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Clinical Manual of Impulse-Control Disorders

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Beginning with the conceptualization and classification of ICDs, including the phenomenology, assessment, and classification of impulsivity as a core symptom domain that cuts across and drives the ...
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  • 25 November 2005
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Visibility of impulse-control disorders (ICDs) has never been greater than it is today, both in the field of psychiatry and in popular culture. Changes in both society and technology have contributed to the importance of conceptualizing, assessing, and treating impulse-control disorders (ICDs). The ground-breaking Clinical Manual of Impulse-Control Disorders focuses on all of the different ICDs as a group.

Here, 25 recognized experts provide cutting-edge, concise, and practical information about ICDs, beginning with the phenomenology, assessment, and classification of impulsivity as a core symptom domain that cuts across and drives the expression of these complex disorders. Subsequent chapters discuss

Intermittent explosive disorder, an often overlooked ICD characterized by impulsive aggression.
Childhood conduct disorder and the antisocial spectrum.
Self-injurious behavior and its relationship to impulsive aggression and childhood trauma.
Sexual compulsions and their serious public health implications.
Binge eating, a highly familial disorder associated with serious medical complications and psychopathology.
Trichotillomania, which may be related to obsessive-compulsive disorder, skin picking, and nail biting.
Kleptomania, a heterogeneous disorder that shares features with ICDs as well as with mood, anxiety, and addictive disorders.
Compulsive shopping, more common in women, with treatments ranging from self-help and financial counseling to trials with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
Pyromania and how it differs from arson.
Pathological gambling, a maladaptive behavioral addiction that is increasing in step with legalized and Internet gambling.
Internet addiction, ranging from excessive seeking of medical information to dangerous sexual behaviors.

The remarkable Clinical Manual of Impulse-Control Disorders sheds light on the complex world of ICDs. As such, it will be welcomed not only by clinicians and researchers but also by individuals and family members coping with these disorders.

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Price: £58.00
Pages: 368
Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Imprint: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Publication Date: 25 November 2005
ISBN: 9781585621361
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

MEDICAL / Psychiatry / General

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This book will be an asset to any mental health professional. Well organized and well written with contributions by 25 different experts in the field of impulse-control disorders, the Clinical Manual of Impulse-Control Disorders is a wonderful collection and synopsis of the current state-of-the-art conceptualization, diagnosis, and treatment of the broad range of all impulse-control disorders. The editors have done an excellent job in not only recruiting superb contributors, but also giving the manual a coherent and consistent feel. This is a book that clinicians will find especially useful because some of the disorders described are so new that they are not yet included in the DSM or in most current residency curricula.

Eric Hollander, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the Compulsive, Impulsive, and Anxiety Disorders Program in the Department of Psychiatry at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York, New York.

Dan J. Stein, M.D., Ph.D., is Professor of Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.

Contributors
Preface
Chapter 1. Conceptualizing and Assessing Impulse-Control Disorders
Chapter 2. Intermittent Explosive Disorder
Chapter 3. Childhood Conduct Disorder and the Antisocial Spectrum
Chapter 4. Self-Injurious Behaviors
Chapter 5. Sexual Compulsions
Chapter 6. Binge Eating
Chapter 7. Trichotillomania
Chapter 8. Kleptomania
Chapter 9. Compulsive Shopping
Chapter 10. Pyromania
Chapter 11. Pathological Gambling
Chapter 12. Problematic Internet Use
Chapter 13. Treatment of Impulse-Control Disorders
Index