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The Diagnostic Criteria for Psychosomatic Research (DCPR) are those of psychosomatic syndromes that did not find room in the classical taxonomy. More recently, the DCPR were updated, called DCPR-revised (DCPR-R). The present study was conducted to test the criterion-related validity of the DCPR-R.
Methods.
Two hundred consecutive subjects were enrolled at the Headache Center of Careggi University Hospital (Italy): 100 subjects had a diagnosis of chronic migraine (CM) and 100 had a diagnosis of episodic migraine (EM). Participants received a clinical assessment, which included the DCPR-revised Semi-Structured Interview (DCPR-R SSI), the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 (SCID-5), and the psychosocial index (PSI).
Results.
Forty-seven subjects (23.5%) had at least one DSM-5 diagnosis: major depressive disorder (8.5%; n = 17) and agoraphobia (7.5%; n = 15) were the most frequent. One hundred and ten subjects (55%) reported a DCPR-R diagnosis: allostatic overload (29%; n = 58) and type A behavior (10.5%; n = 21) were the most frequent. When the incremental validity of the DCPR system over the DSM system was tested using PSI subscales as the criterion variable, the DCPR-R increased up to 0.11–0.24 the amount of explained variance. Subjects with at least one DCPR-R diagnosis showed lower PSI well-being scores (p = .001), higher PSI stress scores (p
< .001), and higher PSI psychological distress scores (p = .008) than subjects without a DCPR-R diagnosis.
Conclusion.
The DCPR-R showed a good criterion-related validity in migraine outpatients. Thus, they might be implemented, together with the DSM-5, in the assessment of migraine subjects.
Hermann Emminghaus was the first to introduce a developmental perspective into child psychiatry, with special focus on psychoses. This chapter describes the general criteria for the classification of psychotic disorders in children and adolescents. In childhood and adolescence, however, age and developmental stage play a very important role in the classification of schizophrenia. The chapter discusses the psychotic disorders in childhood and adolescence and their relation to schizophrenia. Bettes and Walker found a strong effect of age on the manifestation of positive and negative symptoms. Positive symptoms increased linearly with age, while negative symptoms occurred most frequently in early childhood and late adolescence. About 50% of children and adolescents with schizophrenia show an uncharacteristic symptomatology in their premorbid personality. The chapter explains the classification of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders according to International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)-IV.
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