self-compassion in patients with somatoform disorder

... somatoform disorders and low self-compassion. If this is true, it could provide new opportunities for the treatment of this complex disorder. Therefore, in this study an explanatory model for somatoform disorder will be proposed in which the individual components are theoretically linked to the elem ...
1 x 10
1 x 10

... quantifiable behavioral questionnaires and school input, is highly ...
Adults With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Adults With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

... hyperactivity/restlessness and impulsivity/self-control — were based on the core symptoms of ADHD as it typically appears in children. Other symptom domains that the researchers believed to be of potential interest in adult patients included executive function e.g., self-regulation, prioritization o ...
Understanding the Cultural, Social, and Biological
Understanding the Cultural, Social, and Biological

... origins,
and
the
environment
in
which
they
thrive.
Fasting
and
expelling
food
from
the
 body
are
not
new
phenomena.
In
Ancient
Greece,
religious
practices
used
fasting
for
 contacting
supernatural
forces
and
avoiding
entry
of
evil
forces
(Kerndt
1982).
In
ancient
 Egypt
the
people
would
limit
their
 ...
Personality Disorders and Coping Among Anxious Older
Personality Disorders and Coping Among Anxious Older

... It is unfortunately apparent that most studies of anxiety and personality have been conducted on younger populations. It is likely, however, that this type of research on older persons has important implications for the assessment and management of older persons with anxiety disorders. For example, ...
PDF - ijcnmh
PDF - ijcnmh

... and autonomic anxiety, tics are usually preceded by shortlived sensory symptoms and feelings of incompleteness. This difference in how RB are experienced by patients has led to their subdivision into two categories: “OCD-like”, or OCD-related compulsions and “Tic-like”, or TS-related impulsions [12, ...
Understanding Bipolar Disorder - British Psychological Society
Understanding Bipolar Disorder - British Psychological Society

... with both ends of the continuum. For example, individuals who experience extreme mood states tend to be very creative, at times have a great deal of energy and often can be high achievers. But they can also experience problems – for example, during periods of elation people sometimes do things that ...
The World Health Organization adult ADHD self
The World Health Organization adult ADHD self

... (ADHD), the World Health Organization (WHO) Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale (ASRS) was developed in conjunction with revision of the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). The current report presents data on concordance of the ASRS and of a short-form ASRS screener with blind clinical ...
Understanding Bipolar Disorder
Understanding Bipolar Disorder

... with both ends of the continuum. For example, individuals who experience extreme mood states tend to be very creative, at times have a great deal of energy and often can be high achievers. But they can also experience problems – for example, during periods of elation people sometimes do things that ...
AttentionDeficitHyperactivity Disorder in Young French Male Prisoners
AttentionDeficitHyperactivity Disorder in Young French Male Prisoners

... diagnosed with ADHD underlines the possible evolution to subsyndromal ADHD in adulthood, with a reduction in the number and intensity of symptoms and behaviors associated with ADHD. In the present study, prevalence of ADHD and subsyndromal ADHD was about 43% in adulthood, which is consistent with pr ...
Depression And Bipolar Disorder - Entertainment Industries Council
Depression And Bipolar Disorder - Entertainment Industries Council

... heart of all we do: education, resources, and recognition. Education provides our creative community with a better understanding of health and social issues and the ways we can each make an impact in addressing these issues. Resources we develop provide the tools for taking action. Recognition we re ...
The Behavioral Activation System and Mania
The Behavioral Activation System and Mania

... after an initial success. These various manifestations of BAS hypersensitivity do not appear to be merely epiphenomena of illness, as they are often well documented among at-risk populations. Several of these properties also appear to be related to the course of manic symptoms over time. Despite the ...
obsession subtypes: relationships with obsessive
obsession subtypes: relationships with obsessive

... behaviours as well (Abramowitz, Whiteside, Lynam, & Kalsy, 2003; Leckman et al., 1997; Summerfeldt et al., 1999): obsessions with aggressive, sexual, religious and somatic themes, with checking behaviours; symmetry obsessions with ordering/ arranging, counting and repeating rituals; contamination ob ...
Comorbid Psychopathology in Autism Spectrum Disorder Comorbid
Comorbid Psychopathology in Autism Spectrum Disorder Comorbid

... that “while verbally intact patients may be reliably diagnosed with a comorbid mood condition, clinicians may be reluctant to diagnose mood disorders in individuals with greater communication impairment” (p. 64). The authors discussed how due to the challenges in assessing mood disorders in individu ...
Validity of the Executive Function Theory of Attention
Validity of the Executive Function Theory of Attention

... of the last three editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual ...
Jeanne Fery - ONNO VAN DER HART PhD
Jeanne Fery - ONNO VAN DER HART PhD

... produced an even more detailed account describing both identity fragmentation and a past history of childhood trauma. Also well described in both accounts are major criteria and associated features of DID as described in present day diagnostic manuals (American Psychiatric Association, 1987, 1994.) ...
Comparison of Ease of Falsification of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Comparison of Ease of Falsification of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity

... While the literature and psychological tests concerning child ADHD are extensive, the study of adolescent and adult ADHD remains a relatively new and unexplored area of psychopathology. Researchers have yet to fully explore factors exclusive to the older ADHD populations (Downey, Stelson, Pomerleau, ...
NIH Public Access
NIH Public Access

... In recent years, there has been growing clinical and scientific interest in youth irritability.1 The importance of irritability in child psychiatry has long been reflected in our psychiatric nosology, where it is a criterion for several emotional and behavioral disorders, including major depressive ...
Generalized worry disorder - DSM-5
Generalized worry disorder - DSM-5

... the prominence of worry in this disorder has led GAD patients to often be referred to as ‘‘pathological’’ or ‘‘chronic’’ worriers. The term pathological is used here in the sense that it distinguishes normal and disordered states, but worry is not specific to GAD. People with other anxiety disorders ...
UNDERSTANDING ABNORMALITY: DEFINITION
UNDERSTANDING ABNORMALITY: DEFINITION

... would be at risk if she drives in this state. In certain situations, the person may report feeling great and describe oneself in positive terms but those around may suggest that s/he is functioning inadequately in her/his personal or work life. In the case mentioned earlier, Raju spent all his savin ...
EMDR Two Model Tx Plans Panic
EMDR Two Model Tx Plans Panic

... This presentation will review strengths and limitations of treatments for PD and PDA with a focus on cognitive and behavioral therapies, pharmacotherapy, and EMDR, and will present two EMDR treatment plans: a Model I plan for PD without agoraphobia or other co-occurring disorders; and a Model II pla ...
Current and Lifetime Comorbidity of the DSM
Current and Lifetime Comorbidity of the DSM

... OR = 1.36; although estimates and significance testing for principal PTSD and DYS should be interpreted with caution because of their low occurrence in the sample), MDD (69%, OR = 1.25), GAD (68%, OR = 1.24), and PDA (62%, OR = 1.14). The principal diagnoses with the lowest overall comorbidity rates ...
Prevalence, Incidence, Impairment, and Course of the Proposed
Prevalence, Incidence, Impairment, and Course of the Proposed

... full threshold status (diagnostic progression), and crossover from one eating disorder diagnosis to another (diagnostic crossover). These data have the potential of further establishing the clinical validity of the new DSM-5 eating disorder diagnostic system. In sum, we examined the lifetime prevale ...
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Depersonalization disorder

Depersonalization disorder (DPD) is a mental disorder in which the sufferer has persistent or recurrent feelings of depersonalization and/or derealization. In the DSM-5 it was combined with Derealization Disorder and renamed to Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder (DDPD). In the DSM-5 it remains classified as a dissociative disorder, while in the ICD-10 it is called depersonalization-derealization syndrome and classified as a neurotic disorder.Symptoms can be classified as either depersonalization or derealization. Depersonalization is described as feeling disconnected or estranged from one's body, thoughts, or emotions. Individuals experiencing depersonalization may report feeling as if they are in a dream or are watching themselves in a movie. They may feel like an outside observer of their own thoughts or body, and often report feeling a loss of control over their thoughts or actions. In some cases, individuals may be unable to accept their reflection as their own, or they may have out-of-body experiences. While depersonalization is a sense of detachment from one's self, derealization is described as detachment from one's surroundings. Individuals experiencing derealization may report perceiving the world around them as foggy, dreamlike/surreal, or visually distorted.In addition to these depersonalization-derealization disorder symptoms, the inner turmoil created by the disorder can result in depression, self-harm, low self-esteem, anxiety attacks, panic attacks, phobias, etc. It can also cause a variety of physical symptoms, including chest pain, blurry vision, nausea, and the sensation of pins and needles in one's arms or legs.Diagnostic criteria for depersonalization-derealization disorder includes, among other symptoms, persistent or recurrent feelings of detachment from one's mental or bodily processes or from one's surroundings. A diagnosis is made when the dissociation is persistent and interferes with the social and/or occupational functions of daily life. However, accurate descriptions of the symptoms are hard to provide due to the subjective nature of depersonalization/derealization and sufferers' ambiguous use of language when describing these episodes.Depersonalization-derealization disorder is thought to be caused largely by severe traumatic lifetime events, including childhood abuse, accidents, natural disasters, war, torture, and bad drug experiences. It is unclear whether genetics play a role; however, there are many neurochemical and hormonal changes in individuals suffering with depersonalization disorder. The disorder is typically associated with cognitive disruptions in early perceptual and attentional processes.Although the disorder is an alteration in the subjective experience of reality, it is not a form of psychosis, as sufferers maintain the ability to distinguish between their own internal experiences and the objective reality of the outside world. During episodic and continuous depersonalization, sufferers can distinguish between reality and fantasy. In other words, their grasp on reality remains stable at all times.While depersonalization-derealization disorder was once considered rare, lifetime experiences with the disorder occur in approximately 1%–2% of the general population. The chronic form of this disorder has a reported prevalence of 0.1 to 1.9% While these numbers may seem small, depersonalization/derealization experiences have been reported by a majority of the general population, with varying degrees of intensity. While brief episodes of depersonalization or derealization can be common in the general population, the disorder is only diagnosed when these symptoms cause significant distress or impair social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
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