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Join in on this Discussion and see the pictures. Click here-> : Road Rage = Intermittent Explosive Disorder


rtryb2200
06-05-2006, 09:42 PM
Updated: 5:55 p.m. CT June 5, 2006

CHICAGO - To you, that angry, horn-blasting tailgater is suffering from road rage. But doctors have another name for it — intermittent explosive disorder — and a new study suggests it is far more common than they realized, affecting up to 16 million Americans.

“People think it’s bad behavior and that you just need an attitude adjustment, but what they don’t know ... is that there’s a biology and cognitive science to this,” said Dr. Emil Coccaro, chairman of psychiatry at the University of Chicago’s medical school.

Road rage, temper outbursts that involve throwing or breaking objects and even spousal abuse can sometimes be attributed to the disorder, though not everyone who does those things is afflicted.

Multiple angry outbursts
By definition, intermittent explosive disorder involves multiple outbursts that are way out of proportion to the situation. These angry outbursts often include threats or aggressive actions and property damage. The disorder typically first appears in adolescence; in the study, the average age of onset was 14.

The study was based on a national face-to-face survey of 9,282 U.S. adults who answered diagnostic questionnaires in 2001-03. It was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.

About 5 percent to 7 percent of the nationally representative sample had had the disorder, which would equal up to 16 million Americans. That is higher than better-known mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, Coccaro said.

The average number of lifetime attacks per person was 43, resulting in $1,359 in property damage per person. About 4 percent had suffered recent attacks.

The findings were released Monday in the June issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.

Disorder more common than thought
The findings show the little-studied disorder is much more common than previously thought, said lead author Ronald Kessler, a health care policy professor at Harvard Medical School.
“It is news to a lot of people even who are specialists in mental health services that such a large proportion of the population has these clinically significant anger attacks,” Kessler said.

Four a couple of decades, intermittent explosive disorder, or IED, has been included in the manual psychiatrists use to diagnose mental illness, though with slightly different names and criteria. That has contributed to misunderstanding and underappreciation of the disorder, said Coccaro, a study co-author.

Coccaro said the disorder involves inadequate production or functioning of serotonin, a mood-regulating and behavior-inhibiting brain chemical. Treatment with antidepressants, including those that target serotonin receptors in the brain, is often helpful, along with behavior therapy akin to anger management, Coccaro said.

Symptoms often appear in childhood
Most sufferers in the study had other emotional disorders or drug or alcohol problems and had gotten treatment for them, but only 28 percent had ever received treatment for anger.

“This is a well-designed, large-scale, face-to-face study with interesting and useful results,” said Dr. David Fassler, a psychiatry professor at the University of Vermont. “The findings also confirm that for most people, the difficulties associated with the disorder begin during childhood or adolescence, and they often have a profound and ongoing impact on the person’s life.”

Jennifer Hartstein, a psychologist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, said she had just diagnosed the disorder in a 16-year-old boy.

“In most situations, he is relatively affable, calm and very responsible,” she said. But in stressful situations at home, he “explodes and tears apart his room, throws things at other people” to the point that his parents have called the police.

Hartstein said the study is important because many people are not aware of the disorder.

c00lduke
06-05-2006, 10:17 PM
I think giving all the "personality disorders" is a bit silly. They is no way to test the traits for many of them beyond what society thinks is acceptable. Also everyone has one of the many disorders but either are not looking to have them diagnosed or are just under the radar of be crazy.

skrewloose78
06-06-2006, 01:25 AM
great another disorder that they can sell you medicine and treatment for.

i dont think its an issue of them having something wrong in their head. its other ppl. most of these ppl wouldnt snap and have road rage if others wouldnt be so rude and drive like jackasses

rodney87
06-06-2006, 02:03 AM
Sounds about right, not only is it not your fault for being fat, now when you beat your wife you can claim "mental disorder". People with road rage are just pissed off in general, you just knotice it more cause there in control of 3000 LBS of steel doing 60. There's no need for anti depressants, I got the cure right here, a good bitchslap to the face.

Repeat as nessary untill "disorder" is gone.

Manntis
06-06-2006, 02:05 AM
interesting that a society that'll sue whomsoever has the deepest pockets for being 'at fault' when fit hits the shan is also so interested in diminishing responsibility of the individual wherever it can

2ndGen.Rocket
06-06-2006, 08:11 AM
I think I have that.

c00lduke
06-06-2006, 11:57 AM
I think I have that.

See that is the funny thing about these disorders that that almost everyone can read through the list and think to themselves "Oh I have that one kinda." Everyone could be seen as having 3 or 4 if you were to us the same leneacy that is used to diagnose other psycological disorders.

Manntis
06-06-2006, 12:31 PM
"I have Attention Deficit Disorder and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. So I forget to wash my hands like 900 times a day."

aznpoopy
06-06-2006, 01:06 PM
interesting that a society that'll sue whomsoever has the deepest pockets for being 'at fault' when fit hits the shan is also so interested in diminishing responsibility of the individual wherever it can

brave new world +1

guess what... biology and psychology are linked. everything that defines a person can be attributed to some biological facet. instead of exercising self control and discipline, there's a magic pill for every behavioral trait that falls outside of what we consider normal.

Manntis
06-06-2006, 04:05 PM
Sometimes kids are energetic - yet we Ridalin them into a stupor, then cry about how all they do is sit around, play video games, and get fat.

Sometimes people trip and fall down. In the old days you'd get up, dust yourself off, and hope no one saw you being clumsy. Now the SOP is to sue the nearest property owner for your owies plus emotional damages.

Geez.

Say No To Pistons
06-06-2006, 04:05 PM
hahaha... this vid fits this topic

http://videos.streetfire.net/video/6ae22622-a65e-4194-ab94-2407edbc569e.htm

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