Eating Disorders
Conduct Disorder
Childhood Onset Schizophrenia
Pediatric Bipolar Disorder
Basic Terminology
100
Refusal to maintain body weight at or above the 85th percentile of the normal BMI for a specific age and height.
What is anorexia nervosa.
100
Types of behaviors such as aggression to people or animals, physical fights, weapon usage, and destruction of property displayed by an individual with conduct disorder.
What are overt behaviors.
100
Can be auditory, visual, tactile, olfactory, and somatic.
What are hallucinations.
100
Rages that last from several hours to several days at a time.
What is affective storm.
100
Two or more disorders occurring simultaneously with one another.
What is comorbidity.
200
Recurrent episodes of binge eating, followed by compensatory behaviors in order to prevent weight gain.
What is bulimia nervosa.
200
The type of conduct disorder in which the individual is less likely to display aggressive behaviors and tend to have more normative peer relationships.
What is adolescent-onset type.
200
Fixed, false beliefs.
What are delusions.
200
Common mood stabilizer used as a treatment for bipolar disorder.
What is lithium.
200
An inability to learn that cannot be explained by intellectual, sensory, or health factors, an inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal relationships with peers and teachers, inappropriate types of behavior or feelings under normal circumstances, a general pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression, a tendency to develop physical symptoms or fears associated with personal or school problems.
What is an emotional disturbance.
300
The most widely engaged in compensatory behavior.
What is vomiting.
300
The type of conduct disorder in which the individual is more likely to develop adult anti-social personality disorder.
What is child-onset type.
300
A dulled sense of emotional connection; emptiness.
What is flat affect.
300
Subtype of bipolar disorder characterized by psychotic features with more intense manic episodes.
What is Bipolar I.
300
Prescribing instruction to meet a person's specific needs and related services depending on that particular person's circumstances after assessment.
What is specially designed instruction.
400
Loss of menstruation due to critically low body weight.
What is amenorrhea.
400
Many cases of conduct disorder grow out of severe cases of this disorder.
What is oppositional defiant disorder.
400
The phase of schizophrenia where positive symptoms begin to occur and there is a decrease in cognitive functioning.
What is the acute phase.
400
A subtype of bipolar disorder characterized by stages of hypomania with depressive episodes.
What is bipolar II.
400
The right of the parents to dispute the findings of an evaluation report done by a school psychologist and confirmed by a multi-disciplinary team.
What is due process.
500
Persistent ingestion of non-nutritive substances such as dirt, clay, soap, and sandpaper.
What is Pica.
500
This area of the brain, that controls impulse and judgement, may be biologically different in individuals with conduct disorder than that of a normal person.
What is the prefrontal cortex.
500
A condition in which the child repeats verbatim what someone else says.
What is echolalia.
500
A milder form of bipolar disorder characterized by mild depressive stages, stages of hypomania, and no breaks between stages.
What is cyclothymia.
500
Components include related services, specially designed instruction, accommodation and adaptation of tests, development of annual goals, and evaluation of the student's level of academic performance.
What is an IEP (individualized education program).
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