Posts Tagged ‘Psychiatry’

Addicted and Obsessed

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

As we loom nearer to the publication of the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA’s) publication of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), fifth edition, there are some key changes being made. One of the proposals is to include new addictive disorder – "behavioral addictions" such as gambling. It’s simple enough to dismiss an obsession or compulsion as an addiction, but that refers merely to a cycle that is being perpetuated, not the way in which it is being perpetuated. One of the DSM criteria for both obsessive-compulsive personality disorder and substance-use disorders is that the pattern of behavior leads to disruption in normal social functioning due to the behaviors specific to the disorder. Compulsions are behavioral patterns associated with certain beliefs held by the individual with the disorder, whereas substance-use disorders refer more to the effects of the activation of the pleasure-seeking pathways in the brain when that behavior is engaged, through the use of "substances" such as alcohol or hard drugs.

Psychiatrist Charles O’Brien of the University of Pennsylvania attests that there is adequate brain imaging evidence to make a "pretty strong case that [gambling] activates the reward system in much the same way that a drug does" (935). Researchers in Germany have shown that gamblers show an increase in dopamine, stress hormones, and heart rate compared with non-gamblers. At Yale, brain imaging studies by a research group show that the brains of pathological gamblers resemble those of cocaine addicts – specifically, this shows a decrease in activation in regions that indicated judgment and motivation. This evidence collectively suggests that the
effects of being a "degenerate gambler" have about the same impact internally as being addicted to drugs or alcohol.

Behaviorally, we also see similar effects. Gamblers show impaired social functioning, as their behavior is geared toward feeding their attachment to gambling, much as the concerns of someone addicted to drugs are centered on being able to obtain their next fix. But what about other behavior? For instance, can people be "addicted" to things like sex, the Internet, or a certain genre of books? Here is where the fine distinction between addiction and compulsions comes into play. Like physical substances such as alcohol, behaviors are difficult to control because they could take other forms. If you refuse an alcoholic alcohol, he may turn to smoking instead. If someone is "addicted" to sex, their next recourse will take the form of increasing other pleasure-seeking areas in the brain in the same way that sex once did. It is the behavior of addiction itself that needs to be stopped for the obsession to engage in it to decrease. The compulsions are not addictions, but if the need for the addiction is removed, the compulsion may also decrease. Studies need to be conducted to ascertain the relationship between these factors (compulsion, obsession, and addiction) in behavior.

Blanketing addictive behavior into one DSM diagnosis may encompass a large group of people, but not be geared toward the needs of a specific person or group of people. It’s like a one-size-fits-all glove – it will fit most people’s hands generally well; there will always be outliers, and perhaps their issues are serious enough to warrant attention. But if their particular problems aren’t included in the DSM, how can they be treated fairly? The DSM committees need to recognize foremost that with the advance of technology and a deeper understanding of human behavior must come the acceptance that behavior will keep changing. The only thing to do is meet it – and when necessary, make it easier for people who need help with negative behavior patterns, to get it.

Violence and Vampires – the romantic fantasies of American teens

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

As New Moon hit theaters last week, grossing over $140 million dollars over opening weekend, we are left to wonder what it means to live in a society that has fallen in love with stories about a vampires and werewolves. In the 90’s, many Christian groups opposed the rising popularity of the Harry Potter series when it came out because Deuteronomy 18:10-11 prohibits anything to do with witchcraft and wizardry but New Moon brings a new kind of pagan fantasy. By any account, New Moon is significantly more violent, stressing that the protagonist Bella is always in mortal danger, even from her vampiric love interest, Edward. What is most concerning to psychologists and English majors alike about the series is that, in fictionalized Forks, Washington, depression and domestic violence have never been so sexy.

Twilight, the first novel of the series chronicle’s Edward is obsessed with Bella, climbing into her room to watch her as she sleeps every night, stalking her and disabling her car when he does not want her to go visit a friend. For her part, Bella seems attracted to Edward’s aura of danger, unflinching as he describes his blood lust for her and his instinct to kill her. When Edward dumps her during the course of the series, she collapses into depression and takes suicidal risks so that she can see vision of him.

"The big thing that really makes ‘Twilight’ a really bad book is that fear should never be an aphrodisiac,” says Gina Barreca, an English professor at the University of Connecticut. There is concern that teenagers and preteen fans of Twilight will associate positive attributes with feelings of danger, and put themselves in hazardous situations in relationships and in everyday life.

In addition to Edward’s stalkerish obsession with Bella, and Bella’s determination to put herself in danger, the novel sympathetically depicts domestic violence in the relationship of a character named Sam, a werewolf that loses control during his transformation and severely scars his love interest. She forgives him and proceeds to fall in love with him. Mitru Ciarlante, the youth initiative director for the National Center for Victims of Crimes in Washington, D.C, notes that this is a pattern all too common to cases of domestic violence.

A study published in the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in 2008 concluded that "dating violence is a significant public health problem in adolescent populations” in the United States. Since literature emulates life and teenage life copies popular literature, perhaps someone should notify Stephanie Meyers?

I think, therefore I am

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Phantom pregnancies and other forms of psychologically-induced, physiological symptoms

In the 3rd episode of Fox’s upbeat and unconventional new TV series, Glee!, suburban housewife Terri Shuester was happily pregnant (minus the morning sickness) until some 40 minutes into the episode when a few words from the doctor rendered her barren. Confused? So was she. Apparently, Terri was just never pregnant to begin with.

Terri suffers from a little known psychological affliction called phantom pregnancy – the induction of pregnancy symptoms (amenorrhea, morning sickness, even swelling of the belly) without actually carrying a foetus. Phantom pregnancy have been well documented for some time now;  it was first described by none other than Hippocrates and was an ailment of Queen Mary I, the elder half sister to Queen Elizabeth I, who was rumoured to have suffered not one but two of these during her reign in her desperate attempt to produce a male heir. The cause of 1 to 6 in every 22,000 pregnancies, the phantom pregnancy may be one of the strangest examples of mind over matter.

While some may tout it as a testament to the willpower of humans beings (men and women alike can have phantom pregnancies), the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (IV TR) – the psychiatric bible – lists "pseudocyesis” as a mental disease with serious causes and implications. The most commonplace vignette of a patient suffering from phantom pregnancy paints a middle-aged woman with fertility problems who strongly desires a child – a desire that may be fuelled by depression or unresolved conflicts in her life. This desire is apparently strong enough to manifest in physical symptoms.

There still lies debate on the proper categorization of this ailment, as is expected with a disease that is most commonly published in journals as case studies because the patients can differ widely from one another. While Glee! depicts the most common manifestation of phantom pregnancy in a married woman wanting to have a family, these pregnancies have been documented in 5 year olds, teenagers and 72 year olds alike. Social scientists do speculate, however, that the overall decline in phantom pregnancy rates is correlated with a decrease in the pressure on women to reproduce in developed countries.

The Contemporary Narcissus

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

If you've ever had a Xanga, Twitter, and/or Facebook (yes, my friend, that includes you), chances are that you're somewhat of a narcissist. Don't even bother denying those angst ridden days in middle school when you opened up many a blog to cry your troubled little heart out. Or those times when you stuck philosophical-sounding updates all over your Wall with the secret hope of appearing halfway intelligent. And of course you mustn't forget the day when you changed your profile picture eight times in a row as part of some convoluted look-I'm-so-cool scheme. Seriously, just admit it: deep down inside, you love yourself; and you want other people to see the light and love you too.

It's okay. We've all thought, said, and done similarly self-absorbing (and often rather stupid) things in an attempt to seem better than we really are. It's just a not-so-sunny side of human nature. And this perpetual obsession we have with ourselves goes all the way back to the time of the mythological Narcissus, who couldn't help but fall madly in love with his own reflection.

The true contemporary Narcissus is in fact a very interesting psychological specimen. In some ways, he's one step short of a psychopath; and yet, each one of us needs a certain amount of the narcissist in us to succeed. Self-confidence, leadership, and decisiveness are some of the most desirable traits in others' eyes, and we repeatedly put our trust in people who love themselves and aren't afraid to show it. In fact, USA Today has a very nice article on some of the probable causes, reasons, and justifications for narcissism in the context of the political arena.

In any case, the point is that narcissistic tendencies (or lack thereof) don't necessarily evidence an all-good or all-evil personality. But the next time that you change your Twitter status, perhaps consider whether you really want your six hundred and thirty seven friends to know that you looked in the mirror for a minute or two yesterday, today, and tomorrow.