Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative Disorders
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Dissociative Disorders
• Dissociation is defined as an unconscious defense mechanism
involving the separation of any group of mental or behavioral
processes from the rest of the person’s psychic activity.
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• Dissociative disorders are characterized by a disruption of and/or
discontinuity in the normal integration of consciousness, memory,
identity, emotion, perception, body representation, motor control,
and behavior.
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Types of dissociative disorder
o Dissociative identity disorder,
o Dissociative amnesia,
o Depersonalization/derealization disorder,
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• The dissociative disorders are frequently found in the aftermath of
trauma, and many of the symptoms, including embarrassment and
confusion about the symptoms or a desire to hide them, are
influenced by the proximity to trauma.
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• In DSM-5, the dissociative disorders are placed next to, but are not
part of, the trauma- and stressor-related disorders, reflecting the
close relationship between these diagnostic classes.
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1.Dissociative Amnesia
• The main feature is an inability to recall important personal
information, usually of a traumatic or stressful nature, that is too
extensive to be explained by normal forgetfulness.
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• Dissociative amnesia is characterized by an inability to recall
autobiographical information that is inconsistent with normal
forgetting.
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• It may or may not involve purposeful travel or bewildered
wandering (i.e., fugue).
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• For them, awareness of amnesia occurs only when personal
identity is lost or when circumstances make these individuals
aware that autobiographical information is missing (e.g., when they
discover evidence of events they cannot recall or when others tell
them or ask them about events they cannot recall).
• Until and unless this happens, these individuals have "amnesia for
their amnesia."
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• Amnesia is experienced as an essential feature of dissociative
amnesia; individuals may experience localized or selective
amnesia most commonly, or generalized amnesia rarely.
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Diagnostic Criteria of Dissociative Amnesia
A. An inability to recall important autobiographical information,
usually of a traumatic or stressful nature, that is inconsistent with
ordinary forgetting.
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• Specify if :
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Types of Dissociative Amnesia
1. Localized amnesia:
Inability to recall events related to a circumscribed
(restricted) period of time.
Is the most common form of dissociative amnesia.
2. Selective amnesia:
Ability to remember some, but not all, of the events occurring
during a circumscribed period of time.
Thus, the individual may remember part of a traumatic event
but not other parts.
Some individuals report both localized and selective amnesias.
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3. Generalized amnesia:
Failure to recall one's entire life.
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4. Continuous amnesia:
Failure to recall successive events as they occur.
5. Systematized amnesia:
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Epidemiology
• 2 to 6 % of the general population.
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Etiology
• Traumatic experiences such as physical or sexual abuse can induce
the disorder.
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Differential Diagnosis
• Dissociative identity disorder:
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• Amnesias in dissociative identity disorder include:
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• Posttraumatic stress disorder: Some individuals with PTSD cannot
recall part or all of a specific traumatic event (e.g., a rape victim
with depersonalization and/or derealization symptoms who cannot
recall most events for the entire day of the rape).
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• In neurocognitive disorders, memory loss for personal information
is usually surrounded in cognitive, language , affective, attentional,
and behavioral disturbances.
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• Substance-related disorders: In the context of repeated
has no memory.
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• Seizure disorders: Individuals with seizure disorders may exhibit
complex behavior during seizures or post-ictally with subsequent
amnesia.
• Catatonic stupor:
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Comorbidity
• As dissociative amnesia begins to remit, a wide variety of
affective phenomena may surface: dysphoria, grief, rage, shame,
guilt, psychological conflict and turmoil, and suicidal and
homicidal ideation, impulses, and acts.
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• Somatic symptom disorder and conversion disorder (functional
neurological symptom disorder).
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Suicide Risk
• Suicidal and other self-destructive behaviors are common in
individuals with dissociative amnesia.
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Course and Prognosis
• Little is known about the clinical course of dissociative amnesia.
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Treatment of dissociative amnesia
1. Psychotherapy: Supportive psychotherapy (initial stage), Consider
CBT when the patient recovers from the amnesia and Cognitive
therapy for cognitive distortions
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• Medication:
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• This procedure is also occasionally useful in refractory cases of
chronic dissociative amnesia when patients are unresponsive to
other interventions.
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2. Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder
• Depersonalization/derealization disorder is characterized by
clinically significant persistent or recurrent depersonalization
(i.e., experiences of unreality or detachment from one's mind,
self, or body) and/or derealization (i.e., experiences of unreality
or detachment from one's surroundings).
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• There is no evidence of any distinction between individuals with
predominantly depersonalization versus derealization symptoms.
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Diagnostic Criteria
A. The presence of persistent or recurrent experiences of
depersonalization, derealization, or both:
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Diagnosis and Clinical Features
• A number of distinct components comprise the experience of
depersonalization:
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Epidemiology
• Transient depersonalization/derealization symptoms lasting hours
to days are common in the general population.
• Transient experiences of depersonalization and derealization are
extremely common in normal and clinical populations.
• In general, approximately one-half of all adults have experienced
at least one lifetime episode of depersonalization/derealization.
• Lifetime prevalence in U.S. and non-U.S. countries is
approximately 2% (range of 0.8% to 2.8%).
• Depersonalization is found two to four times more in women than
in men.
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• The third most commonly reported psychiatric symptoms, after
depression and anxiety.
is 16 years.
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• Duration of the episodes can vary greatly, from brief (hours or
days) to prolonged (weeks, months, or years).
• Given the rare of disorder onset after age 40 years, in such cases
the individual should be examined more closely for underlying
medical conditions (e.g., brain lesions, seizure disorders, sleep
apnea).
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Risk and Prognostic Factors
• Temperamental: Harm-avoidant temperament, immature
defenses, and both disconnection and over-connection schemata.
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• Environmental: There is a clear association between the disorder
and childhood interpersonal traumas in a substantial portion of
individuals.
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• The most common precipitants of the disorder are:
o Depression
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• Psychodynamic: Traditional psychodynamic formulations have
emphasized the disintegration of the ego or have viewed
depersonalization as an affective response in defense of the ego.
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Neurobiological Theories
• The association of depersonalization with migraines and
marijuana, its generally favorable response to selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).
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DDx
• Depersonalization can result from a medical condition or
neurological condition, intoxication or withdrawal from illicit
drugs, as a side effect of medications, or can be associated with
panic attacks, phobias, PTSD, or acute stress disorder,
schizophrenia, or another dissociative disorder.
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Con’t…
• Drug-related depersonalization is typically transient, but persistent
psychostimulants.
anxiety disorder.
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Con’t…
• Major depressive disorder: Feelings of numbness, deadness,
apathy, and being in a dream are not uncommon in major
depressive episodes.
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Con’t…
• Obsessive-compulsive disorder: Some individuals with
depersonalization/derealization disorder can become obsessively
preoccupied with their subjective experience or develop rituals
checking on the status of their symptoms.
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Con’t…
• Other dissociative disorders: In order to diagnose
depersonalization/derealization disorder, the symptoms should
not occur in the context of another dissociative disorder, such as
dissociative identity disorder.
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Con’t…
• Anxiety disorders: Depersonalization/derealization is one of the
symptoms of panic attacks, increasingly common as panic attack
severity increases.
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Con’t…
• Diagnosis of depersonalization/derealization disorder can be made
if :
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Con’t…
• Psychotic disorders: The presence of intact reality testing
specifically regarding the depersonalization/derealization
symptoms is essential to differentiating depersonalization/
derealization disorder from psychotic disorders.
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Con’t…
• Substance/medication-induced disorders:
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• If the symptoms persist for some time in the absence of any
further substance or medication use, the diagnosis of
depersonalization/ derealization disorder applies.
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• Mental disorders due to another medical condition:
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Comorbidity
• Unipolar depressive disorder and anxiety disorder
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Course and Prognosis
• Depersonalization after traumatic experiences or intoxication
these conditions.
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• Depersonalization disorder itself may have an episodic, relapsing
and remitting, or chronic course.
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Treatment of depersonalization/derealization disorder
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• Some patients with depersonalization disorder respond at best
infrequently and partially to the usual groups of psychiatric
medications, singly or in combination: antidepressants, mood
stabilizers, typical and atypical neuroleptics, and
anticonvulsants.
• Psychotherapy: psychodynamic, cognitive, cognitive-behavioral,
and supportive.
• Stress management stratégies, distraction techniques, réduction of
sensory stimulation, relaxation training, and physical exercise may
be some what helpful in some patients.
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Dissociative Fugue
• Dissociative fugue was deleted as a major diagnostic category in
DSM-5.
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• This is accompanied by confusion about personal identity or even
the assumption of a new identity.
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Etiology
• Traumatic circumstances (i.e., combat, rape, recurrent childhood
sexual abuse, massive social dislocations, natural disasters),
leading to an altered state of consciousness dominated by a wish to
flee (run away) are the underlying cause of most fugue episodes.
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Epidemiology
• The disorder is thought to be more common during natural
disasters, wartime, or times of major social dislocation and
violence.
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Diagnosis and Clinical Features
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• After the termination of a fugue, the patient may experience
perplexity, confusion, trance-like behaviors, depersonalization,
derealization, and conversion symptoms, in addition to amnesia.
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Course and Prognosis
• Most fugues are relatively brief, lasting from hours to days.
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Treatment
• Psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy that focuses on
helping the patient recover memory for identity and recent
experience.
• Hypnotherapy and pharmacologically facilitated interviews are
frequently necessary adjunctive techniques to assist with memory
recovery.
• Patients may need medical treatment for injuries sustained during
the fugue as well as food and sleep.
• Psychiatric hospitalization may be indicated if the patient is an
outpatient.
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3. Dissociative identity disorder
• Dissociative identity disorder, previously called multiple
personality disorder, a persons personality spilt b/n one or more
alternative personality.
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• The identities or personality states, sometimes called alters, self-
states, alter identities, or parts, among other terms, differ from one
another in that each presents as having its own pattern of
perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and
self, in short, its own personality.
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Epidemiology
• Few systematic epidemiological data exist for dissociative identity
disorder.
• The prevalence across genders in that study was 1.6% for males
and 1.4% for females.
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Diagnosis and Clinical Features
• The key feature in diagnosing this disorder is the presence of two
or more distinct personality states.
• There are many other signs and symptoms, this make the
diagnosis difficult.
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• It is easy to mistake patients with this disorder as suffering from
schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder, or malingering.
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Diagnostic Criteria of dissociative identity disorder
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B. Recurrent gaps in the recall of everyday events, important personal
information, and/ or traumatic events that are inconsistent with
ordinary forgetting. (Recurrent amnesia)
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D. The disturbance is not a normal part of a broadly accepted cultural
or religious practice.
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Differential Diagnosis
• Other specified dissociative disorder: May be distinguished
from dissociative identity disorder by the presence of chronic or
recurrent mixed dissociative symptoms that do not meet Criterion
A for dissociative identity disorder or are not accompanied by
recurrent amnesia.
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• Major depressive disorder: Individuals with dissociative identity
disorder are often depressed, and their symptoms may appear to
meet the criteria for a major depressive episode.
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• Bipolar disorders: Individuals with dissociative identity disorder
are often misdiagnosed with a bipolar disorder, most often bipolar
II disorder.
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• Posttraumatic stress disorder: Some traumatized individuals have
disorder.
PTSD only and individuals who have both PTSD and dissociative
identity disorder.
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• Some individuals with PTSD manifest dissociative symptoms that
cognition and mood, and hyperarousal that are focused around the
traumatic event.
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• Individuals with dissociative identity disorder manifest
dissociative symptoms that are not a manifestation of PTSD:
1. Amnesias for many everyday (i.e., non-traumatic) events,
2. Dissociative flashbacks that may be followed by amnesia for
the content of the flashback,
3. Disruptive intrusions (unrelated to traumatic material) by
dissociated identity states into the individual's sense of self and
agency
4. Infrequent, complete changes among different identity states.
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• Psychotic disorders: Dissociative identity disorder may be
confused with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders.
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• Dissociative experiences of identity fragmentation or possession,
and of perceived loss of control over thoughts, feelings, impulses,
and acts, may be confused with signs of formal thought disorder,
such as thought insertion or withdrawal.
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• Individuals with dissociative identity disorder experience these
in a personified way (e.g., "I feel like someone else wants to cry
with my eyes").
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• Substance/medication-induced disorders: Symptoms associated
with the physiological effects of a substance can be distinguished
from dissociative identity disorder if the substance in question is
judged to be etiologically related to the disturbance.
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• Personality disorders: In DID, the individual's longitudinal
variability in personality style (due to inconsistency among
identities) differs from the pervasive and persistent dysfunction in
affect management and interpersonal relationships typical of those
with personality disorders.
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• Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder):
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Comorbidity
• Trauma- and stressor-related disorders(PTSD)
• Depressive disorders,
• Personality disorders (especially avoidant and borderline
personality disorders),
• Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder),
• Somatic symptom disorder,
• Eating disorders,
• Substance-related disorders,
• Obsessive-compulsive disorder, and
• Sleep disorders.
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Suicide Risk
• Over 70% of outpatients with dissociative identity disorder have
attempted suicide;
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Course and Prognosis
• Untreated dissociative identity disorder are thought to continue
involvement in abusive relationships or violent subcultures, or
both, that may result in the traumatization of their children, with
the potential for additional family transmission of the disorder.
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• Other factors that usually indicate a poorer prognosis include:
current victimization.
eating disorders
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TREATMENT
A. Psychotherapy: include psychoanalytic psychotherapy, cognitive
therapy, behavioral therapy, hypnotherapy, and a familiarity with
the psychotherapy and psychopharmacological management of
the traumatized patient.
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B. Psychopharmacological:
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• Recent research suggests that the α1-adrenergic antagonist
prazosin (Minipress) may be helpful for PTSD nightmares.
• But do not meet the full criteria for any of the disorders in the
dissociative disorders diagnostic class.
Dissociative trance
Ganser syndrome
Brainwashing