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Conduct disorder (CD) is a mental disorder diagnosed in childhood or adolescence that presents itself through a repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior that includes theft, lies, physical violence that may lead to destruction, and reckless breaking of rules, [1] in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate norms are violated.
DSM-5 replaces the Not Otherwise Specified (NOS) categories with two options: other specified disorder and unspecified disorder to increase the utility to the clinician. The first allows the clinician to specify the reason that the criteria for a specific disorder are not met; the second allows the clinician the option to forgo specification.
A CU specifier for conduct disorder was added to DSM-5. [4] The addition "with limited prosocial emotions" to the conduct disorder diagnosis in DSM-5 is to classify a specific subgroup of antisocial youth with distinguishing antisocial behaviors and psychopathic traits. [6]
The DSM-5 does not have a direct equivalent to PD-NOS. However, the DSM-5 other specified personality disorder and unspecified personality disorder are substantially comparable to PD-NOS. [2] Additionally, the DSM-5 introduced the diagnosis Personality disorder - trait specified (PD-TS) as an alternative to let clinicians define the ...
To be diagnosed with ASPD, Kennedy says someone must show evidence of a conduct disorder before age 15 and express symptoms like aggression, cruelty to people or animals, lying, property ...
Communication disorder NOS: 312.xx: Conduct disorder: Coded 312.8 in the DSM-IV. 312.82: Conduct disorder, adolescent-onset type: Included only in the DSM-IV-TR. 312.81: Conduct disorder, childhood-onset type: Included only in the DSM-IV-TR. 312.89: Conduct disorder, unspecified onset: Included only in the DSM-IV-TR. 300.11: Conversion disorder ...
312.2 Compulsive conduct disorder (Include: Kleptomania) 312.3 Mixed disturbance of conduct and emotions (Include: neurotic delinquency) 312.8 Other disturbance of conduct not elsewhere classified; 312.9 Unspecified disturbance of conduct not elsewhere classified; 313 Disturbance of emotions specific to childhood and adolescence
The fifth edition of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders that was published in 2013 includes a new chapter (not in DSM-IV-TR) on disruptive, impulse-control, and conduct disorders covering disorders "characterized by problems in emotional and behavioral self-control". [1]