ABPSY LT3

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Last updated 3:18 PM on 3/25/26
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163 Terms

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somatoform/somatic symptom and related disorders

  • Malinger: pretend when they’re sick 

  • Psychological problems take a physical form

  • Broad group of illnesses with bodily signs and symptoms, not under voluntary control or intentionally produced

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types of somatoform disorders

  1. somatic symptom disorder

  2. illness anxiety disorder

  3. functional neurological symptom disorder (conversion disorder)

  4. factitious disorder

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somatic symptom disorder

  • Experience of physical symptoms suggesting the presence of a medical condition for which there is no apparent physical cause 

    • E.g. undergo MRI 

    • Psychological problem 

  • duration: 6 months

characterized by at least one:

  1. Excessive time and energy deviated

  2. health-related anxiety

  3. disproportionate concerns regarding gravity of symptoms 

  • Specify: predominant somatic complaints, predominant health anxiety, predominant pain 

  • DSM-IV:  Clustered under one big disorder: pain order + somatization disorder

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[SSD] specifiers and severity

  • Formerly Somatization Disorder

  • Persistent severe symptoms > 6 months

  • Specificers: predominant pain 

  • Severity: mild, moderate, severe

  • Ex. would go to hospital and ask for a doctor to explain -> gone thru lab tests

  • Emphasis on symptomatic 

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illness anxiety disorder

  • Severe anxiety about relatively mild symptoms taken as signs of a serious undiagnosed illness 

    • Care-avoidant subtype 

    • Care-seeking subtype 

  • Formerly Hypochondriasis 

  • Filipinos are hospital aversive

  • Liver enzymes, kidney enzymes, creatine levels

  • Lab test results: can’t stop worrying despite providing evidence 

  • Preoccupation for more than 6 months to be considered as a diagnosis 

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functional neurological symptom disorder

  • Neurologic symptoms affecting voluntary motor function, sensory function, cognition, or seizure-like episodes 

    • Common: paralysis, blindness, mutism

    • Inconsistent or incongruent with a recognized neurological disorder and cannot be explained by a medical condition 

  • DSM-IV criteria: symptoms are related to conflict or stress and not intentionally produced

  • Doesn’t show up in the tests

  • Specifiers

    • With weaknesses, paralysis

    • Abnormal movement 

    • Speech symptoms 

    • Attacks or seizures

  • Physical health can affect mental health 

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factitious disorder

  • Munchausen syndrome 

  • Intentional fabrication of psychological or physical symptom for no apparent gain 

  • Intent to deceive others that one is ill, impaired or injured without apparent external rewards

  • Factitious disorder imposed on another = munchausen syndrome by proxy 

  • For no apparent reason; no external rewards, money, attention, etc.

  • E.g. gypsy rose; malingering by proxy


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malingering

  • Vs. malingering: faking of illness clearly motivated by external rewards or incentives 

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etiology of SSD and IAD

  1. hypochondriasis

  2. psychosocial

  3. psychodynamic

  4. biological factors

  5. neurological factors

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[SSD & IAD] hypochondriasis

  • Prevalence: 4-6%, as high as 15%

  • Men and women equally

  • Typically begins in early adulthood, tends to be chronic

  • Transient hypochondrial complaints common in early medical students

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[SSD & IAD] psychosocial

  • Parental teaching, examples and ethnic moves may teach some children to somatize

  • Symptoms as social communication whose result is to avoid obligations, express emotions, or symbolize a feeling 

  • E..g. more accommodating to people who are sick = unconscious motivation to appear sick = understand them more

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[SSD & IAD] psychodynamic

  • May be symbolically expressing an intrapsychic conflict through the body 

    • Unconscious regard of emotional pain as weak and lacking legitimacy 

  • Displaces problem to the body, enabling legitimate claim to the fulfillment of dependency needs

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[SSD & IAD] biological factors

  • Anterior cingulate cortex: attributed to complex cognitive functions like empathy, impulse control emotion, and decision making 

  • Anterior insula: involved in emotional experience and subjective feelings

  • They don’t just make it up -> Real for them = subjective

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[SSD & IAD] neurological factors

  • Hyperactive anterior insula and anterior cingulate

  • Somatic symptoms are influenced by emotions and stress

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on somatic symptom disorders only

  1. cognitive behavioral factors (dissociative disorders)

  2. functional neurological disorder

  3. environmental and stress trauma

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[SSD] cognitive behavioral factors (dissociative disorders)

  • Distorted cognitions lead to somatic amplification 

  • Attention to bodily sensations + attributions of those sensations -> tend to focus on physical health cues and overreact with overly negative interpretations 

  • Sick role limits healthy life alternatives

  • Affect the way they present themselves unconsciously

  • help-seekin g behaviors are reinforced by attention or sympathy

  • Easily getting dismissed

  • E.g. AI consult

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[SSD] functional neurological disorder

  • Prevalence: <1%, women > men 

  • Onset from late childhood to early adulthood, after a major life stressor 

  • 95% remit spontaneously within 2 weeks 

  • Prognosis dimmer, the longer, the conversion is present 

  • comorbid : MDD, anxiety, substance use, schizophrenia, personality disorder

  • Freud: conversion, Joseph Brewer (Anna O)

    • Mental health concern

    • She experienced blindness, etc. 

    • Conversion disorder

  • Symptoms allowed for the partial expression of unacceptable impulses

  • sackheim’s 2 stage model

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[FND] hysteria

  • Hippocrates: hysteria (wandering uterus)

    • Used to believe that people would have seamen in their body, including women 

    • Lead to problems in that specific body part

    • Headaches start to occur -> physiological manifestations

  • Longer it stays, lead to more permanent

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[FND] Sackheim’s 2 Stage Model

  • Blindsight: people have unconscious perceptual abilities in visual cortex

  • Some people may be more motivated to appear disabled

  • Can process visual information outside of their consciousness through the vision system, consisting of modules within the brain

  • It is possible for some people to truthfully claim that they cannot see even if tests confirm otherwise


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[SSD] environmental stress and trauma

  • Stress 

  • Sexual abuse 

  • Family separation/loss 

  • Family conflict/violence 

  • Sexual assault


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difference between disorders

Differences

Voluntary Control

Clear Motive

Somatic

No

No

Factitious

Yes

No

Malingering

Yes

Yes

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treatment and interventions of SSD

  1. cognitive behavioral factors

  2. pharmacotherapy

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[treatment] cognitive behavioral factors

  • Identify and change triggering emotions 

  • Change cognitions about symptoms 

    • Nothing wrong with body but feel symptoms-> integrate in session 

  • Replace sick role behaviors with more appropriate social interactions 

    • Empowering clients that they benefit from being not sick

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[treatment] pharmacotherapy

  • Few controlled treatment outcome studies

  • Analgesics don’t generally benefit patients 

  • Antidepressants - imipramine (Tofranil)

    • In low doses, to reduce chronic pain and distress


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dissociative disorders

  • Disruption in the usually integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment 

  • May be sudden, gradual, transient or chronic

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types of dissociative disorders

  1. dissociative amnesia

    1. dissociative fugue

  2. dissociative identity disorder

  3. depersonalization/derealization disorder

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[DD] dissociative amnesia

  • Extensive memory loss

  • No identifiable organic cause

  • Frequently in those who experienced acute trauma 

  • May be reversible 

    • Amnesic episode may last several hours or years

  • More rarely, patient retains implicit memory but loses explicit memory 

  • Can be transient 

  • Can be localized or generalized 

    • Generalized; individuals that may not be related to traumatic experience 

  • Affect implicit or explicit memory 

  • Specify if with dissociative fatigue

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[DA] implicit memory

  • Unconscious retrieval 

  • Non-verbal

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[DA] explicit memory

  • conscious retrieval 

  • Verbal

  • declarative

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course and prognosis on dissociative amnesia

  • Acute dissociative amnesia frequently spontaneously resolves once the person is removed to safety from traumatic or overwhelming circumstances

  • Some patients do develop chronic forms of generalized, continuous or severe localized amnesia and are profoundly disabled and require high levels of support 

  • Individuals who would have anterograde amnesia: don’t take in new experiences 

  • Rare cases: require hospitalization, neurologist

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[DD] dissociative fugue

  • Losing autobiographical information even identity

  • Subtype of dissociative amnesia 

  • Sudden, unprecedented away from home or place of origin with inability to recall some or all of one’s past

  • May also be confusing about personal identity or assumption of a new identity 

  • Disappearing from one’s community

  • recovery often complete 

  • E.g.  shutter island

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[DD] dissociative identity disorder

  • Changed to MDD to DID Starting DSM 5 until current version

    • Wanted to focus less on persona 

  • Was Multiple Personality Disorder 

  • Involves the adoption of several new identities or alters 

  • Defining feature: dissociation of certain aspects of the personality

  • Forming of a new identity

  • Evident in memory gaps or loss for days or weeks

  • Doesn’t know that there are alters 

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[DID] alters

  • Doesn’t know that there are alters 

    • But alters are aware that they exist

    • There can be less dominant ones 

    • Main persona is unaware

    • Form a system

    • Each alter plays a role -> change in the tone of voice/language that they use

      • Centered on trying to protect the main persona

    • There’s forming a new identity from a consciousness of another person 

    • Manifests in the change of biological features 

    • E.g. Main person; woman -> alter; men

    • Main persona is not gaining the memory -> wake up in someone else’s house 

    • TAKES TIME 

    • 2-3 alters 

      • Guardian 

      • Protector

      • mothers/parents

      • 2500 alters = Rare case than l

  • Can stem from traumatic event / extreme sexual physical violence from family members during childhood to early teenage years

  • Alters can reach out to the main persona = knows about it 

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[DID] example: Sybil

  • The story of a woman believed to have 16 distinct personalities 

  • Based on Shirley Mason’s life 

  • Suffered from physical and sexual abuse by her mother 

  • Sybil Exposed in 2011

  • Because of her consults with her psychiatrist, she was aware -> check how suggestible they are

  • Didn’t know what the other alters were doing if it was out of their consciousness 

  • E.g. SPLIT

  • Psychodynamic perspective: regressing the memories, stored in the unconscious 

  • Make sure that you earn their trust of alters for main persona

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more about dissociative identity disorder

  • Usually begins in childhood but rarely diagnosed until adulthood 

  • Prevalence rates: 0.4 to 1.3% 

    • VERY RARE

    • More people share on stories

  • Male to female ratio: 9:1

  • High comorbidity with a chronic course - usually accompanied by headaches, substance abuse, phobias, hallucinations, suicide attempts, sexual dysfunction and self-abusive behavior

  • E.g. kids in war -> have adults as alters 

  • Man up

  • Repress 

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[DD] depersonalization/derealization disorder

  • Persistent or recurrent feeling of detachment or estrangement from oneself 

  • Reality testing remains intact during the experience 

  • Feel disconnected from body -? Form of hallucination

  • Usually as a specifier for PTSD, panic disorder and other mental disorders

  • Depersonalization:

  • Derealization:

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[DDD] depersonalization

  • detachment from the self, sense of self and reality is temporarily lost 

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experience of depersonalized

  • The sense of bodily changes 

  • Duality of self as observer and actor (outside their body)

  • Being cut off from others/their own emotions

  • Dissociation depends on nature of triggering event

  • Some body parts are disconnected/limbs

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[DDD] derealization

  • sense of reality of the outside world is lost; detached from reality

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more about depersonalization/derealization disorder

  • Transient experiences of depersonalization and derealization extremely common in normal & clinical; populations

  • Similar episodes may occur in: schizophrenia, panic attacks, PTSD, and borderline personality disorder 

  • Usually begins in adolescence, persists until adulthood 

  • Comorbid ODs are frequent 

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on dissociative disorders

  1. course and prognosis (dissociative amnesia)

  2. the experience of depersonalized

  3. depersonalization/derealization disorder

  4. dissociative identity disorder

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etiology of dissociative disorders

  1. social cognitive

  2. psychodynamic

  3. biological

  4. models for DID

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[etio] social cognitive

  • Learned response (Psychologically distancing) 

  • Form of role playing acquired through observational learning and reinforcement

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[etio] psychodynamic

  • Massive use of repression 

    • Splitting off from consciousness unacceptable impulses & painful memories 

  • Adaptive function of blotting out or disconnecting one’s conscious self from awareness or traumatic experiences or other sources of psychological pain or conflict



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[etio] biological

  • Abnormal brain functioning, structural abnormalities, neurochemical changes, and other neurological conditions

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[etio] models for DID

  • Unconsciously; start to dissociate from consciousness -> alters were formed 

  1. post-traumatic : dissociation begins in childhood from severe abuse, as a way of escaping the trauma 

  2. Socio-cognitive; appears in adulthood due to learned social role enactment, typically manifest from a therapist's suggestion

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treatment of dissociative amnesia

  1. Cognitive therapy

  2. Hypnosis, self-hypnosis

  3. Somatic therapies

  4. Group psychotherapy

  5. Through the sense 

  6. Mindfulness exercises

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treatment of dissociative identity disorder

  • From traumatic events that are blocked from consciousness 

  • May be treated as a complex, chronic, trauma-based disorder 

    • PTSD as a most commonly diagnosed comorbid disorder with DID 

  • Psychoanalysis

    • To address repression 

    • Hypnosis may help retrieve lost memories (risky) 

  • It can be a process: TRAUMA INFORMED CARE (recalling) -> psychodynamic 

  • TIC -> willing to remember thru hypnosis -> psychoanalytic -> once they remember, address that 

  • PTSD therapy

  • Can apply CBT: when stable already

  • Ex. trauma informed care -> most common treatment for PTSD to avoid retraumatization 


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general treatment of DD

  • Anti-depressants 

  • Long-term therapy

  • CBT 

    • Work on misinterpretations of normal symptoms such as fatigue, stress, or substance abuse 

    • Cognitive restructuring: challenging misinterpretations and exploring alternative explanations 

  • Psychoanalysis 

    • To help process childhood experiences of trauma 

    • Exposure therapy


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treatment of depersonalization disorder

  • SSRIs: fluoxetine (prozac), sertraline (zoloft)

  • Adjunct psychotherapy

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goal

  • Integration of the different aspects of the self 

  • For DID, reintegration of alters

  • More than 10: harder and longer to integrate to main persona 

  • Lose the alters - not meant to exist in the first place 

  • Limited capacity of memory during integration 

  • Depends on how many alters -> need to understand/gals they’re serving

  • Need to encourage them that they have to be reintegrated back into the main persona 

  • Assess in every session

  • Make them feel capable and empowered in  ma

  • Do hypnosis for others to come out

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sexual dysfunctions

  • persistent or recurrent problems with sexual interest, arousal, or response that causes or impairment

  • sex is human nature: biological thing

  • central to people’s functioning in most individuals

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4 sexual response phases

  • Desire -> Orgasm -> Excitement -> Resolution

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types of sexual dysfunctions

  1. disorders of interest/arousal

  2. orgasmic disorders

  3. genito-pelvic pain/penetration disorders

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disorders of interest/arousal

  1. male hypoactive sexual desire disorder

  2. female sexual desire/arousal disorder

  3. male erectile disorder

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[IA] male hypoactive sexual desire disorder

  • at least 6 months 

  • acknowledging asexuality 

  • little desire for sexual activity or may lack sexual or erotic thoughts of fantasies

  • impotence 

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[IA] female sexual desire/arousal disorder

  • at least 6 months 

  • frigidity: failure to respond to sexual stimuli

  • lack of, or greatly reduced level of sexual interest, drive or arousal 

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[IA] male erectile disorder

  • decrease in erectile rigidity

  • little desire = affects relationships 

  • difficulty in maintaining erection during sexual activity

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types of orgasmic disorders

  1. female orgasmic disorder

  2. delayed ejaculation

  3. premature ejaculation

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[OD] female orgasmic disorder

  • specifiy if never experienced an orgasm in any situation

  • persistent or recurrent delay or absence of organs following normal sex excitement phase

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[OD] delayed ejaculation

  • In men, persistent, delay, infrequency, or absence of ejaculation

  • delay in 75-100% of partnered sexual activity

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[OD] premature ejaculation

  • Ejaculation occurring within about one minute of vaginal penetration before it is desired

  • Duration is not specified for non vaginal sexual activities

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types of genito-pelvic pain / penetration disorders

  • genital pain during intercourse with muscle tension, fear, and anxiety related to genitalpain or penetrative sexual activity

  • vaginismus:

  • rare in men 

  • male dyspareunia:

  • rule out medical conditions and effects of substances

    • antidepressants have regulated and lead to problems with sex

  • note that significant distress is experienced by the individual 


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[GPP] vaginismus

  • muscles surrounding the vagina involuntarily contract whenever penetration is attempted, making sexual intercourse painful or impossible

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male dyspareunia

  • recurrent/persistent genital or pelvic pain with sexual activity or sexual dysfunction 

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specifiers

  1. lifelong

  2. acquired

  3. generalized

  4. situational

  5. severity

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[specifiers] lifelong

  • onset as soon as the individual became sexually active 

  • can have normal or healthy functioning before they start to experience problems 

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[specifiers] acquired

disturbance started after a period of relative normal sexual function

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[specifiers] generalized

  • applies to most type of stimulations, situations or partners

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[specifiers] situational

  • the disturbance is limited to certain types of stimulation, situations or partners

  • ex. Blondes

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[specifiers] severity

mild, moderate, severe

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etiology and treatment for SD

  1. biological

  2. socio-cultural

  3. psychological

  4. biological treatments

  5. psychosocial therapy

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[etio] biological

  • hormonal imbalances

    • Hypothyroidism: impact of low production of thyroid hormone

    • Hypogonadism: low production of sex glands, decline in the sex glands produced by the gonads and can lead to low sex hormones

  • menopause (lower estrogen)

  • low in testosterone (30-40s)

  • physical disorders

    • diabetes

    • cardiovascular disease

    • hypertension 

    • obesity 

    • kidney failure 

    • cancer

  • alcohol and drugs

  • antidepressants (SSRI impair sexual performance) 

  • work with psychologist, psychiatrist, and physician -> involves biological/physiological responses

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[etio] socio-cultural

  • women may harbor stereotypical attitudes towards female sexuality

  • sexual dysfunction too may be linked to extremely strict sociocultural beliefs and sexual taboos

  • rigid standards about women -> affect sexual functioning

  • expectations for women in terms of sexual activities

    • men should "initiate" vs. women

    • heteronormative and patriarchal standards

    • expectations for men in relationships also -> paying for the first date

  • role of culture and religion 

  • could limit women’s expression of their sexuality

  • expectations for men in sex

  • lack of sex education in the PH

  • ex. bong suntay 

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[etio] psychological

  1. severe mental disorders

  • depression, anxiety 

  1. traumatic sexual experience 

  • childhood sexual abuse 

  • stress and psychological exhaustion 

  1. negative cognitions

  • performance anxiety 

  • worry about pregnancy, AIDS

  • negative towards sex

  • concerns about the partner

  1. classical conditioning 

  • repeated experiences involving the need to ejaculate quickly 

  1. interpersonal 

  • couple distress and negative life events 

  • poor communication and unresolved differences 

  1. irrational beliefs


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[etio] other psychological factors

  • performance anxiety and sexual activity

  • negative attitudes toward sex

  • religious beliefs

  • body dissatisfaction and sexual dissatisfaction 

  • self-perception

    • ex. had to look at it a certain way

  • expectations about sex

  • interpersonal concerns and sex 

    • addressed in psychotherapy

    • need to normalize

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[treatment] biological

  • testosterone replacement therapy (injection, patch, gel) 

  • SSRIs (increase sexual desire but impair sexual performance)

  • in media and advertisements 

    • viagra, levitra, cialis 

  • penile implants 


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[treatment] psychosocial therapy

  1. couples therapy 

  • skills and communication training 

  1. sex therapy steps

  • stop-squeeze technique: males who have problems with premature ejaculation

  • directed masturbation: for women with orgasmic problems 

  • after addressing, SD

  1. systematic desensitization 

  • with the use of different-sized vaginal dilators for women who experience pain during sex

  • CBT to challenge irrational beliefs and attitudes

  • communicating sexual needs 

  • pakiramdaman in the philippines -> main way of communicating 

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paraphillic disorders

  • Group of persistent sexual behavior pattern in which unusual objects, rituals, or situations are required to fulfill sexual satisfaction

  • para; beside; philla; love

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[paraphillic] specifiers

  • 6 months, distress, impairment 

  • Coercive, vs non-coercive

  • Atypical vs clinical

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types of paraphilic disorders

  1. towards nonhuman objects

  2. towards children and non-consenting individuals

  3. involving suffering or humiliation

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disorders towards nonhuman objects

  1. fetishistic disorder

  2. transvestic disorder

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[nonhuman] fetishistic disorder

  • fantasies, urges, or behaviors that involves nonliving objects , not limited to female clothing used in cross-dressing

    • most common: lingerie, stockings, footwear

    • actirasty: sun light 

  • xylophilia; exposed to wood

  • specifier: body parts, nonliving objects, others

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[nonhuman] transvestic disorder

  • sexual arousal in men from wearing women’s clothing

  • With distress and impairment

  • only in cisgender heterosexual men 

  • Specifier:

    • With fetishism - aroused by garments, fabrics or materials

    • With autogynephilia - aroused by thoughts or images of self as female

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disorders towards children and nonconsenting individuals

  1. exhibitionistic disorder

  2. voyeuristic disorder

  3. frottereustic disorder

  4. pedophilic disorder

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[children] exhibitionistic disorder

  • exposure of one's genitalia to unsuspecting viewers

  • specify if sexually aroused by exposing genitals to prepuberal children, physically mature individuals or both

  • nonconsenting

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[children] voyeuristic disorder

  • watching an unsuspecting person naked, undressing, or engaging in sexual activity

  • the individual acting on the urges must be 18 yo

    • kids don't experience it: can be curiosity

  • with a nonconsenting person

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[children] frottereustic disorder

  • rubbing against a nonconsenting person

  • willing to take risk even though they know its against the law/illegal 

  • with intense arousal

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[children] pedophilic disorder

  • sexual urges, fantasies, or actual behavior directed towards prepubescent child

  • usually with children 13yo or younger

  • 16 yo can be diagnosed if a criterion is met

    • if 16 and above, and 5 years younger

    • can be considered it even if minor

    • age gap: more than 5 years

  • grooming: below 18, minor

    • groomer; legal age

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disorders involving suffering or humilation

  1. sexual masochism disorder

  2. sexual sadism disorder

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[suffering] sexual masochism disorder

  • strong and recurrent sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors in which one becomes sexually aroused by being humiliated, bound, flogged, or made to suffer in other ways

  • hypoxyphillia: involving arousal obtained by reduction of oxygen flow to the brain

  • specify with asphyxiophilia; sexual arousal through restriction of breathing

  • sexual preference vs. disorder

    • BDSM: maintain healthy relationships and functioning, family relationships

  • presence distress in person: puts life in danger

  • obvious lack of control despite consequences 


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[suffering] sexual sadism disorder

  • Recurrent powerful sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors in which one becomes sexually aroused by inflicting physical or psychological suffering or humiliation on another 

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sadomasochism

  •  practicing both sadism and masochism


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etiology and treatment of PD

  1. biological view

  2. psychodynamic influences

  3. psychological perspectives

  4. incarceration and court-ordered treatment

  5. cognitive behavioral tx

  6. biological tx

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[etio] biological view

  • Male hormones or androgens as almost all are more common in men

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[etio] psychodynamic influences

  • Defense against leftover castration anxiety from the phallic period of psychosexual development

  • History of childhood physical and sexual abuse

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[etio] psychological perspectives

  • Cognitive distortions 

    • Since the child does not run away, she must want me to touch her

  • Learning 

    • Conditioning and observational learning 

    • An object or activity becomes inadvertently associated with sexual arousal

  • Poor social skills


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[treatment] incarceration and court-ordered tx

  • Used to enhance motivation 

  • Often: denial and minimization of problem 

  • Some: blame victim

  • Lack of motivation for treatment 

  • Drop out of treatment 


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[treatment] cognitive behavioral tx

  • Cognitive conditioning 

    • Aversive therapy

    • Covert sensitization (with imagery)

  • Counter distorted thinking

  • Often combined with social skills and empathy training

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[treatment] biological tx

  • Castration used in past

  • Medications: hormonal agents to reduce androgens 

    • Depo-provera

    • SSRIs