Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T01:45:27.170Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Depersonalization and Allied Disturbances in Childhood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

D. J. Salfield*
Affiliation:
Derbyshire Children's Hospital and Child Guidance Service

Extract

Depersonalization, derealization, unreality feelings, metamorphopsia and similar symptoms are not unusual in neuro-psychiatric patients. They are said to be extremely rare in children, Tramer (22) does not mention them, and Kanner (9) remarks only that “feelings of unreality are exceedingly rare in children. Things seem unreal to the patient, different from what he knows them to be. He is fully aware of the incongruity of his experience, which sometimes causes considerable distress.” He quotes the case of a slightly retarded boy of almost 14 years who combined feelings of unreality and derealization with occasional macropsia.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1958 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Baruk, H., “Le sentiment de la personnalité, la dépersonnalisation et la cénésthésie”, Ann. Médico-psychologiques, 1951, 2, 4.Google Scholar
2. Bender, L., and Lipkowitz, H., Amer. J. Orthopsych., 1940, 10. As reprinted with additions in A Dynamic Psychopathology of Childhood, chapter on Hallucinations in Children, 1954. Springfield.Google Scholar
3. Idem , “The Psychology of Children with Organic Disturbances of the Cerebellum”, in Bender, L., Psychopathology of Children with Organic Brain Disorders, 1956. Springfield.Google Scholar
4. Bender, L., and Kjeeler, W. R., “The Body Image of Schizophrenic Children following Electro-shock Therapy”, Amer. J. Orthopsychiatry, 1952, 22, 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Binswanger, L., Z. Neurol., 1933, 145, 598. Quoted from Karl Jaspers Allgemeine Psychopathologie, 1948. Berlin.Google Scholar
6. Critchley, M., The Parietal Lobes, 1953. London.Google Scholar
7. Cutner, M., “On the Inclusion of certain ‘Body Experiments’ in Analysis”, Brit. J. Med. Psychol., 1953, 26, 324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
8. Hécäen, H., and Ajuriaguerra, J. de, Méconnaissances et Hallucinations Corporelles, 1952. Paris.Google Scholar
9. Kanner, L., Child Psychiatry, 1948. Oxford.Google Scholar
10. Krapf, E., “Sur la dépersonnalisation”, Encéphale, 1951, 11, 3.Google Scholar
11. Mueller, Chr., Mikropsie und Makropsie, 1956. Basel.Google Scholar
12. Salfield, D. J., “Notes on Psychotherapy of Children jointly with their Parents”, Z. Kinderpsychiat., 1951, 18, 2.Google Scholar
13. Idem , and Greenland, C., “Painting and Stories, a diagnostic and therapeutic technique in child psychiatry”, Z. Kinderpsychiat., 1953, 20, 4.Google Scholar
14. Idem, Concentrative Relaxation. To be published shortly.Google Scholar
15. Idem , “On Two Important Indian Contributions to Modern Psychotherapy”, Psychotherapy, 1957, No. 3–6, Vol. I and II.Google Scholar
16. Idem , “Auto-hypno-therapeutic Techniques”, Brit. J. Med. Hypnot. To appear January, 1958.Google Scholar
17. Idem , “Autogenes Training eines Kindes mit Depersonalisation”, Psychotherapie (Bern). To appear shortly.Google Scholar
18. Schilder, P., Image and Appearance of the Human Body, 1951. New York.Google Scholar
19. Idem , “The Psychological Implications of Motor Development”, in Bender, L. (20).Google Scholar
20. Psychopathology of Children with Organic Brain Disorders, 1956. Springfield.Google Scholar
21. Schultz, J. H., Das Autogene Training, 1956. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
22. Tramer, M., Lehrbuch der Allgemeinen Kinderpsychiatrie, 1949. Basel.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.