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Case 1: “Treatment-resistant Depression” as Misdiagnosed Bipolar Depression Case 1: “Treatment-resistant Depression” as Misdiagnosed Bipolar Depression
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Case 2: Treating Anxiety in PTSD Case 2: Treating Anxiety in PTSD
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Case 3: Suicidality and Antidepressants in Borderline Personality Case 3: Suicidality and Antidepressants in Borderline Personality
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Case 4: Low-Dose Divalproex for Misdiagnosed Narcissistic Personality Disorder Case 4: Low-Dose Divalproex for Misdiagnosed Narcissistic Personality Disorder
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Case 5: Carbamazepine to the Rescue Case 5: Carbamazepine to the Rescue
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Case 6: Life Events, not Trauma Case 6: Life Events, not Trauma
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Case 7: “Premenstrual Mood Dysphoric Disorder” or Rapid-cycling Bipolar Illness? Case 7: “Premenstrual Mood Dysphoric Disorder” or Rapid-cycling Bipolar Illness?
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Case 8: Not ADD, not “Depression,” not Chronic Fatigue Case 8: Not ADD, not “Depression,” not Chronic Fatigue
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Case 9: Childhood ADD Worsened by Amphetamines Case 9: Childhood ADD Worsened by Amphetamines
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Case 10: Hyperthymia Misdiagnosed as Treatment-resistant Depression Case 10: Hyperthymia Misdiagnosed as Treatment-resistant Depression
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Case 11: When Benzodiazepines are Preferable to SRIs for Anxiety Case 11: When Benzodiazepines are Preferable to SRIs for Anxiety
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Case 12: PTSD or Bipolar Illness? Case 12: PTSD or Bipolar Illness?
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Case 13: Pre-adolescent Depression Versus Bipolar Illness Case 13: Pre-adolescent Depression Versus Bipolar Illness
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Case 14: First Depression in a Young Adult Case 14: First Depression in a Young Adult
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Case 15: Stopping Antidepressants for “Depression” Case 15: Stopping Antidepressants for “Depression”
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Case 16: Antidepressant Plus Antipsychotic do not Equal Mood Stabilizer Case 16: Antidepressant Plus Antipsychotic do not Equal Mood Stabilizer
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Case 17: Seasonality in Affective Illness Case 17: Seasonality in Affective Illness
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44 C44Clinical Cases
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Published:December 2018
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Abstract
Seventeen case reports are provided applying the principles described in this volume, including the following triad of principles: 1. Treat diseases, not symptoms. 2. Do not use DSM-based diagnoses. 3. Focus on the course of the illness, not just its symptoms, when you are making diagnoses. In addition, specific pharmacological aspects of medications as used in practice are explored in the context of specific cases—mood illnesses; PTSD; personality states; purported ADD; seasonality in affective illness; stopping antidepressants for “depression”; first depression in a young adult; pre-adolescent depression versus bipolar illness; when benzodiazepines are preferable to SRIs for anxiety; hyperthymia misdiagnosed as treatment-resistant depression; premenstrual mood dysphoric disorder; low-dose divalproex for misdiagnosed narcissistic personality disorder; suicidality and antidepressants in borderline personality—and more.
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