Florida State University College Of Medicine Digital Library delusional disorder Clinical Resources; delusional disorder Patient/Family Resources; Patient/FamilyResources; Dependent personality disorder Clinical Resources; http://fsumed-dl.slis.ua.edu/alpha-index/aa-alpha-individ/d-page.htm
Extractions: Digital Library Alphabetic Browse All Digital Library Resource Topics Beginning with "D" See also: Clinical Resources A-Z Patient/Family Resources A-Z Preventive Medicine Resources A-Z Public Health Resources A-Z ... DiFerrante Syndrome Clinical Resources (MPS VIII) Diffuse Axonal Injury Clinical Resources Diffuse Axonal Injury Patient/Family Resources Digoxin and Digitalis Poisoning Clinical Resources Dilated Cardiomyopathy Clinical Resources ... Dupuytren Contracture Patient/Family Resources Dysmenorrhea Clinical Resources, see Menstruation Disorders Dysmenorrhea Patient/Family Resources, see Menstruation Disorders Dyspareunia Clinical Resources Dyspareunia Patient/Family Resources Dyspepsia Clinical Resources ... Florida State University College of Medicine
Journal Of Psychiatry Includes current issue contents and subscription details.Category Health Medicine Medical Specialties Psychiatry Journals disorder; Cyclothymic disorder; Delirium; delusional disorder; Dementia; Dysthymic Anxiety;Anxiety disorders; Borderline personality disorder; Child Development; Child http://www.medical-library.org/j_psych.htm
Extractions: From the University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Emergency Medicine Search the Medical Library and Previous Issues Instructions for Authors Editors and Contributors References Acute Stress Disorder Anorexia Nervosa Antianxiety Agents Antidepressant Drug Therapy ... Eating Disorders, Anorexia and Bulimia
Paranoid Personality Disorder - New Treatments, April 1, 2003 The disorder may be a premorbid condition in schizophrenia. Differential Diagnosis.delusional disorder Fixed delusions are not seen in personality disorders. http://www.medical-library.org/journals2a/paranoid.htm
Extractions: This page has moved. Click here to view. DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria A pervasive distrust and suspiciousness of others is present without justification beginning by early adulthood and indicated by at least four of the following: The patient suspects others are exploiting, harming, or The patient doubts the loyalty or trustworthiness of others. The patient fears that information given to others will be used maliciously against him. Benign remarks by others or benign events are interpreted as having demeaning or threatening meanings. The patient persistently bears grudges. The patient perceives attacks that are not apparent to others, and is quick to react angrily or to counterattack. The patient repeatedly questions the fidelity of Clinical Features of Paranoid Personality Disorder The patient is often hypervigilant, and constantly looking for data to support his paranoia. Patients are often argumentative and hostile.
Delusional Disorder based on the predominant delusional theme) Erotomanic Somatic/Sexual DysfunctionOdd/Eccentric/Suspicious personality. a dementia, or Psychotic disorder Due to http://www.bipolarconnection.com/DelusionalDisorder.html
Extractions: multiple personality, multiple personality disorder, multiple personalities, multiple personalitys, MPD, dissociative identity disorder, dissociative identities disorder, dissociative identitys disorder, dissociative disorders, DID, split personality, dual personality, dual personalities, dual personalitys, many personalities, many personalitys, abused children, abuse in childhood, physical abuse, physical abuse of children, physical child abuse, child beating, beating children, abusing children, sexually abusing children, emotional abuse, emotional child abuse, emotionally abusing children, rape, childhood rape, rape of children, child abuse, childhood abuse, child sexual abuse, childhood sexual abuse, neglect, child neglect, childhood neglect, abandonment, child abandonment, attachment, attachment disorder, attachment disorders, bonding, bonding disorder, bonding disorders, sexual abuse, flashbacks, flashbacks of abuse, sexual flashbacks, abbreactive therapy, abbreactive 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support networks, treatment network, treatment networks, therapeutic manipulation, emotional manipulation, dissociative manipulation, schizophrenic, schizophrenia, psychotic, psychosis, psychotic episode, psychotic episodes, psychotic break, psychotic breaks, mentally ill, mental illness, misdiagnosis, psychological misdiagnosis, misdiagnosed, returning memories, trauma, traumas, psychological trauma, psychological traumas, psychological scarring, psychological scars, emotional scarring, emotional scars, therapist competence, therapist incompetence, therapeutic competence, therapeutic incompetence, asthma, differential reaction to medication, psychosomatic, psychosomatic symptoms, insensitivity to pain, pain threshold, high pain threshold, suicide, attempted suicide, suicide attempt, suicide attempts, conversion disorder, conversion disorders, conversion reaction, conversion reactions, hysteria, hysterical neurosis, self-hypnosis, self-hypnotic, autohypnotic, autohypnosis, trance, 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Paranoia | Ahealthyme.com Treatment Paranoia that is symptomatic of paranoid schizophrenia, delusional disorder,or paranoid personality disorder should be treated by a psychologist and http://www.ahealthyme.com/topic/topic100587259
Extractions: Paranoid perceptions and behavior may appear as features of a number of mental illnesses, including depression and dementia, but are most prominent in three types of psychological disorders: paranoid schizophrenia, delusional disorder (persecutory type), and paranoid personality disorder (PPD). Individuals with paranoid schizophrenia and persecutory delusional disorder experience what is known as persecutory delusions: an irrational, yet unshakable, belief that someone is plotting against them. Persecutory delusions in paranoid schizophrenia are bizarre, sometimes grandiose, and often accompanied by auditory hallucinations. Delusions experienced by individuals with delusional disorder are more plausible than those experienced by paranoid schizophrenics; not bizarre, though still unjustified. Individuals with delusional disorder may seem offbeat or quirky rather than mentally ill, and, as such, may never seek treatment. Persons with paranoid personality disorder tend to be self-centered, self-important, defensive, and emotionally distant. Their paranoia manifests itself in constant suspicions rather than full-blown delusions. The disorder often impedes social and personal relationships and career advancement. Some individuals with PPD are described as "litigious," as they are constantly initiating frivolous law suits. PPD is more common in men than in women, and typically begins in early adulthood.
Extractions: Do you live your life in extremes? Do you indulge to reckless excess, bingeing on food, sex, drugs, alcohol, or money? Do you stay in debt from gambling or from running your credit cards to the limit with impulsive purchases of clothes, jewelry or high-tech "toys"? Do you cling desperately to relationships, especially those that are abusive, exploitive, or volatile? Are you addicted to the thrill of living on the edge, taking risks that could, in an instant, shatter you or your most valued relationships? If you answered "Yes" to any of these questions, you may have Borderline Personality Disorder. If you are borderline, you may engage in any of the above behaviors in order to alter your mood or change your level of arousal as you desperately struggle to escape either emotional pain and intensity or feelings of emptiness and numbness. If you are borderline, you may at times feel flooded with emotion and at other times feel nothing at all. You may feel euphoric one moment and despairing the next. You may adore someone one moment and despise them the next, feeling nothing in between. Your world may be peopled with heroes and villains, who change from one to the other in an instant. You may view yourself similarly in extremes, feeling special and entitled one moment, worthless or contemptible the next. If you are borderline, you have likely experienced intense emotional pain as a child. You have been unable to develop enduring trust in others or an enduring sense of who you are. In place of the smoothly connecting flow of memories that define identity, your life may seem like a chaotic montage of snapshots that bear little relationship to one another. You may even be aware of long gaps in your personal history for which you have no memory at all. Living from moment to moment with little sense of continuity or meaning, you resort to extreme and desperate measures to make the moment tolerable. You may even hurt yourself physically as a way of coping with intolerable tension. Self-mutilation, while not always present, is perhaps the most striking and shocking symptom of BPD.
Click To Learn More Make sure your expert Ph.D. rules out the possibility that the accuser ispossibly delusional, and suffers from Borderline personality disorder. http://www.fathersworld.com/fatherhood/guestindex.cfm?guest=dean
Extractions: Home About the Faculty Prospective Students Current Students ... Contact Us In this Section: Curriculum Curriculum 2000 Term Dates Objectives ... Retreat 2002 A new graduate should have sufficient knowledge and skills in the following areas to deal with the subsequently listed problems: A newly qualified doctor should have a comprehensive knowledge of clinical phenomena, clinical course, epidemiology and evidence of causal contributions (genetic, psychosocial and cultural) of the following conditions. In addition, they should be able to recognise the signs and symptoms, take a relevant history, perform a comprehensive mental state examination and formulate a diagnostic assessment of the following problems. They should recognise the principles of management including: - physical treatments ++
Extractions: Database Psych Rx Purchase Download the appropriate files below to add the associated diagnostic criteria to Psych Dx . Use of this listing for anything else other than personal exploration, education, or research is strictly prohibited (see ). Symptom lists are not complete, but are instead summarized versions of official diagnostic criteria. Some of the categories listed below are not actual diagnoses, but rather parts of a diagnosis (eg., the descriptions of "episodes"). These symptom lists have been summarized from current diagnostic criteria most commonly used in the United States by mental health professionals. The lists are divided into three broad categories: adult childhood , and personality disorders. Psychdx_axis1a.PDB 77 axis I adult disorders Acute Stress Disorder Adjustment Disorder Agoraphobia Alcohol Dependence/Abuse Amphetamine Dependence/Abuse Anorexia Nervosa Bipolar I Disorder Bipolar II Disorder Body Dysmorphic Disorder Brief Psychotic Disorder Bulimia Nervosa Cannabis Dependence/Abuse Chronic Motor or Vocal Tic Disorder Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder Cocaine Dependence/Abuse Cyclothymia Delirium Delusional Disorder Dementia (Alzheimer's Type) Dementia (Other General Med Conditions) Dissociative AmnesiaDissociative Fugue Dissociative Identity Disorder Dyspareunia Dysthymic Disorder Exhibitionism Female Orgasmic Disorder Female Sexual Arousal Disorder Fetishism Frotteurism
Psych Dx delusional disorder; Dementia General Medical Condition; Dementia Posttraumaticbrain injury; Dementia of the Alzheimer's type; Dependent personality disorder; http://members.rogers.com/medicalpiloteer/psychrx/database.htm
Korean Standard Classification Of Diseases Exclusion asperger's syndrome(F84.5) delusional disorder(F22.0 disorder(F21)F60.2 Dissocial personality disorder personality disorder characterized by http://www.nso.go.kr/eng/standards/edis/f60.htm
Extractions: F60 Specific personality disorders These are severe disturbances in the characterological constitution and behavioural tendencies of the individual; not directly resulting from disease, damage or other insult to the brain, or from another psychiatric disorder; usually involving several areas of the personality; nearly always associated with considerable personal distress and social disruption; and usually manifest since childhood or adolescence and continuing throughout adulthood. F60.0 Paranoid personality disorder Personality disorder characterized but excessive sensitivity to setbacks, unforgiveness of insults, suspiciousness and tendency to distort experience by misconstruing the neutral or friendly actions of others as hostile or contemptuous and a combative and tenacious sense of personal rights. There may be a proneness to pathological jealousy or excessive self-importance, the there is often excessive self-reference. Expansive paranoid personality(disorder) Fanatic personality(disorder) Querulant personality(disorder) Paranoid personality(disorder) Sensitive paranoid personality(disorder) Exclusion : paranoia(F22.0) querulans paranoia(F22.8) paranoid psychosis(F22.0) paranoid schizophrenia(F22.0) paranoid state(F22.0) F60.1 Schizoid personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by withdrawal from affectional, social and other contacts with preference of fantasy, solitary activities, and introspective reserve. There is incapacity to express feeling and to experience pleasure. Exclusion £ºasperger's syndrome(F84.5) delusional disorder(F22.0) schizoid disorder of childhood(F84.5) schizophrenia(F20.-) schizotypal disorder(F21) F60.2 Dissocial personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by disregard for social obligations, lack of feeling for others, and impetuous violence or callous unconcern. There is gross disparity between behaviour and the prevailing social norms. Behaviour is not readily modifiable by experience, including punishment. There is a low tolerance to frustration and a low threshold for discharge of aggression, including violence; there is a tendency to blame others, or to offer plausible rationalizations for the behaviour bringing the subject into conflict with society. Amoral personality(disorder) Antisocial personality(disorder) Asocial personality(disorder) Psychopathic personality(disorder) Sociopathic personality(disorder) Exclusion : conduct disorders(F91.-) emotionally unstable personality disorder(F60.3) F60.3 Emotionally unstable personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by a definite tendency to act impulsively and without consideration of the consequences; the mood is unpredictable and capricious. There is a liability to outbursts of emotions, and an incapacity to control the behavioural explosions. There is a tendency to quarrelsome behaviour and to conflicts with others, especially when impulsive acts are thwarted or censored. Two types may be distinguished; the impulsive type, characterized predominantly by emotional instability and lack of impulse control, and the borderline type, characterized in addition by disturbances in self-image, aims and internal preferences, by intense and unstable interpersonal relationships, and gy tendency to self-destructive behaviour, including suicide gestures and attempts. Aggressive personality(disorder) Borderline personality(disorder) Explosive personality(disorder) Exclusion £ºdissocial personality disorder(F60.2) F60.4 Histrionic personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by shallow and labile affectivity, self-dramatization, theatricality, exaggerated expression of emotions, suggestibility, egocentricity, self-indulgence, lack of consideration for others, easily hurt feelings and continuous craving for appreciation, excitement and attention. Hysterical personality(disorder) Psychoinfantile personality(disorder) F60.5 Anankastic personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by feelings of personal insecurity and doubt, leading to excessive conscientiousness, checking, stubbornness, caution and rigidity. They may be insistent and unwelcome thoughts or impulses which do not attain the severity of an obsessive-compulsive disorder. There is often perfectionism and meticulous accuracy and a need to check repeatedly in an attempt to ensure this. Compulsive personality(disorder) Obsessional personality(disorder) Obsessive-compulsive personality(disorder) F60.6 Anxious[avoidant] personality disorder Personality disorder chacacterized by feelings of tension and apprehension, insecurity and inferiority. There is a continuous yearning to be liked and accepted, a hypersensitivity to rejection and criticism with restricted personal attachments, and a tendency to avoid certain activities out of habitual exaggeration of the potential dangers or risks in everyday situations. F60.7 Dependent personality disorder Personality disorder characterized by pervasive passive reliance on other people to make major and minor life decisions, great fear of abandonment, feelings of helplessness and incompetence, passive compliance with the wishes of elders and others and a weak response to the demands of daily life. Lack of vigour may show itself in the intellectual or emotional spheres; and there is often a tendency to react to adversity by transferring responsibility to others. Asthenic personality(disorder) Inadequate personality(disorder) Passive personality(disorder) Self-defeating personality(disorder) F60.8 Other specific personality disorders Eccentric personality(disorder) "Haltlose" type personality(disorder) Immature personality(disorder) Narcissistic personality(disorder) Passive-aggressive personality(disorder) Psychoneurotic personality(disorder) F60.9 Personality disorder, unspecified Character neurosis NOS Pathological personality NOS
Jacinto Links and resources regarding mental health disorders organized by stages of the life cycle and families Category Health Mental Health disorders Directories delusional disorder Treatment; Brief Psychotic disorder; Shared Psychotic disorder; Amnesia;Dissociative Fuge; Child Abuse and Multiple personality disorder; http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~gjacinto/6123.htm
Extractions: Home Topics Facts Publications Facts CQ PILOTS About PILOTS Term Lists User's Guide Incidents List Persons Lists Obtaining Documents Organizations Scope Searching Intro Search Strategy Mechanics of Searching the PILOTS Database Advanced Search Basic Search Records Browsing Some Things to Note Modifications Thesaurus RQ Research Treatment Assessment DMH Manual Reading Documents Video Assessment About NCPTSD Most Popular Pages: A Systematic Table of the entire thesaurus, along with descriptive and explanatory material, may be viewed or printed in PDF form. Terms in italics are not assigned as descriptors, but are shown to indicate their hierarchical role in the PILOTS Thesaurus. Academic Achievement
Paranoia Mental Health Problems Page Includes * expansive paranoid, fanatic, querulant and sensitive paranoid personality(disorder) Excludes * delusional disorder * schizophrenia personality http://www.nuts.cc/prob/paranoia.html
Extractions: Paranoid Personality Disorder This page provides the World Health Organisations descriptor.Information on other mental health problems can be accessed by selecting an item from the Mental Health Problems drop down menu below. Identification and diagnosis of mental health problems is a complex area that is continually under debate both within and outside the health professions. The On Line Dictionary and Encyclopedia links below may help with understanding the complex terminology. The NHS Direct web site link below may help with further information. Information obtained from these pages is specifically for informational purposes only. Please read the Mental Health Resource Centre MENTAL HEALTH PROLEMS Stress Agoraphobia Alcoholism Anorexia Nervosa Attention Deficit Disorders Autism Bipolar Disorders Bulimia Nervosa Delirium Delusional Dementia Depression Mania Obsessive Compulsion Panic Paranoia Personality Disorder Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Schizophrenia On Line Encyclopedia Online Dictionary
Borderline Personality Disorder can occur in which the Borderline experiences delusional thinking and environment the groundwork is set for developing Borderline personality disorder. http://www.psychadvisor.com/articles/viewart.cfm/ArtID/13
Extractions: Recommend a Link: Category/Type of Link Website Address Disorders First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or Adolescence Mental Retardation, Learning Disorders, Motor Skills Disorder, Communication Disorders, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders, Feeding and Eating Disorders of Infancy or Early Childhood, Tic Disorders , Elimination Disorders, Other Disorders of Infancy, Childhood, or Adolescence, Other Cognitive Disorders. Substance-Related disorders Alcohol-Related Disorders, Amphetamine- Related Disorders, Caffeine-Related Disorders, Cocaine-Related Disorders, Hallucinogen-Related Disorders, Inhalant-Related Disorders, Nicotine-Related Disorders, Opioid-Related Disorders, Phencyclidine-Related Disorders, Sedative-, Hypnotic-, or Anxiolytic-Related Disorders, Polysubstance-Related Disorder. Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders Schizophrenia, Paranoid type, Disorganized type, Catatonic type, Undifferentiated type, Residual type. Schizophreniform Disorder, Schizoaffective Disorder, Delusional Disorder, Brief Psychotic Disorder, Shared Psychotic Disorder, Psychotic Disorder Due to a Medical Condition, with Delusions, with Hallucinations; Psychotic Disorder NOS.
Extractions: Mental Disorders - DSM-IV Introduction: Diagnostic Criteria for the most common mental disorders including: description, diagnosis, treatment, and research findings. This list is a shortened version (incomplete) of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), published by the American Psychiatric Association, Washington D.C., 1994, the main diagnostic reference of Mental Health professionals in the United States of America. 1. - This list of diagnostic criteria is not meant to replace the consultation with a licensed professional trained in testing, assessment and psychological diagnostic but as a general information tool. . . . . . . . . 2. - Improper usage may lead to dangerous conclusion. Affinity Zone or its representatives cannot be held responsible for any decisions you make regarding your mental health treatment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3. - The authors of this website have used the utmost care and professional judgement to select the information presented herein.
Extractions: DWARF INVENTORY OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGY By Dave Robinson, M.D. www.psychler.com The continual reclassification of diagnostic schemes means confusion for everyone. The revision of criteria can cause more frothing at the mouth than a rabies outbreak. The following classification system takes a more holistic approach by amalgamating types of behaviour into clusters, so called Dwarf Prototypes. Familiarization is available to all by way of a short story and training film. DWARF PROTOTYPE CONVENTIONAL DIAGNOSIS Sleepy Narcolepsy, Sleep Apnea Dopey Organic Brain Syndrome, Alcohol and Substance Abuse - Valium Barbiturate Intoxication Bashful Avoidant Personality Disorder, Agoraphobia Depression, Dysthymia Grumpy Schizoid Personality Disorder Borderline Personality Disorder Sneezy Somatoform Disorder, Conversion Disorder Substance Abuse - Cocaine Doc Narcissistic Personality Disorder Obsessive-Compulsive, Hypochondriasis Happy Mania, Delirium, Substance Abuse - Narcotics PROPOSED DWARF PROTOTYPES * Rude Dude Antisocial Personality Disorder Malingering, Factitious Disorder