Eating/Feeding Disorders
OCD Disorders
Disruptive, Impulse, & Conduct Disorders
Personality Disorders
Substance Use Disorders
100

This less common eating disorder involves consuming non-nutritive substances like dirt, chalk, or paper.

What is pica?

100

Recurrent, persistent, invasive thoughts or images which are unwanted, and which the person has difficulty controlling.

What are obsessions?

100

A pattern of angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant behavior or vindictiveness.

What is oppositional defiant disorder?

100

An enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from norms and expectations of individual’s culture.

What is a personality disorder?

100

A reversible substance-specific syndrome due to recent ingestion of substance.

What is intoxication?

200

This is a common factor in the etiology of eating disorders.

What is a history of trauma/abuse?

200

Repetitive behaviors an individual feels compelled to perform in response to an obsession or rigid rules.

What are compulsions?

200

Recurrent behavioral outbursts that are aggressive and impulsive.

What is intermittent explosive disorder?

200

When personality disorders typically emerge in the lifespan.

What is adolescence and early adulthood?

200

A reversible substance-specific syndrome due cessation of substance.

What is withdrawal?

300

Eating in a period of time (e.g., 2 hours), an amount of food that is larger that what most individuals would eat in a similar period of time under similar circumstances and a sense of a lack of control overeating behaviors during the episode

What is a binge-eating episode?

300

A combination of medication & exposure-response prevention/acceptance and commitment therapy.

What is the most effective treatment for OCD?

300

The feelings that occur right before engaging in fire setting (pyromania) or stealing (kleptomania)?

What are tension or arousal?

300

The only personality disorder that cannot be diagnosed to someone under the age of 18.

What is antisocial personality disorder?

300

A temporary disorder that is developed in the context of severe intoxication and/or withdrawal

What is a substance-induced disorder?

400

Methods to prevent weight gain, including self-induced vomiting, laxatives, and excessive exercise.

What is a compensatory behavior?

400

A preoccupation with 1+ perceived defects/flaws in physical appearance that are not observable or appear slight to others and the preoccupation is grossly out of proportion to the actual defect.

What is body dysmorphia?

400

Treatment in which you picture yourself engaging in the unwanted behavior and then facing negative consequences.

What is covert sensitization?

400

A pervasive pattern of detachment from social relationships and restricted range of expression of emotions; does not desire or enjoy close relationships.

What is schizoid personality disorder?

400

Includes pre-contemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, and relapse.

What is the transtheoretical model of change?

500

Determining the severity of anorexia nervosa.

What is the BMI?

500

Insight that is good, fair, poor, absent/delusional.

What is a hoarding disorder specifier?

500

The amount of time a behavior should occur in the context of oppositional defiant disorder if under the age of 5.

What is most days for a period of at least 6 months?

500

A grouping with a focus on distrust, detachment, discomfort with relationships.

What is Cluster A personality disorders?

500

1. Cluster of cognitive, behavioral, and physiological symptoms 

2. Use of substance(s) despite significant use-related problems

3. Change in brain chemistry/circuits/functioning as result of use (effects persist after detoxification)

What are the hallmark features of substance use disorders?