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What Disorder Is This

What disorder is this?

The problem with diagnoses is that they don't mean that much. All inpatient units have to come up with significant diagnoses to justify billing.

The depression sounds significant along with the eating disorder, and those are likely to be the focus of your outpatient treatment. The V-code (parent child problem) is a much lesser diagnosis, few people in your place don't have parent child issues.

What matters is your aftercare now that you're no longer in the hospital, don't focus on the terms, they really don't mean that much.

What disorder is he suffer from?

John suffers from Klinefelter's syndrome, a genetic disorder due to nondisjunction during meiosis. This usually occurs when chromosomes fail to seperate correctly during anaphase I.

Klinefelter syndrome, or XXY syndrome is a condition in which human males have a problematic extra X chromosome. In humans, Klinefelter syndrome is the most common sex chromosome disorder in males.

Some symptoms of Klinefelter's: Underdeveloped testes; infertile; some breast enlargement; varying degrees of mental retardation.

Which disorder is the movie “3” based on?

Ram suffered from bipolar disorder. It is a mental disorder that causes periods of depression and periods of elevated mood. The elevated mood is significant and is known as mania or hypomania, depending on its severity, or whether symptoms of psychosis are present. During mania, an individual behaves or feels abnormally energetic, happy, or irritable. The need for sleep is usually reduced during manic phases. During periods of depression, there may be crying, a negative outlook on life, and poor eye contact with others. Ram( Dhanush) had this disorder in this movie because of which he acted weird.

Fear of being fooled by others, what disorder is it?

If three or more of the following are applicable to you, then you are very likely to have Paranoid Personality Disorder:

A. You are excessively sensitive to rebuffs and setbacks.
B. You tend to often conjure simple meanings out of even simple statements. (Leading to a distorted version of reality, which may be the case of your notion that you have been "fooled" by others repeatedly).
C. You find it generally difficult to forgive others for anything you perceive as a slight at your person.
D. You are frequently suspicious that others are cheating you. This includes friends (Again, fooling you), spousal infidelity, and so on.
E. You often refer to yourself and feel self-important. (Doesn't seem applicable to you, but what do I know?)
F. You frequently mull or think over possible ways that others might cheat you, and attempt to take precautions. You may experience insomnia or difficulties in concentration due to this, and may spend an excessive amount of time principally mulling over this.


The exclusion of some of these characteristics does not necessarily mean that you are not Paranoid, in much the same manner that meeting some of them does not mean you have the disorder. However, if this is a persistent problem that interferes with your life and disrupts it, it is time to see a psychologist or a psychiatrist to determine whether this is the disorder you are suffering, or whether it is a fleeting phase. In addition, if this is indeed a disorder that you suffer from, determining the subtype and following through with therapy is important for your quality of life.



P.S.: I sent you an IM. If you need someone to talk to, feel free!

Is this a fake panic attack? Or what disorder is this?

There is a girl that I go to college with. She has been known to fake things before. For example, when I first knew here my freshmen year she said she was from France, everyone thought she was so cool because of her accent. Later in the school year, however, she would show up one day without it talking normal. Then someone told us they had her in high school and she isn t from France she s from somewhere in the US. She does this all the time and changes from normal voice, to French, to country. She also tells us she cancer that is triggered by allergies and she has a disease where parasites are in her body. Now with the panic attacks, I think they are fake. You can tell me when it s one of those days she s going to have one. I have her in 2 classes and when she comes in some days she s shaking uncontrollably She will start making a sound like she s choking, then her eyes will roll in the back of her head and her hands will coil into her chest. She will most of the time fall onto.the floor and people will have to help her outside. After a few mins she s fine and will go right back to normal. My college has had to call the ambulance on multiple occasions because she will pass out outside and go into one of her attacks. I think this is all fake, everything I ve looked up about panic attacks gave said nothing about these symptoms. I am wondering if anyone knows what this is, if it is panic attacks, her faking it like She is known to do, or if it s something else.

What disorder do people "who know it all" have?

Not every thing that is annoying about a person is a disorder.This is actually really important to understand about psychology. Psychologists generally try to avoid transforming others. The Myers-Briggs personality test, for example, has an ethical system behind it that aims to avoid judgment and coercion. The Myers-Briggs even has as a standard that you can't do selection based off of it for things like jobs or college admission!What we identify as disorders in psychology are overwhelmingly problems that lead a person to have a disrupted life. Whether it's megalomania, schizophrenia, sociopathy or depression, the goal is to identify a problem that a person has for themselves that can be fixed (and I say "fixed" for linguistic matching but even that term is too strong and coercive).So a person who acts like a know-it-all might be a megalomaniac, or a narcissist, or someone overcompensating for depression, but it could just be that they have a very common disorder: Banal human arrogance.Studies have found that quite a lot of people have distorted views of themselves. There's the Lake Woebegone effect, where everyone thinks they're above average. There's the Dunning–Kruger effect, wherein the most incompetent people think of themselves as the most competent, exactly because the first thing anyone learns in any field is how little they know and how much it matters to learn what they don't know.So if a behavior trait is omnipresent and actually not all that maladaptive (just annoying), it's not a disorder.

A person is over talkative? what disorder is this?

I have a nonverbal learning disability and I talk too much.

Someone with NLD processes everything via verbal language. It is very hard to organize anything in your head, so it all must be talked out and through a million times before resolution. We are very articulate speakers and learn via sound and not so much by sight. I also lack the ability to pick up on cues when individual as gotten what I am trying to say. Really, I am trying to explain it out to myself anyway.

NLD is more than just over-talking though. It has to do with a lack of visual-spacial order and coordination as well as social skills (all because we process information incorrectly).

With mood (like bipolar) and thought disorders (schizophrenia) words become very rushed and disorganized as well, but that wouldn't be the only symptoms. An individual with bipolar would also have highly elated moods and then extreme depressive crashes. An individual with schizophrenia would have hallucinations or delusions.

Of course it could be ADHD. Or anxiety. I'm just guessing and possibly making the point that there is no way to know what disorder, IF she has a disorder at all.

What disorder is this? Psychology help please!?

Warren, a football player reports he never takes his football helmet off for interviews because he is fearful of the crowd and being in open spaces.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder

Specific phobia disorder

Generalized anxiety disorder

Panic Disorder

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