Dissociative Disorders in DSM-5

Author:

Spiegel David1,Lewis-Fernández Roberto2,Lanius Ruth3,Vermetten Eric4,Simeon Daphne5,Friedman Matthew6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94304-5718;

2. New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032;

3. Department of Psychiatry, London Health Sciences Center, London, N6A 5A5 ON Canada;

4. Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Utrecht, 3584 CX Netherlands;

5. Department of Psychiatry, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10025;

6. Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755;

Abstract

The rationale, research literature, and proposed changes to the dissociative disorders and conversion disorder in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) are presented. Dissociative identity disorder will include reference to possession as well as identity fragmentation, to make the disorder more applicable to culturally diverse situations. Dissociative amnesia will include dissociative fugue as a subtype, since fugue is a rare disorder that always involves amnesia but does not always include confused wandering or loss of personality identity. Depersonalization disorder will include derealization as well, since the two often co-occur. A dissociative subtype of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), defined by the presence of depersonalization or derealization in addition to other PTSD symptoms, is being recommended, based upon new epidemiological and neuroimaging evidence linking it to an early life history of adversity and a combination of frontal activation and limbic inhibition. Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder) will likely remain with the somatic symptom disorders, despite considerable dissociative comorbidity.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine

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