McLaughlin Katie A, Green Jennifer Greif, Hwang Irving, Sampson Nancy A, Zaslavsky Alan M, Kessler Ronald C
Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Psychiatry, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2012 Nov;69(11):1131-9. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2012.592.
Epidemiologic studies of adults show that DSM-IV intermittent explosive disorder (IED) is a highly prevalent and seriously impairing disorder. Although retrospective reports in these studies suggest that IED typically begins in childhood, no previous epidemiologic research has directly examined the prevalence or correlates of IED among youth.
To present epidemiologic data on the prevalence and correlates of IED among US adolescents in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement.
United States survey of adolescent (age, 13-17 years) DSM-IV anxiety, mood, behavior, and substance disorders.
Dual-frame household-school samples.
A total of 6483 adolescents (interviews) and parents (questionnaires).
The DSM-IV disorders were assessed with the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI).
Nearly two-thirds of adolescents (63.3%) reported lifetime anger attacks that involved destroying property, threatening violence, or engaging in violence. Of these, 7.8% met DSM-IV/CIDI criteria for lifetime IED. Intermittent explosive disorder had an early age at onset (mean age, 12.0 years) and was highly persistent, as indicated by 80.1% of lifetime cases (6.2% of all respondents) meeting 12-month criteria for IED. Injuries related to IED requiring medical attention reportedly occurred 52.5 times per 100 lifetime cases. In addition, IED was significantly comorbid with a wide range of DSMIV/CIDI mood, anxiety, and substance disorders, with 63.9% of lifetime cases meeting criteria for another such disorder. Although more than one-third (37.8%) of adolescents with 12-month IED received treatment for emotional problems in the year before the interview, only 6.5% of respondents with 12-month IED were treated specifically for anger.
Intermittent explosive disorder is a highly prevalent, persistent, and seriously impairing adolescent mental disorder that is both understudied and undertreated. Research is needed to uncover risk and protective factors for the disorder, develop strategies for screening and early detection, and identify effective treatments.
针对成年人的流行病学研究表明,《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)中的间歇性爆发性障碍(IED)是一种高度流行且严重损害身心健康的疾病。尽管这些研究中的回顾性报告表明IED通常始于童年,但此前尚无流行病学研究直接调查过青少年中IED的患病率或相关因素。
在全国共病调查复制青少年补充调查中,呈现美国青少年中IED患病率及相关因素的流行病学数据。
针对美国青少年(年龄13 - 17岁)进行的DSM-IV焦虑、情绪、行为和物质使用障碍调查。
双框架家庭 - 学校样本。
共6483名青少年(访谈)和家长(问卷调查)。
采用世界卫生组织综合国际诊断访谈(CIDI)评估DSM-IV疾病。
近三分之二的青少年(63.3%)报告有涉及破坏财产、威胁暴力或实施暴力的终生愤怒发作。其中,7.8%符合DSM-IV/CIDI终生IED标准。间歇性爆发性障碍起病年龄较早(平均年龄12.0岁)且具有高度持续性,80.1%的终生病例(占所有受访者的6.2%)符合12个月IED标准即表明了这一点。据报告,每100例终生病例中因IED导致需要医疗救治的伤害发生52.5次。此外,IED与多种DSM-IV/CIDI情绪、焦虑和物质使用障碍显著共病,63.9%的终生病例符合另一种此类障碍的标准。尽管超过三分之一(37.8%)有12个月IED的青少年在访谈前一年接受过情绪问题治疗,但只有6.5%有12个月IED的受访者接受过专门针对愤怒的治疗。
间歇性爆发性障碍是一种高度流行、持续存在且严重损害青少年身心健康的精神障碍,目前对其研究不足且治疗不够。需要开展研究以揭示该障碍的风险和保护因素,制定筛查和早期发现策略,并确定有效的治疗方法。