精神疾病诊断和统计手册,第四版,初级保健版

Brian P. Quinn
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The manual is laid out so that the physician faced with a patient suffering from, say, depressed mood can turn to a “quick reference algorithm”—a flowchart with minimal diagnostic criteria and information—or to a section with more detailed information to begin considering likely diagnoses. Alternatively, the physician can go to an index, find a symptom, and be directed to several parts of the manual to explore various diagnostic possibilities. There is a separate chapter on the diagnosis of disorders typically first seen in infants, children, and adolescents. \n \nAll of the DSM-IV-PC algorithms begin by advising the physician to rule out medical illness or substance abuse as a cause of a patient's psychiatric symptoms. The manual includes a section on clues that will alert the physician to the possible presence of a medical masquerade of psychiatric symptoms. It would be wise to highlight and add to this section in future editions. Anyone using the DSM-IV-PC (or the DSM-IV, for that matter) must keep in mind that DSM-IV labels are not etiologic diagnoses. Patients with psychiatric symptoms need to have their physicians do a thoughtful and thorough differential diagnostic workup to rule out organic illness. \n \nThe flowcharts in the DSM-IV-PC are useful for helping the physician make diagnostic decisions. In future editions, the authors of the DSM-IV-PC should provide physicians with more specific advice on the type of information they need to gather to make an expert differential diagnosis. For example, it will be especially important to revise the depressed mood algorithm. Physicians should be explicitly advised to consider the possibility of bipolar disorder when a patient presents with symptoms of depression. As it now stands, step 1 of the depressed mood flowchart merely suggests that the physician consider “another mental disorder” to explain a patient's depressed mood. If the doctor does not consult the more detailed information after the flowchart and is not aware that a large proportion of affectively ill patients in primary care may suffer from bipolar illness,2 he or she might diagnose a patient with bipolar depression as suffering from unipolar depression. This is a potentially serious error. Primary care physicians are prescribing antidepressants more often, and there is now a growing body of evidence that treating bipolar patients with antidepressants alone can adversely affect the nature and course of their illness. Antidepressants can induce mania in vulnerable individuals, precipitate rapid cycling and mixed states with irritability, and lead to treatment-refractory depression.3,4 \n \nEven if physicians consult the more detailed information following the flowchart and turn to the section on manic symptoms, the lack of information provided on unique signs of bipolar depression could lead them to fail to consider the diagnosis of bipolar disorder. The DSM-IV-PC authors make only brief mention of the need to look for “a history of elevated, expansive, or euphoric mood,” and then direct physicians to the section on manic symptoms. It would be better if the manual first advised physicians to ask patients directly about periods of hypomania. Most patients view these periods as normal and will not spontaneously mention them.5 In addition, the manual should advise physicians to interview family members. Bipolar disorder is underdiagnosed by a factor of 2 if family members are not interviewed.6 Finally, other clues suggestive of bipolar depression should be mentioned in the manual: seasonal variation in symptoms (typically winter depression and summer hypomania), multiple generation family history of depression and irritable mood, stormy relationships, chaotic life histories, and, most importantly, the presence of atypical symptoms and psychomotor retardation.7 \n \nThe flowchart for unexplained physical complaints should be revised so that the physician is advised to consider depressive illness as a diagnosis. As it now stands, the chart merely alludes to the need to consider another mental disorder and buries information about depression in the text, where the busy physician can easily overlook it. \n \nThe substance abuse algorithm could be improved as well. The algorithm advises physicians to consider substance abuse if there is a history of problematic use of alcohol or drugs. 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Did you ever regret anything you said or did while drinking? \n \nWith added information on how to detect medical mimics of psychiatric symptoms, the importance of medical differential diagnosis, and how to diagnose substance abuse, this manual could fulfill a critical need for improved diagnostic skills in psychologists, social workers, marriage counselors, and employee assistance and substance abuse treatment professionals, as well as the primary care physician. Nonmedical therapists have not been trained to consider the possible role of medical illness in their patients' presenting symptoms. In addition, they are often not familiar with psychiatric differential diagnosis and the psychiatric conditions that are responsive to medication. 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If the doctor does not consult the more detailed information after the flowchart and is not aware that a large proportion of affectively ill patients in primary care may suffer from bipolar illness,2 he or she might diagnose a patient with bipolar depression as suffering from unipolar depression. This is a potentially serious error. Primary care physicians are prescribing antidepressants more often, and there is now a growing body of evidence that treating bipolar patients with antidepressants alone can adversely affect the nature and course of their illness. 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引用次数: 31

摘要

有强有力的证据表明,初级保健医生对患者的精神疾病和药物滥用的诊断不足。例如,超过一半的抑郁症患者被医生误诊精神疾病诊断与统计手册,第四版,初级保健版(DSM-IV-PC)在帮助医生识别患者的这些常见问题方面走了很长一段路。未来的版本将受益于一些修订和补充,这将有助于初级保健医生做出正确的诊断。DSM-IV- pc的作者已经设法将800页的DSM-IV压缩并重新排列成一种格式,使忙碌的初级保健医生可以很容易地使用它来帮助他们诊断精神疾病。该手册的设计是为了让医生在面对患有抑郁症的病人时,可以求助于“快速参考算法”——一个包含最少诊断标准和信息的流程图,或者求助于一个包含更详细信息的部分,以便开始考虑可能的诊断。或者,医生可以去索引,找到一个症状,并被引导到手册的几个部分,以探索各种诊断的可能性。有一个单独的章节关于疾病的诊断通常首先出现在婴儿,儿童和青少年。所有的DSM-IV-PC算法都是从建议医生排除医学疾病或药物滥用作为患者精神症状的原因开始的。该手册包括一个部分的线索,将提醒医生可能存在的医学伪装的精神症状。在以后的版本中突出显示并添加到这一部分是明智的。任何使用DSM-IV- pc(或DSM-IV,就此而言)的人都必须记住,DSM-IV标签不是病因诊断。有精神症状的患者需要他们的医生做一个深思熟虑和彻底的鉴别诊断工作,以排除器质性疾病。DSM-IV-PC中的流程图有助于医生做出诊断决定。在未来的版本中,DSM-IV-PC的作者应该为医生提供更具体的建议,说明他们需要收集哪些类型的信息来进行专家鉴别诊断。例如,修改抑郁情绪算法就显得尤为重要。当患者出现抑郁症状时,应明确建议医生考虑双相情感障碍的可能性。目前来看,抑郁情绪流程图的第一步只是建议医生考虑“另一种精神障碍”来解释病人的抑郁情绪。如果医生没有在流程图后查阅更详细的信息,也没有意识到在初级保健中有很大比例的情感疾病患者可能患有双相情感疾病,2他或她可能会将双相情感抑郁症患者诊断为患有单极抑郁症。这是一个潜在的严重错误。初级保健医生更经常地开抗抑郁药,现在有越来越多的证据表明,单独用抗抑郁药治疗双相情感障碍患者会对他们的疾病性质和病程产生不利影响。抗抑郁药可在易感个体中诱发躁狂,沉淀快速循环和混合状态,并伴有易怒,导致难治性抑郁症。3,4即使医生参考了流程图后面更详细的信息,并转到躁狂症状部分,缺乏关于双相情感障碍独特症状的信息也可能导致他们无法考虑双相情感障碍的诊断。DSM-IV-PC的作者只是简单地提到需要寻找“情绪高涨、膨胀或愉悦的病史”,然后将医生引导到躁狂症状部分。如果手册首先建议医生直接询问患者的轻躁期,那就更好了。大多数病人认为这些时期是正常的,不会自发地提及它们此外,手册还应建议医生与患者家属面谈。如果不与家庭成员面谈,双相情感障碍的漏诊率为2倍最后,手册中应该提到其他提示双相抑郁症的线索:症状的季节性变化(典型的冬季抑郁症和夏季轻躁狂),多代抑郁症家族史和易怒情绪,暴风雨的关系,混乱的生活史,最重要的是,非典型症状和精神运动迟缓的存在无法解释的身体疾患的流程图应修改,以便建议医生考虑将抑郁症作为一种诊断。就目前的情况来看,该图表只是暗示需要考虑另一种精神障碍,并将有关抑郁症的信息隐藏在文本中,忙碌的医生很容易忽略它。药物滥用算法也可以得到改进。 该算法建议医生,如果有酗酒或吸毒史,就考虑药物滥用。但是他们应该问什么问题来确定是否有问题的使用?DSM-IV的药物滥用标准,充其量只是暗示医生应该寻找持续或反复出现的社会或人际问题。手册应该建议医生问一些具体的问题,比如,你的配偶或男朋友/女朋友曾经抱怨过你喝酒或你喝酒时的行为吗?比如,他们有没有说过你会变得尴尬、讨厌或沮丧?你曾经决定戒酒或减少饮酒量吗?你有没有后悔过你喝酒时说的话或做的事?本手册增加了关于如何检测精神症状的医学模拟、医学鉴别诊断的重要性以及如何诊断药物滥用的信息,可以满足心理学家、社会工作者、婚姻咨询师、员工援助和药物滥用治疗专业人员以及初级保健医生对提高诊断技能的关键需求。非医学治疗师还没有接受过考虑医学疾病在患者表现症状中的可能作用的培训。此外,他们往往不熟悉精神病学的鉴别诊断和对药物有反应的精神病学状况。针对非医学治疗师和初级保健医生的修订手册将有助于全面提高精神健康诊断和治疗的质量。
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Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Primary Care Version
Strong evidence exists that primary care physicians underdiagnose psychiatric disorders and substance abuse in their patients. Over half of patients with depression, for example, are misdiagnosed by their doctors.1 The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Primary Care Version (DSM-IV-PC) goes a long way toward helping doctors identify these common problems in their patients. Future editions would benefit from a number of revisions and additions that would help the primary care physician make correct diagnoses. The authors of the DSM-IV-PC have managed to condense and rearrange the 800-page DSM-IV into a format that busy primary care physicians can easily use to help them diagnose psychiatric disorders. The manual is laid out so that the physician faced with a patient suffering from, say, depressed mood can turn to a “quick reference algorithm”—a flowchart with minimal diagnostic criteria and information—or to a section with more detailed information to begin considering likely diagnoses. Alternatively, the physician can go to an index, find a symptom, and be directed to several parts of the manual to explore various diagnostic possibilities. There is a separate chapter on the diagnosis of disorders typically first seen in infants, children, and adolescents. All of the DSM-IV-PC algorithms begin by advising the physician to rule out medical illness or substance abuse as a cause of a patient's psychiatric symptoms. The manual includes a section on clues that will alert the physician to the possible presence of a medical masquerade of psychiatric symptoms. It would be wise to highlight and add to this section in future editions. Anyone using the DSM-IV-PC (or the DSM-IV, for that matter) must keep in mind that DSM-IV labels are not etiologic diagnoses. Patients with psychiatric symptoms need to have their physicians do a thoughtful and thorough differential diagnostic workup to rule out organic illness. The flowcharts in the DSM-IV-PC are useful for helping the physician make diagnostic decisions. In future editions, the authors of the DSM-IV-PC should provide physicians with more specific advice on the type of information they need to gather to make an expert differential diagnosis. For example, it will be especially important to revise the depressed mood algorithm. Physicians should be explicitly advised to consider the possibility of bipolar disorder when a patient presents with symptoms of depression. As it now stands, step 1 of the depressed mood flowchart merely suggests that the physician consider “another mental disorder” to explain a patient's depressed mood. If the doctor does not consult the more detailed information after the flowchart and is not aware that a large proportion of affectively ill patients in primary care may suffer from bipolar illness,2 he or she might diagnose a patient with bipolar depression as suffering from unipolar depression. This is a potentially serious error. Primary care physicians are prescribing antidepressants more often, and there is now a growing body of evidence that treating bipolar patients with antidepressants alone can adversely affect the nature and course of their illness. Antidepressants can induce mania in vulnerable individuals, precipitate rapid cycling and mixed states with irritability, and lead to treatment-refractory depression.3,4 Even if physicians consult the more detailed information following the flowchart and turn to the section on manic symptoms, the lack of information provided on unique signs of bipolar depression could lead them to fail to consider the diagnosis of bipolar disorder. The DSM-IV-PC authors make only brief mention of the need to look for “a history of elevated, expansive, or euphoric mood,” and then direct physicians to the section on manic symptoms. It would be better if the manual first advised physicians to ask patients directly about periods of hypomania. Most patients view these periods as normal and will not spontaneously mention them.5 In addition, the manual should advise physicians to interview family members. Bipolar disorder is underdiagnosed by a factor of 2 if family members are not interviewed.6 Finally, other clues suggestive of bipolar depression should be mentioned in the manual: seasonal variation in symptoms (typically winter depression and summer hypomania), multiple generation family history of depression and irritable mood, stormy relationships, chaotic life histories, and, most importantly, the presence of atypical symptoms and psychomotor retardation.7 The flowchart for unexplained physical complaints should be revised so that the physician is advised to consider depressive illness as a diagnosis. As it now stands, the chart merely alludes to the need to consider another mental disorder and buries information about depression in the text, where the busy physician can easily overlook it. The substance abuse algorithm could be improved as well. The algorithm advises physicians to consider substance abuse if there is a history of problematic use of alcohol or drugs. But what questions should they ask to determine if there has been problematic use? The DSM-IV criteria for substance abuse, at best, merely imply that physicians should look for persistent or recurrent social or interpersonal problems. The manual should advise physicians to ask specific questions, such as, Has your spouse or boy/girlfriend ever complained about your drinking or your behavior when you drink? Do they ever say you get embarrassing, nasty, or depressed, for example? Have you ever decided to quit drinking or cut down on your drinking? Did you ever regret anything you said or did while drinking? With added information on how to detect medical mimics of psychiatric symptoms, the importance of medical differential diagnosis, and how to diagnose substance abuse, this manual could fulfill a critical need for improved diagnostic skills in psychologists, social workers, marriage counselors, and employee assistance and substance abuse treatment professionals, as well as the primary care physician. Nonmedical therapists have not been trained to consider the possible role of medical illness in their patients' presenting symptoms. In addition, they are often not familiar with psychiatric differential diagnosis and the psychiatric conditions that are responsive to medication. A revised manual geared toward nonmedical therapists as well as primary care physicians would help improve the quality of mental health diagnosis and treatment across the board.
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