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Insomnia Symptoms, Nightmares, and Suicide Risk: Duration of
Insomnia Symptoms, Nightmares, and Suicide Risk: Duration of

... individuals without nightmares, those who reported experiencing occasional nightmares were at 57% greater risk to die by suicide, and those who reported experiencing frequent nightmares were at 107% greater risk of suicide (Tanskanen et al., 2001). However, unlike insomnia symptoms, nightmares remai ...
Atypical Development of Resting Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia in Children at
Atypical Development of Resting Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia in Children at

... been inattentive to potential confounds which can inflate effect sizes (e.g., medication, body weight). Another issue has been the causal relationship between RSA and episodes of depression: is low RSA a precursor of depression or simply a correlate of the depressed state? One way to address this iss ...
What School Psychologists Need to Know about DSM‐5 Workshop
What School Psychologists Need to Know about DSM‐5 Workshop

... –  Fears drug companies will to use “loose DSM definiNons”  and promote …  ...
Nightmares and their treatment options
Nightmares and their treatment options

... This would mean that sleep disturbances develop earlier and are not secondary manifestations of PTSD. Neurobiological findings in PTSD sleep disturbance Sleep is regulated by those areas of brain where PTSDrelated changes were found as well. This suggests that stress response, arousal of the organis ...
(V5.0) - Gov.uk
(V5.0) - Gov.uk

...  Service Users diagnosed with borderline personality disorder are well known to exhibit erratic patterns of behaviour, with fluctuations in distress and risk commonplace. Despite increases in risk, decisions are often made to take therapeutic risks rather than immediately increasing the overall le ...
Chapter 16: Specific Disorders and Treatments
Chapter 16: Specific Disorders and Treatments

... affective disorder (SAD) feel good in the summer and seriously depressed in the winter (or good in the winter and depressed in the summer). Seasonal affective disorder is commonest in far northern locations such as Scandinavia, where the summer days are very long and bright and the winter days are v ...
Persistent Depressive Disorder or Dysthymia
Persistent Depressive Disorder or Dysthymia

... 1980 the diagnosis of dysthymia was introduced into the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the DSM-111 (American Psychiatric Association, 1980). At that time, the depressive symptoms of dysthymia were characterized as less severe but of longer duration than t ...
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

... The diagnosis of ADHD is made by careful clinical history.15 A child with ADHD is characterized by a considerable degree of inattentiveness, distractibility, impulsivity, and often hyperactivity that is inappropriate for the developmental stage of the child. Although ADHD is often first observed in ...
ADHD09
ADHD09

... ADHD "attention" problems may be most obvious on specific types of tasks. Children with ADHD have their greatest difficulties with sustaining their attention in responding to tasks - in being vigilant. Problems are usually seen in situations requiring the child to attend over time to rather dull, bo ...
ADHD: We know it when we see it*or do we?
ADHD: We know it when we see it*or do we?

...  diminished ability to think or concentrate or indecisiveness  recurrent thoughts of death, suicidal ideation, suicide attempt ...
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSOMNIA AND DEPRESSION
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSOMNIA AND DEPRESSION

... disturbance as the cause of primary insomnia. This statement should not be considered contradictory to the criteria for diagnosis listed in the DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000) which state that the diagnosis of primary insomnia must not be made if the disturbance occurs exclusively ...
a conceptual history of anxiety and depression - FGW-VU
a conceptual history of anxiety and depression - FGW-VU

... whatever paradigms are currently fashionable in the various branches of science. Moreover, they are always interpretations of a reality which is already interpreted by the afflicted person and those around him. Accordingly, we cannot pretend that depression and anxiety are natural phenomena which ha ...
About ADHD
About ADHD

... Many biological and psychological problems can contribute to symptoms similar to those exhibited by children with ADHD. For example, anxiety, depression and certain types of learning disabilities may cause similar symptoms. In some cases, these other conditions may actually be the primary diagnosis; ...
What Is Insomnia?
What Is Insomnia?

... • Some medications (for example those used to treat colds, allergies, depression, high blood pressure, and asthma) may interfere with sleep • Interferences in normal sleep schedule (jet lag or switching from a day to night shift, for example) ...
Prevalence, Clinical Correlates, and Longitudinal Course of Severe
Prevalence, Clinical Correlates, and Longitudinal Course of Severe

... (Table 1). For these items, a symptom was rated as present if it occurred in at least two settings and was uncontrollable at least some of the time during the rating period. Unlike in Leibenluft et al (2003), here two (instead of three) hyperarousal symptoms were judged as satisfactory to meet SMD c ...
Insomnia - Australasian Sleep Association
Insomnia - Australasian Sleep Association

... long period of unbroken sleep is incorrect and unnecessarily increases worry about sleep when awakenings are experienced. The belief that you cannot function if you get lighter, broken sleep also increases worry and contributes to poor sleep and daytime malaise. Relaxation and Thought Recognition th ...
1/26 Hostility may explain the association between depressive
1/26 Hostility may explain the association between depressive

... provide compelling evidence linking the Type A with mortality and focused attention on hostility as the „toxic‟ component of the Type A [18, 27]. Hostility was actually found to predict mortality [14-18], but null findings have also been reported [28]. Evidence supporting the personality-disease the ...
Myths vs. Facts – Reflections on ADHD
Myths vs. Facts – Reflections on ADHD

... There is a gender difference in associated conditions. Girls are less likely to have a learning disability; lesser risk for depression, conduct disorder, and oppositional defiant disorder than boys with ADHD. ...
Atypical Depression in the 21st Century: Diagnostic and
Atypical Depression in the 21st Century: Diagnostic and

... depression” was used to describe a more severe biologically mediated illness, whereas “nonendogenous depression” or “exogenous depression” referred to a less severe and environmentally mediated condition characterized by mood reactivity.3 It was not until the introduction of the first monoamine oxid ...
depressive disorder - Repatriation Medical Authority
depressive disorder - Repatriation Medical Authority

... (18) being pregnant within the one year before the clinical worsening of depressive disorder; (19) being treated with a drug which is associated in the individual with the development of depressive symptoms during drug therapy, and the cessation or significant reduction of the depressive symptoms wi ...
PTSD Overview
PTSD Overview

... PTSD is a disorder that develops in some people who have seen or lived through a shocking, scary, or dangerous event. It is natural to feel afraid during and after a traumatic situation. Fear triggers many split-second changes in the body to help defend against danger or to avoid it. This “fight-or- ...
Cellular Biology - PathophysiologyMTSUWeatherspoon
Cellular Biology - PathophysiologyMTSUWeatherspoon

... Increased CSF levels of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) Blunted thyrotropin-stimulating hormone (TSH) response to TRH challenge ...
Childhood trauma as a risk factor for
Childhood trauma as a risk factor for

... harmed, are the most common); referential; somatic; religious; grandiose. ...
Stress and Sleep Disturbances in Female College Students
Stress and Sleep Disturbances in Female College Students

... .001), and they slept less during weekdays compared to weekend days (t[102]=6.50, p < .001). Altogether, data indicate they were sleep deprived and their activity (sleep-wake) circadian rhythms were not well-synchronized, which may increase their vulnerability to adverse health outcomes.27 About hal ...
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

... disorder, post traumatic stress disorder, reactive attachment disorder; see Appendices B1 & B2). Treatment (See Table 4) Drug treatment ...
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Mania

Mania is the mood of an abnormally elevated arousal energy level, or ""a state of heightened overall activation with enhanced affective expression together with lability of affect."" Although it is often thought of as a ""mirror image"" to depression, the heightened mood can be either euphoric or irritable and, indeed, as the mania progresses, irritability becomes more prominent and can eventuate in violence. Although bipolar disorder is by far the most common cause of mania, it is a key component of other psychiatric conditions (e.g., schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type; cyclothymia) and may occur secondary to neurologic or general medical conditions, or as a result of substance abuse.The nosology of the various stages of a manic episode has changed over the decades. The word derives from the Greek μανία (mania), ""madness, frenzy"" and the verb μαίνομαι (mainomai), ""to be mad, to rage, to be furious"". In current DSM-5 nomenclature, hypomanic episodes are separated from the more severe full manic ones, which, in turn, are characterized as either mild, moderate, or severe (with or without psychotic features). However, the “staging” of a manic episode – hypomania, or stage I; acute mania, or stage II; and delirious mania, or stage III – remains very useful from a descriptive and differential diagnostic point of view, in particular allowing for a more thorough consideration of the more pronounced manic states, wherein the fundamental signs become increasingly obscured by other symptoms, such as delusions.The cardinal symptoms of mania are the following: heightened mood (either euphoric or irritable); flight of ideas and pressure of speech; and increased energy, decreased need for sleep; and hyperactivity. These cardinal symptoms are often accompanied by the likes of distractibility, disinhibited behaviour, and poor judgement, and, as the mania progresses, become less and less apparent, often obscured by symptoms of psychosis and an overall picture of disorganized and fragmented behaviour.Mania may be caused by drug intoxication (notably stimulants, such as cocaine and methamphetamine), medication side effects (notably SSRIs), and malignancy (the worsening of a condition), to name but a few. Mania, however, is most commonly associated with bipolar disorder, a serious mental illness in which episodes of mania may alternate unpredictably with episodes of depression or periods of euthymia. Gelder, Mayou, and Geddes (2005) suggest that it is vital that mania be predicted in the early stages because otherwise the patient becomes reluctant to comply with the treatment. Those who never experience depression also experience cyclical changes in mood. These cycles are often affected by changes in sleep cycle (too much or too little), diurnal rhythms, and environmental stressors.Mania varies in intensity, from mild mania (hypomania) to delirious mania, marked by such symptoms as a dreamlike clouding of consciousness, florid psychotic disorganization, and incoherent speech. Standardized tools such as Altman Self-Rating Mania Scale and Young Mania Rating Scale can be used to measure severity of manic episodes. Because mania and hypomania have also been associated with creativity and artistic talent, it is not always the case that the clearly manic bipolar person needs or wants medical help; such persons often either retain sufficient self-control to function normally or are unaware that they have ""gone manic"" severely enough to be committed or to commit themselves. Manic persons often can be mistaken for being on drugs or other mind-altering substances.
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