Impulse Control Disorders Not Elsewhere Classified
Download
Report
Transcript Impulse Control Disorders Not Elsewhere Classified
Impulse Control Disorders
Not Elsewhere Classified
Intermittent Explosive Disorder,
Kleptomania, Pyromania, Pathological
Gambling, Trichotillomania
Impulse-Control Disorder NOS
Essential Features
of Impulse Control Disorders
Failure to resist an impulse, drive or temptation
to perform potentially harmful act
To self or another; physical or financial
Sense of tension/arousal before committing act
Relief, pleasure, or gratification when act
committed
No motivation or gain planned
Distinguish between purposeful behavior
Presence of motivation & gain in aggressive act
Not a lot of insight
Late adolescence to 3rd decade of life
Other Features
May or may not be present
Conscious resistance to impulse
Preplanning
Guilt, regret or self-reproach after
committing act
Differentiates from antisocial
If addictive
Withdrawal-like symptoms may require
attention
Making a Diagnosis
Heterogeneous & idiosyncratic group of
syndromes
Do not fit in any larger group of illnesses similarly
characterized by loss of control over impulses
ICD disorders so different
impossible to confuse diagnostically
Diagnostic problems
Not quite fulfill criteria for specific ICD diagnosis
Occurs in context of other psychiatric
symptoms/disorders
Review rules of diagnostic precedence
Treatment for Impulse Control Disorders
Difficult to treat
Negative behavior inherently gratifying & reinforcing
Patience & persistence as relapse common
Build relapse into counseling
Little research available
Treatment recommendations tentative
Based primarily on theory & effectiveness
with related disorders
Importance of trusting relationship
Behavioral Techniques
Stress management
Impulse control
Contingency contracting
If-Then
Aversive conditioning
Discourages impulsive behavior
Overcorrection
via public confession & restitution
Assertiveness training
Communication skills
Alleviates interpersonal difficulties
Increases sense of control & power
Other Techniques for Treatment
Attend to correlates
Of behavior, legal, financial, occupational & family difficulties
Leisure activities & increased involvement in career &
family to replace impulsive behavior
Group therapy
Counteracts attraction of impulse through peer confrontation &
support
Medication
Lithium or anticonvulsants
Serzone
Occasionally useful with pyromania & explosive disorders
Intermittent Explosive Disorder
Distinguish from purposeful behavior
Therapeutic hold – act out only to be restrained bkz it is learned & only
way to be touched
Discrete episodes where loss of control of results in serious
assaultive acts or destruction of property
Aggressiveness grossly out of proportion to precipitating events
Does not occur during other mental disorders
Regret may follow
Generalized impulsivity/aggressive may be present
between episodes
Often job loss, school suspension, divorce, difficulties
with relationships, accidents, hospitalizations, or
incarceration
More common in males
Apparently rare (information is lacking)
Differential Diagnosis
Aggressive behavior in context of many other disorders
Differentiate between spoiled children
Rule out Psychotic Disorders, ASPD, BPD, ODD, CD,
manic episode, & Schizophrenia
Consider aggressive outbursts associated with
psychoactive substance-induced intoxication or
substance-withdrawal
Rule out Delirium, Dementia with behavioral disturbance
In forensic setting, may malinger Intermittent Explosive
Disorder to avoid responsibility for behavior
Treatment
Communication Skills
Explore cognitions
Check underlying depression &
anxiety
Family therapy if abuse
Confidentiality problematic
Don’t be foolhardy
Kleptomania
Recurrent failure to resist impulses to steal
objects not needed for personal use or for their
monetary value
Increasing sense of tension immediately
before committing theft
Pleasure, gratification/relief at time of theft
Stealing not committed
to express anger or vengeance
Not a response to a delusion or hallucination
Associated Features
Depression, anxiety,
personality disturbance
Awareness that act is
wrong & senseless
Possible eating disorders
Legal, family, career, &
personal difficulties
Prevalence
Rare
Occurs in fewer that
5% of identified
shoplifters
Appears more in
females
May continue for
years despite
convictions
Differential Diagnosis
Rule out ordinary stealing
R/O malingering, CD, Antisocial PD
Distinguish from:
Intentional stealing during Manic Episode
Stealing in response to delusions as in
Schizophrenia
Stealing as a result of a dementia (elderly)
Treatment -- NO controlled studies
Stress inoculation
Treat depression & anxiety
Family therapy
Breath-holding aversion conditioning
Systematic desensitization
Cognitive behavioral
Monitor antecedents & sense of relief
Diary of thoughts, preoccupations, impulses & behaviors
Assertiveness training
Unassertiveness may cause stealing as indirect way to
strike back
Behavioral treatment
Pyromania
Deliberate fire-setting/more than 1 time
Increased tension prior to fire-setting
Intense pleasure/relief during fire-setting
or as result of witnessing/participating aftermath
Fascination with, curiosity about, attraction
to fire & situational contexts
No typical age at onset
Fire-setting incidents usually episodic
May wax & wane in frequency
Associated Features
May be regular fire-watcher, set off false alarms,
show interest in fire-fighting paraphernalia, seek
employment as firefighter, or as volunteer FF
May be considerable advance preparation
may leave clues
Not motivated by:
monetary gain, sociopolitical ideology, anger, or
revenge, or to conceal criminal activity
Not done;
to improve living circumstances
in response to delusion or hallucination
as result of impaired judgment
Differential Diagnosis
Consider:
developmental
experimentation with fire
intentional fire-setting
making a political
statement
attracting attention or
recognition
Not in conjunction with
impaired judgment
associated with dementia,
MR, or substance
intoxication
Prevalence
About 40% of arson
offenses are under 18
Yet rare in childhood
Juvenile fire-setting
usually associated with
CD, ADHD or Adjustment
Disorder
More often in males
Especially males with
poor social skills &
learning difficulties
Treatment – Lacks Controlled Studies
Trustful relationship
Cognitive behavioral
Treat underlying depression & anxiety
Parenting training/family therapy if needed
Behavioral treatments
Over-correction
Satiation, under controlled conditions
Behavior contracting
Token reinforcement
Special problem-solving skills training
Positive & negative reinforcement
Fire safety & prevention education
Treatment
Medication
Social skills training
Symptom treatments
Systematic Desensitization
Stress inoculation
Limit setting especially important
Bailing out seems to reinforce & perpetuate
behavior
Pathological Gambling – not manic
Persistent & recurrent maladaptive gambling
behavior with 5 of following
Preoccupied with gambling
Increasing amounts of gambling
Repeated unsuccessful efforts to control
Restless/irritable when attempting change
Cyclical gambling – to escape/relieve dysphoria
Chases one’s losses
Lies to conceal involvement
Illegal acts committee
Jeopardized/lost significant relationships, jobs, career
opportunities
Relies on others in dire financial straits
Associated Features
Overconfident, very energetic,
easily bored, “big spender”
Prone to Gen. med. Conditions
due to stress
Possible distortions in thinking
Over concern with approval of
others
Generous to the point of
extravagance
May be workaholic or “binge”
worker who wait for deadlines
to work
Increased rates of Mood D/O,
ADHS, Substance
Abuse/Dependence,
Antisocial, Narcissistic, PBD
Some correlation to marital
problems
20% suicidal
Hidden disorder; not easy to
detect
Intermittent rewards advocate
denial in patient & family
Differential Diagnosis
Consideration of:
social gambling
professional gambling
Is it during a Manic episode?
Not better accounted for as part of mania
Antisocial Personality Disorder
Prevalence & Predisposing Factors,
Prevalence
1-3% adult population
Approximately 1/3 female
Females more apt to use
as depression escape
Females underreport in
treatment; 2-4%
Gamblers Anonymous
May indicate stigma to
female gambling
Predisposition
Inappropriate parental
discipline
Exposure to gambling as
adolescent
High family value on
material/financial symbols
Low family value placed
on savings/budgeting
Course & Familial Pattern
Course
Typically early
adolescence in male
Later in females
Insidious; may be yrs of
social gambling before
greater exposure or as
stressor
Regular or episodic
Chronic typically
Urge increases during
stress, depression
Familial Pattern
More prevalence if
parents diagnosed
Treatment
Trusting relationship
Cognitive behavioral
Underlying depression & anxiety
Family therapy if indicated
Systematic desensitization
Stress inoculation
Referral to Gamblers Anonymous
Inpatient programs – VA hospitals
Limit setting
Crisis management
Trichotillomania
Recurrent pulling out of hair resulting in
noticeable loss
Increasing sense of tension before act or
attempt to resist
Pleasure, gratification/relief when in act
With clinically significant distress or impairment
in social, occupational, or other areas of
functioning
Associated Features
Rituals
(i.e., eating hair, swallowing hair)
Denial of behavior
If onset in adulthood
R/O psychotic disorders
No occur in presence of other people (exc. Family)
Social situations avoided
May have urge to pull other people’s hair
Nail biting, scratching, gnawing & excoriation
Thumb sucking
Co-occurrence of Mood Disorders, Anxiety D/O, MR
Scalp most common area involved
No evidence of scarring or pigmentary change
May involve eyebrows, eyelashes, & beard
Other Factors
Precedence
No better Diagnosis
Not due to Medical
Predisposing Factors
Psychological stress or
psychoactive substance
abuse
May be stress related
Prevalence
College samples suggest
1-2% if past or current
history
Among children, males &
females equal
Among adults, more
Course
Adults report onset in
early childhood
Continuous or come/go
Sites of hair pulling may
vary over time
Treatment
Some pharmacological success
clomipramine & parozetine
Behavior therapy for “habit reversal”
Bitter Chinese herb solution
applied to thumb or thumb post when thumb also involved
Multimodal treatment
Address awareness of feelings, negative self-image combined
with hypnosis
Relaxation techniques
Mild aversive therapy
Simple hypnotic suggestion
Impulse-Control NOS
May not meet any specific impulse-control
disorder
May not meet another mental disorder
having features involving impulse control
described elsewhere in manual
e.g., Substance Dependence, a Paraphillia)