Psychological issues / physical health conditions

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ProteinTreasure

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Hello!

Can you please recommend a resource where I can get a list of psychological problems associated with physical health conditions. For example, morbid jealously in men and erectile dysfunction.

Thank you.

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Hello!

Can you please recommend a resource where I can get a list of psychological problems associated with physical health conditions. For example, morbid jealously in men and erectile dysfunction.

Thank you.

Google? :shrug:
 
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Thank you but I only give constructive answers here.
It's about as constructive as it can be to answer your question, as there is really no such list. I may be mistaken, but it seems like you're looking for 1:1 physical condition : psychological condition associations, while in reality things are more complicated with a large number of medical disorders associated with depressive and anxiety disorders (manic and psychotic disorders less commonly), and people with medical conditions not necessarily having any of the commonly associated psychological/psychiatric conditions. As a matter of fact, I don't think there is such a strong association between ED and Otello syndrome, as there are plenty of men with ED and without Otello syndrome, as well as men with Otello syndrome without any objective difficulties in sexual functioning.

If you're seriously interested in the question, you can look through a psychosomatic medicine textbook to see which psychological disorders occur more commonly in which medical conditions (spoiler alert: depressive and anxiety disorders).
 
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Hello!

Can you please recommend a resource where I can get a list of psychological problems associated with physical health conditions. For example, morbid jealously in men and erectile dysfunction.

Thank you.

all of them
 
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Thank you but I only give constructive answers here.

As per Amygdara's answer that was a constructive suggestion, seeing as I'm unaware of anything available publication wise that would list such a 1:1 ratio.
 
As a matter of fact, I don't think there is such a strong association between ED and Otello syndrome, as there are plenty of men with ED and without Otello syndrome, as well as men with Otello syndrome without any objective difficulties in sexual functioning.
You've spelt Othello wrong thrice! Shakespeare would be turning in his grave! (othello syndrome is of course a nod to the Shakespearean tragedy in which Othello, misled into believing his wife Desdemona is having an affair, flies into a jealous rage, kills her and orders her imagined lover to be killed

PS morbid jealousy is typically associated with alcoholism, and 2nd vascular dementia. I have never heard of a robust relationship between ED and morbid jealousy, but I could see how in some cases that could be the case.
 
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This was compiled from Moore, D. P. (2008). Textbook of Clinical Neuropsychiatry Second edition. CRC Press.

DEPRESSION

Primary or idiopathic disorders

Major depressive disorder
Bipolar disorder
Dysthymia
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
Post-partum blues
Post-partum depression
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-psychotic depression in schizophrenia

Toxic depressions

Medication-induced

Prednisone (Wolkowitz et al. 1990)
Alpha-interferon (Fried et al. 2002; Krauss et al. 2003;
Raison et al. 2005; Torriani et al. 2004)
Beta 1b-interferon (Neilley et al. 1996)
Metoclopramide (Friend and Young 1997)
Pimozide (Bloch et al. 1997b)
Propranolol (Petrie et al. 1982; Pollack et al. 1985)
Nifedipine (Hullett et al. 1988)
Cimetidine (Billings et al. 1981)
Ranitidine (Billings and Stein 1986)
Subdermal estrogen–progestin (Wagner 1996; Wagner and
Berenson 1994)
Alpha-methyl dopa (DeMuth and Ackerman 1983)
Reserpine (Jensen 1959; Quetsch et al. 1959)
Levetiracetam (Mula et al. 2003; Wier et al. 2006)
Isotretinoin (Wysowski et al. 2001)
Bismuth (Supino-Viterbo et al. 1977)

Substances of abuse or toxins

Chronic alcoholism
Lead intoxication

Metabolic depressions

Obstructive sleep apnea
Chronic hypercalcemia

Vitamin deficiencies


Vitamin B12 deficiency
Pellagra
Pancreatic cancer

Medication or substance withdrawal

Cholinergic rebound
Stimulants
Anabolic steroids

Endocrinologic disorders

Hypothyroidism
Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome
Adrenocortical insufficiency
Hyperaldosteronism
Hyperprolactinemia

Neurodegenerative and dementing disorders

Parkinson’s disease
Diffuse Lewy body disease
Hereditary mental depression with parkinsonism
Huntington’s disease
Alzheimer’s disease
Multi-infarct dementia

Other intracranial disorders

Stroke
Traumatic brain injuy
Multiple sclerosis
Epilepsy-associated depression
Ictal depression
Interictal depression
Tumors
Hydrocephalus
Fahr’s syndrome
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Limbic encephalitis
Tertiary neurosyphilis
New-variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Down’s syndrome


MANIA

Primary, idiopathic disorders

Bipolar disorder
Cyclothymia
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-partum psychosis

Toxic

Prednisone (Lyons et al. 1988, Minden et al. 1988, Wolkowitz
et al. 1990)
Anabolic steroids (Pope and Katz 1988, 1994)
Oral contraceptives (Sale and Kalucy 1981)
Levodopa (Ryback and Schwab 1971; Van Woert et al. 1971)
Pramipexole (Singh et al. 2005)
Ropinirole (Singh et al. 2005)
Antidepressants (Shulman et al. 2001; Stoll et al. 1994)
Buspirone (Liegghid and Yeragani 1988; Price and Bielfeld 1989)
Alpha-interferon (Constant et al. 2005)
Zidovudine (Maxwell et al. 1988; O’Dowd and McKegney
1988; Wright et al. 1989)
Abacavir (Brouilette and Routy 2007)
Clarithromycin (Abouesh and Hobbs 1998)
Ciprofloxacin (Bhalerao et al. 2006)
Isoniazid (Chaturvedi and Upadhyaya 1988; Jackson 1957)
Topiramate (Jochum et al. 2002)
Phenytoin (Patten et al. 1989)
Zonisamide (Sullivan et al. 2006)
Procyclidine (in high dosage) (Coid and Strang 1982)
Propafenone (Jack 1985)
Procarbazine (Mann and Hutchinson 1967)
Disulfiram (Ceylan et al. 2007)
Aspartame (in high dosage) (Walton 1986)
Bromide (Sayed 1976)
Mannitol (Navarro et al. 2001)
Metrizamide (Kwentus et al. 1984)
Baclofen withdrawal (Kirubakaren et al. 1984)
Tiagabine withdrawal (Pushpal and Shamshul 2006)
Reserpine withdrawal (Kent and Wilber 1982)
Alpha-methyldopa withdrawal (Labbatte and Holzgang 1989)

Metabolic

Hepatic encephalopathy
Uremia

Endocrinologic

Cushing’s syndrome
Hyperthyroidism
Intracranial disorders
Infarctions
Midbrain
Thalamus
Caudate
Frontal lobe
Temporal lobe
Tumors
Midbrain
Hypothalamus
Thalamus
Frontal lobe
Multiple sclerosis

As part of certain dementing disorders

Alzheimer’s disease
Huntington’s disease
Neurosyphilis
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Metachromatic leukodystrophy
Adrenoleukodystrophy

Miscellaneous

Traumatic brain injury
Epileptic disorders
Ictal mania
Post-ictal mania
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Sydenham’s chorea
Chorea gravidarum
Encephalitis lethargica
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
Fahr’s syndrome
Dialysis dementia
Tuberous sclerosis
Velocardiofacial syndrome


ANXIETY - PERSISTENT

Primary, idiopathic anxiety

Generalized anxiety disorder

Toxic

Caffeine
Sympathomimetics
Theophylline
Levodopa

Metabolic

Hypocalcemia
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Congestive heart failure

Substance or medication withdrawal

Alcohol
Sedative/hypnotic
Nicotine
Anticholinergic

Endocrinologic

Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome

Intracranial disorders

Post-stroke
Traumatic brain injury


ANXIETY - ATTACKS

Idiopathic disorders

Panic disorder
Phobias
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Obsessive–compulsive disorder

Toxic

Cocaine
Cannabis
Hallucinogens
Clozapine

Metabolic

Hypoglycemia
Hyperventilation

Endocrinologic

Pheochromocytoma

Miscellaneous

Simple partial seizures
Right temporal lobe tumor
Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia
Angina or myocardial infarction
Pulmonary embolus
Parkinson’s disease
 
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You've spelt Othello wrong thrice! Shakespeare would be turning in his grave! (othello syndrome is of course a nod to the Shakespearean tragedy in which Othello, misled into believing his wife Desdemona is having an affair, flies into a jealous rage, kills her and orders her imagined lover to be killed
Pardon my spelling, and I do know what Othello syndrome refers to, no English literature lessons necessary.
Of note, while I learned English as a young adult, and even the alphabet in my native language is different from Latin, at least I don't make mistakes like affect/effect, it's/its, their/there, definAtely and such, which are abundant on this forum even among native English speakers. Maybe I'm feeling particularly thin skinned at the moment but I don't think the condescension in your comment was entirely necessary.
 
This was compiled from Moore, D. P. (2008). Textbook of Clinical Neuropsychiatry Second edition. CRC Press.

DEPRESSION

Primary or idiopathic disorders

Major depressive disorder
Bipolar disorder
Dysthymia
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
Post-partum blues
Post-partum depression
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-psychotic depression in schizophrenia

Toxic depressions

Medication-induced

Prednisone (Wolkowitz et al. 1990)
Alpha-interferon (Fried et al. 2002; Krauss et al. 2003;
Raison et al. 2005; Torriani et al. 2004)
Beta 1b-interferon (Neilley et al. 1996)
Metoclopramide (Friend and Young 1997)
Pimozide (Bloch et al. 1997b)
Propranolol (Petrie et al. 1982; Pollack et al. 1985)
Nifedipine (Hullett et al. 1988)
Cimetidine (Billings et al. 1981)
Ranitidine (Billings and Stein 1986)
Subdermal estrogen–progestin (Wagner 1996; Wagner and
Berenson 1994)
Alpha-methyl dopa (DeMuth and Ackerman 1983)
Reserpine (Jensen 1959; Quetsch et al. 1959)
Levetiracetam (Mula et al. 2003; Wier et al. 2006)
Isotretinoin (Wysowski et al. 2001)
Bismuth (Supino-Viterbo et al. 1977)

Substances of abuse or toxins

Chronic alcoholism
Lead intoxication

Metabolic depressions

Obstructive sleep apnea
Chronic hypercalcemia

Vitamin deficiencies


Vitamin B12 deficiency
Pellagra
Pancreatic cancer

Medication or substance withdrawal

Cholinergic rebound
Stimulants
Anabolic steroids

Endocrinologic disorders

Hypothyroidism
Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome
Adrenocortical insufficiency
Hyperaldosteronism
Hyperprolactinemia

Neurodegenerative and dementing disorders

Parkinson’s disease
Diffuse Lewy body disease
Hereditary mental depression with parkinsonism
Huntington’s disease
Alzheimer’s disease
Multi-infarct dementia

Other intracranial disorders

Stroke
Traumatic brain injuy
Multiple sclerosis
Epilepsy-associated depression
Ictal depression
Interictal depression
Tumors
Hydrocephalus
Fahr’s syndrome
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Limbic encephalitis
Tertiary neurosyphilis
New-variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Down’s syndrome


MANIA

Primary, idiopathic disorders

Bipolar disorder
Cyclothymia
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-partum psychosis

Toxic

Prednisone (Lyons et al. 1988, Minden et al. 1988, Wolkowitz
et al. 1990)
Anabolic steroids (Pope and Katz 1988, 1994)
Oral contraceptives (Sale and Kalucy 1981)
Levodopa (Ryback and Schwab 1971; Van Woert et al. 1971)
Pramipexole (Singh et al. 2005)
Ropinirole (Singh et al. 2005)
Antidepressants (Shulman et al. 2001; Stoll et al. 1994)
Buspirone (Liegghid and Yeragani 1988; Price and Bielfeld 1989)
Alpha-interferon (Constant et al. 2005)
Zidovudine (Maxwell et al. 1988; O’Dowd and McKegney
1988; Wright et al. 1989)
Abacavir (Brouilette and Routy 2007)
Clarithromycin (Abouesh and Hobbs 1998)
Ciprofloxacin (Bhalerao et al. 2006)
Isoniazid (Chaturvedi and Upadhyaya 1988; Jackson 1957)
Topiramate (Jochum et al. 2002)
Phenytoin (Patten et al. 1989)
Zonisamide (Sullivan et al. 2006)
Procyclidine (in high dosage) (Coid and Strang 1982)
Propafenone (Jack 1985)
Procarbazine (Mann and Hutchinson 1967)
Disulfiram (Ceylan et al. 2007)
Aspartame (in high dosage) (Walton 1986)
Bromide (Sayed 1976)
Mannitol (Navarro et al. 2001)
Metrizamide (Kwentus et al. 1984)
Baclofen withdrawal (Kirubakaren et al. 1984)
Tiagabine withdrawal (Pushpal and Shamshul 2006)
Reserpine withdrawal (Kent and Wilber 1982)
Alpha-methyldopa withdrawal (Labbatte and Holzgang 1989)

Metabolic

Hepatic encephalopathy
Uremia

Endocrinologic

Cushing’s syndrome
Hyperthyroidism
Intracranial disorders
Infarctions
Midbrain
Thalamus
Caudate
Frontal lobe
Temporal lobe
Tumors
Midbrain
Hypothalamus
Thalamus
Frontal lobe
Multiple sclerosis

As part of certain dementing disorders

Alzheimer’s disease
Huntington’s disease
Neurosyphilis
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Metachromatic leukodystrophy
Adrenoleukodystrophy

Miscellaneous

Traumatic brain injury
Epileptic disorders
Ictal mania
Post-ictal mania
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Sydenham’s chorea
Chorea gravidarum
Encephalitis lethargica
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
Fahr’s syndrome
Dialysis dementia
Tuberous sclerosis
Velocardiofacial syndrome


ANXIETY - PERSISTENT

Primary, idiopathic anxiety

Generalized anxiety disorder

Toxic

Caffeine
Sympathomimetics
Theophylline
Levodopa

Metabolic

Hypocalcemia
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Congestive heart failure

Substance or medication withdrawal

Alcohol
Sedative/hypnotic
Nicotine
Anticholinergic

Endocrinologic

Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome

Intracranial disorders

Post-stroke
Traumatic brain injury


ANXIETY - ATTACKS

Idiopathic disorders

Panic disorder
Phobias
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Obsessive–compulsive disorder

Toxic

Cocaine
Cannabis
Hallucinogens
Clozapine

Metabolic

Hypoglycemia
Hyperventilation

Endocrinologic

Pheochromocytoma

Miscellaneous

Simple partial seizures
Right temporal lobe tumor
Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia
Angina or myocardial infarction
Pulmonary embolus
Parkinson’s disease

freaking sweet....
....aaaaand this is a list on why psychiatrists are "real" doctors, and it takes an MD/DO to properly practice
* @RomanticScience drops the mike*
 
This was compiled from Moore, D. P. (2008). Textbook of Clinical Neuropsychiatry Second edition. CRC Press.

DEPRESSION

Primary or idiopathic disorders

Major depressive disorder
Bipolar disorder
Dysthymia
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
Post-partum blues
Post-partum depression
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-psychotic depression in schizophrenia

Toxic depressions

Medication-induced

Prednisone (Wolkowitz et al. 1990)
Alpha-interferon (Fried et al. 2002; Krauss et al. 2003;
Raison et al. 2005; Torriani et al. 2004)
Beta 1b-interferon (Neilley et al. 1996)
Metoclopramide (Friend and Young 1997)
Pimozide (Bloch et al. 1997b)
Propranolol (Petrie et al. 1982; Pollack et al. 1985)
Nifedipine (Hullett et al. 1988)
Cimetidine (Billings et al. 1981)
Ranitidine (Billings and Stein 1986)
Subdermal estrogen–progestin (Wagner 1996; Wagner and
Berenson 1994)
Alpha-methyl dopa (DeMuth and Ackerman 1983)
Reserpine (Jensen 1959; Quetsch et al. 1959)
Levetiracetam (Mula et al. 2003; Wier et al. 2006)
Isotretinoin (Wysowski et al. 2001)
Bismuth (Supino-Viterbo et al. 1977)

Substances of abuse or toxins

Chronic alcoholism
Lead intoxication

Metabolic depressions

Obstructive sleep apnea
Chronic hypercalcemia

Vitamin deficiencies


Vitamin B12 deficiency
Pellagra
Pancreatic cancer

Medication or substance withdrawal

Cholinergic rebound
Stimulants
Anabolic steroids

Endocrinologic disorders

Hypothyroidism
Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome
Adrenocortical insufficiency
Hyperaldosteronism
Hyperprolactinemia

Neurodegenerative and dementing disorders

Parkinson’s disease
Diffuse Lewy body disease
Hereditary mental depression with parkinsonism
Huntington’s disease
Alzheimer’s disease
Multi-infarct dementia

Other intracranial disorders

Stroke
Traumatic brain injuy
Multiple sclerosis
Epilepsy-associated depression
Ictal depression
Interictal depression
Tumors
Hydrocephalus
Fahr’s syndrome
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Limbic encephalitis
Tertiary neurosyphilis
New-variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Down’s syndrome


MANIA

Primary, idiopathic disorders

Bipolar disorder
Cyclothymia
Schizoaffective disorder
Post-partum psychosis

Toxic

Prednisone (Lyons et al. 1988, Minden et al. 1988, Wolkowitz
et al. 1990)
Anabolic steroids (Pope and Katz 1988, 1994)
Oral contraceptives (Sale and Kalucy 1981)
Levodopa (Ryback and Schwab 1971; Van Woert et al. 1971)
Pramipexole (Singh et al. 2005)
Ropinirole (Singh et al. 2005)
Antidepressants (Shulman et al. 2001; Stoll et al. 1994)
Buspirone (Liegghid and Yeragani 1988; Price and Bielfeld 1989)
Alpha-interferon (Constant et al. 2005)
Zidovudine (Maxwell et al. 1988; O’Dowd and McKegney
1988; Wright et al. 1989)
Abacavir (Brouilette and Routy 2007)
Clarithromycin (Abouesh and Hobbs 1998)
Ciprofloxacin (Bhalerao et al. 2006)
Isoniazid (Chaturvedi and Upadhyaya 1988; Jackson 1957)
Topiramate (Jochum et al. 2002)
Phenytoin (Patten et al. 1989)
Zonisamide (Sullivan et al. 2006)
Procyclidine (in high dosage) (Coid and Strang 1982)
Propafenone (Jack 1985)
Procarbazine (Mann and Hutchinson 1967)
Disulfiram (Ceylan et al. 2007)
Aspartame (in high dosage) (Walton 1986)
Bromide (Sayed 1976)
Mannitol (Navarro et al. 2001)
Metrizamide (Kwentus et al. 1984)
Baclofen withdrawal (Kirubakaren et al. 1984)
Tiagabine withdrawal (Pushpal and Shamshul 2006)
Reserpine withdrawal (Kent and Wilber 1982)
Alpha-methyldopa withdrawal (Labbatte and Holzgang 1989)

Metabolic

Hepatic encephalopathy
Uremia

Endocrinologic

Cushing’s syndrome
Hyperthyroidism
Intracranial disorders
Infarctions
Midbrain
Thalamus
Caudate
Frontal lobe
Temporal lobe
Tumors
Midbrain
Hypothalamus
Thalamus
Frontal lobe
Multiple sclerosis

As part of certain dementing disorders

Alzheimer’s disease
Huntington’s disease
Neurosyphilis
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
Metachromatic leukodystrophy
Adrenoleukodystrophy

Miscellaneous

Traumatic brain injury
Epileptic disorders
Ictal mania
Post-ictal mania
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Sydenham’s chorea
Chorea gravidarum
Encephalitis lethargica
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
Fahr’s syndrome
Dialysis dementia
Tuberous sclerosis
Velocardiofacial syndrome


ANXIETY - PERSISTENT

Primary, idiopathic anxiety

Generalized anxiety disorder

Toxic

Caffeine
Sympathomimetics
Theophylline
Levodopa

Metabolic

Hypocalcemia
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Congestive heart failure

Substance or medication withdrawal

Alcohol
Sedative/hypnotic
Nicotine
Anticholinergic

Endocrinologic

Hyperthyroidism
Cushing’s syndrome

Intracranial disorders

Post-stroke
Traumatic brain injury


ANXIETY - ATTACKS

Idiopathic disorders

Panic disorder
Phobias
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Obsessive–compulsive disorder

Toxic

Cocaine
Cannabis
Hallucinogens
Clozapine

Metabolic

Hypoglycemia
Hyperventilation

Endocrinologic

Pheochromocytoma

Miscellaneous

Simple partial seizures
Right temporal lobe tumor
Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia
Angina or myocardial infarction
Pulmonary embolus
Parkinson’s disease


Thank you so much! This is very kind of you!
 
You've spelt Othello wrong thrice! Shakespeare would be turning in his grave! (othello syndrome is of course a nod to the Shakespearean tragedy in which Othello, misled into believing his wife Desdemona is having an affair, flies into a jealous rage, kills her and orders her imagined lover to be killed

PS morbid jealousy is typically associated with alcoholism, and 2nd vascular dementia. I have never heard of a robust relationship between ED and morbid jealousy, but I could see how in some cases that could be the case.

In all fairness, Otello is the name of Verdi's opera adaptation of the Shakespeare play ;)
 
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