The mandate of Canadian Mental Health Association/Peel Branch,
which is determined by our Board of Directors, is to serve
individuals with severe mental illness, the most prevalent
illnesses being schizophrenia, psychotic and mood disorders.
However, our Resource Centre receives calls about several issues,
including the ones below.
The content below is provided for information purposes only. For
additional detail, we suggest that you visit the websites listed
or
www.211ontario.ca for service listings across Ontario and
searchable by geographical area served.
The following information is paraphrased from a book called DSM-IV
Made Easy. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV, or DSM-IV provides clear descriptions of diagnostic
categories in order to enable clinicians and investigators to
diagnose, communicate about, study, and treat people with various
mental disorders. DSM-IV Made Easy provides easier to understand
information and a copy is available in our
library.
Cognitive Disorders
Delirium
Dementia
(Alzheimer’s)
Amnestic Disorder)
Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or
Adolescence
Mental Retardation
Learning Disorders
Pervasive Developmental Disorders (Autism, Rett’s, Asperger’s)
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Conduct Disorder
Oppositional
Defiant Disorder
Tourette’s Disorder
Separation
Anxiety Disorder
Suggested Websites
Anxiety Disorders Association of Ontario –
www.anxietydisordersontario.ca
Autism Ontario –
www.autismontario.com
Asperger’s Society of Ontario –
www.aspergers.ca
Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation –
www.cnsfederation.org (click on General Information and
scroll to Canadian Brain and Nerve Health Coalition for agency
listings)
Children’s Mental Health Ontario –
www.kidsmentalhealth.ca
Learning Disabilities Association of Ontario –
www.ldao.ca
Ontario Association on Developmental Disabilities –
www.oadd.org
Tourette Syndrome Association of Ontario –
www.tourettesyndromeontario.ca
American:
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke –
www.ninds.nih.gov (click on Disorders for links to more
information and resources)
Cognitive
Disorders
Cognitive Disorders include but are not limited to:
Delirium
Dementia
(Alzheimer’s)
Amnestic Disorder
Delirium
Delirium is the most common cognitive disorder. It usually
begins suddenly and fluctuates in intensity, often lasting less
than a week. Sometimes mistaken for other mental disorders
including psychosis, depression, mania, hysteria, or a personality
disorder, it can be caused by a general medical condition, be
substance-induced, or due to multiple causes. Delirium is a
disease that changes the way the brain works.
Symptoms include:
- Decreased awareness of one’s environment,
- A cognitive deficit
Decreased awareness looks like this:
- Someone finds it difficult to maintain and/or shift
attention during interactions with others
- He/she might become drowsy or sleepy
- His/her thinking slows, making problem solving more
difficult
- He/she might be easily distracted, rapidly shifting focus
from one thing to another.
The cognitive deficit shows up in:
- Language – rambling, disjointed, pressured, or incoherent
speech, or speech leaping from one topic to another; may also
have difficulty writing or naming things
- Memory – recent events aren’t remembered; older memories
(especially from childhood) are usually the last to go
- Orientation – at first there is disorientation about date,
day, month, year, then place, relatives and friends. (People
remember their own identities except in severe cases.)
- Perception – boundaries are fuzzy, colours are brighter, and
images distorted. Some may have illusions (misidentifying what
they see), false perceptions (hallucinations), and in later
stages might have incomplete, changing, or poorly organized
delusions (false beliefs attached to hallucinations).
Dementia
(including Alzheimer’s)
Dementia means “loss.” The disorder, which usually starts
gradually, includes a decline from a previous level of
functioning, and memory loss. As with delirium, recent memories go
first. As a dementia worsens, remote memories go. In addition to
memory loss, someone with dementia suffers at least one of the
following cognitive deficits:
- aphasia (can’t remember words, so they use wordy, roundabout
expressions)
- apraxia (although physically capable of performing some
motor acts, they are unable to do so)
- agnosia (failure to recognize or identify objects despite
intact sensory function)
People with dementia are vulnerable to psychosocial stresses.
Some might become paranoid or irritable; others might shoplift;
some might compulsively make lists. If they become frustrated or
frightened they may have angry outbursts, or become restless and
pace. People may wander from home. In the final stage of dementia,
they may lose all useful speech and self-care. Medical and
neurological evaluation is necessary to diagnose dementia. The
cause is often biological, e.g. Huntington’s disease, multiple
sclerosis, AIDS.
The most common cause of senility, Dementia of the Alzheimer’s
type, affects about 3% of people over age 65. The risk increases
with age. The first sign is a change in personality. Someone may
become more obsessive, secretive or sexually active. Alternatively
he/she may become apathetic, more emotional, or lose his/her sense
of humour. Typically an Alzheimer’s patient will live six to eight
years after the disease begins, following these stages:
- one to three years of growing forgetfulness
- two to three years of increasing disorientation, loss of
language skills and inappropriate behaviour. Hallucinations and
delusions may appear
- a final period of severe dementia, which includes
disorientation and loss of self-care
Amnestic Disorder
Most people have heard the word “amnesia.” All amnestic
disorders are due to brain damage. It could be due to head trauma,
surgery of the temporal lobe, hypoxia, stroke, or some forms of
encephalitis, but the most frequent cause is chronic alcohol use
with accompanying vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency. A person with
an amnestic disorder has severe short term memory loss – enough so
that he/she can’t recall events that occurred moments earlier.
However, he/she can usually repeat what he/she has just heard.
Persons are disoriented for time and often for place. Some don’t
care about their memory problems; others do and make up stories to
hide it.
When the disorder is due to a general medical condition:
- the person develops impaired memory and can’t learn new or
recall old information
- symptoms impair work functioning
- symptoms don’t occur solely during a delirium or dementia
- history, physical exam or laboratory data shows that a
general medical condition probably directly caused the disorder
Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or
Adolescence
The disorders categorized as being usually first diagnosed in
childhood include but are not limited to:
Mental Retardation
Learning Disorders
Pervasive Developmental Disorders (Autism, Rett’s, Asperger’s)
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Conduct Disorder
Oppositional Defiant
Disorder
Tourette’s Disorder
Separation Anxiety Disorder
This is a separate section in the DSM and is provided for
convenience only, not meant to suggest that there is any clear
distinction between “childhood” and “adult” disorders. Although
most individuals with these disorders seek help during childhood
or adolescence, sometimes the disorders are not diagnosed until
adulthood.
Mental Retardation
Mental Retardation is a behavioural syndrome related to low
intelligence. Onset is usually in infancy or before birth. Before
age 18 it’s mental retardation; after 18 yr. it’s a dementia.
These two criteria are necessary for a diagnosis:
- A standard individual IQ test results in an IQ of less than
70
- Impaired ability to adapt to the demands of normal life
Causes are:
- Genetic – about 5% (Chromosomal abnormalities, Tay-Sachs,
tuberous sclerosis)
- Early Pregnancy Factors – about 30% (Trisomy 21 – Down’s
syndrome, substance use by mother, infections)
- Later Pregnancy and Perinatal Factors – about 10% (Prematurity,
anoxia, birth trauma, fetal malnutrition)
- Acquired Childhood Physical Conditions – about 5% (Lead
poisoning, infections, trauma)
- Environmental Influences and Mental Disorders – about 20%
(Cultural deprivation, early-onset schizophrenia)
- Unknown Factors – about 30% (no identifiable cause)
It affects about 1% of the population. Males outnumber females
about three to two. Most (85%) have Mild Mental Retardation (IQ of
50 to 70) and are educable. About 10% have Moderate Mental
Retardation (IQ high 30’s to low 50’s) and can learn social and
occupational skills but may never be able to live independently.
Less than 5% have Severe Mental Retardation (IQ low 20’s to high
30’s) and may learn to perform simple jobs and read a few words.
Only 1% – 2% have Profound Mental Retardation (IQ in the low 20’s
or below).
Co-occurring mental retardation or intellectual disability and
mental illness is known as
dual diagnosis.
Learning Disorders
People with learning disorders have far more difficulty
learning certain academic skills. Diagnosis must be made from a
standardized, individualized test. These tests show that a
person’s ability to read, do math or write are substantially less
than what would be expected for their age, intelligence and
education. Learning disorders include:
- Reading Disorder
- Mathematics Disorder
- Disorder of Written Expression
Pervasive Developmental Disorders (Autism, Rett’s, Asperger’s)
With Pervasive Developmental Disorders, children fail to
develop normally in a number of areas, including the ability to:
- Interact socially
- Communicate verbally and nonverbally
- Use their imaginations
Autistic Disorder, Rett’s Disorder and Asperger’s Disorder are
considered Pervasive Developmental Disorders. A child with
Autistic Disorder has impaired social interactions and
communications, and stereotyped behaviours and interests. Rett’s
Disorder is characterized by slow head growth, delayed language,
poorly coordinated gait, and loss of purposeful hand movements and
social engagement. Although similar to Autistic Disorder, a child
with Asperger’s Disorder does not have delayed/impaired language.
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Some mothers say their children kicked more in utero, or cried
more as a baby. Symptoms of ADHD (Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder) typically begin before a child starts school but the
disorder is not usually diagnosed until age 9. Children usually
have a normal IQ but because of trouble focusing, may not do well
in school. Tending to be impulsive they may say things that hurt
others’ feelings, making them unpopular. A person with ADHD has
trouble sitting quietly and needs to be “on the go.” Many children
have a learning disability in reading, and a Conduct Disorder or
Oppositional Defiant Disorder.
Generally, impulsive behaviour decreases during the teen years,
but in some cases, a teen might use substances. Some adults
continue to have interpersonal problems, a quick temper, and
difficulty dealing with stress.
Conduct Disorder
After 12 months or more of repeatedly violating rules,
age-appropriate societal norms or the rights of others, Conduct
Disorder may be diagnosed. Three or more of the following
behaviours must have occurred in the previous six months:
- Frequent bullying or threatening
- Starts fights often
- Uses weapon that could cause serious injury (gun, knife,
club, broken glass)
- Physical cruelty to people
- Physical cruelty to animals
- Theft with confrontation (armed robbery, extortion, mugging,
purse snatching)
- Forced sex on someone
- Deliberately set fires to cause serious damage
- Deliberately destroyed property of others
- Break and enter
- Frequent lies or broken promises to avoid obligations
- Burglary, forgery, or shoplifting
- Stays out at night against parents’ wishes (before age 13)
- Run away overnight twice or more (or once for extended
period)
- Frequent truancy before age 13
Oppositional Defiant
Disorder
After six or more months if someone shows defiant, hostile,
negativistic behaviour, Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) may be
diagnosed. The symptoms must impair work, school or social
functioning and not occur during a mood or psychotic disorder. As
well four or more of the following must be present:
- Losing temper
- Arguing with adults
- Actively defying or refusing to carry out the rules or
requests of adults
- Deliberately doing things that annoy others
- Blaming others for own mistakes or misbehaviour
- Being touchy or easily annoyed by others
- Being angry and resentful
- Being spiteful or vindictive
Tourette’s Disorder
Tourette’s Disorder is a Tic Disorder, characterized by one or
more vocal tics and multiple motor tics. A “tic” is a movement or
vocalization that is non-rhythmic, rapid, repeated, stereotyped,
and sudden. Work, social or personal functioning is impaired.
Eye blinking is often the first motor tic symptom. Some tics
are complex, e.g. someone might do deep knee bends, retrace steps,
or twirl while walking. The location and severity of tics can
change with time.
Vocal tics include barks, clicks, coughs, grunts and
understandable words. Between 10% and 30% have “coprolalia,”
meaning that they utter obscenities.
The average onset is age 7; most have the disorder before age
18. With maturity, many people can suppress their tics, but not
for more than three consecutive months.
Separation Anxiety
Disorder
If someone experiences excessive anxiety that is inappropriate
to their development stage, about being separated from home or the
people they’re attached to, a diagnosis of Separation Anxiety
Disorder may be made. The symptoms must last for more than four
weeks, begin before age 18, impair school, social or personal
functioning and do not occur during a pervasive developmental
disorder or psychotic disorder. Sometimes the disorder develops
after a life stress, e.g. death of relative or pet, move to new
neighbourhood. Three or more of the following symptoms must
persist/recur:
- Excessively distressed anticipating or experiencing
separation from home/parents
- Excessively worried about loss of or harm to parents
- Excessively worried about being separated from parent by a
serious event (e.g. becoming lost)
- Refuses or is reluctant to go somewhere (e.g. school)
because of separation fears
- Excessively afraid to be alone, without parents at home
- Refuses or is reluctant to sleep away from home or go to
sleep without being near parent
- Recurrent nightmares about separation
- Recurrent physical symptoms
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