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Alexithymia
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Difficulty naming, describing, or expressing emotions verbally.
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Alter
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Any of the personalities present in dissociative identity disorder; each one is referred to as an “alter.”
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B cells
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Lymphocytes that produce antibodies, which attack invading viruses and bacteria to stop them from entering cells.
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Bioenergetics exercises
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Breathing and other exercises intended to enhance bodily awareness.
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Biofeedback
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Technique in which patients are hooked up to a machine that measures one or more biological functions (e.g., heart rate, breathing rate, muscle tension, or temperature); patients are reinforced for desired changes to these biological functions; used to help reinforce patients with psychosomatic illnesses for altering biological functions they typically assume they have little control over.
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Bodily Distress Disorder
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ICD-11 characterized by physical symptoms that the person finds distressing and pays excessive attention to; even when the symptoms have a physical explanation, worry about them is excessive and the person cannot be reassured, even by doctors; roughly equivalent to the DSM-5’s somatic symptom disorder.
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Body-oriented psychotherapies
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Incorporate dance, meditation, martial arts, yoga, and awareness through movement techniques into the therapeutic encounter.
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Character armor
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Reich’s idea that the physical postures people adopt—including how they walk, talk, breathe, and carry themselves—tell us a great deal about their psychological functioning; also called body armor.
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Conversion disorder
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DSM-5 somatic symptom diagnosis that involves physical loss or alteration for which there is no known neurological or medical explanation; also called functional neurological symptom disorder.
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Depersonalization/derealization disorder
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DSM-5 and ICD-11 dissociative disorder diagnosed in those who experience depersonalization, derealization, or both; called depersonalization/derealization syndrome in ICD-10.
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Diathesis-stress model of psychosomatic illness
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Maintains that psychosomatic illness emerges from a combination of diathesis (a predisposing biological vulnerability) and stress.
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Dissociative amnesia
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DSM-5, ICD-10, and ICD-11 dissociative disorder that involves difficulty recalling important autobiographical information; diagnosed with or without fugue in DSM-5 and ICD-11.
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Dissociative disorders of movement and sensation
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ICD-10 term for conversion disorder; see also dissociative neurological symptom disorder, its ICD-11 equivalent.
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Dissociative fugue
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ICD-10 dissociative disorder in which a person experiences dissociative amnesia, leaves home, travels to a new location, and establishes a new identity; considered a subtype of dissociative amnesia in DSM-5 and ICD-11.
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Dissociative identity disorder (DID)
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DSM-5 and ICD-11 dissociative disorder describing people who have two or more distinct “personalities,” with only one being present at any given time; called multiple personality disorder in ICD-10. (
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