Corrected July 7, 2013
Maybe my writer's block is an Ecclesiastes issue. There is nothing new under the sun.
But finally, there is. No, not the DSM. Keep reading.
The DSM. Sigh.
But regarding the DSM, and it makes no difference at all which edition, you have to wonder when somebody who is suicidal, losing weight, irritated at the drop of a hat and can't sleep gets the same diagnosis as somebody else who is immobile, gaining weight, couldn't be bothered about anything anymore and sleeps the night and day away. It's all depression -- the DSM's junk drawer.
Finally, somebody thought to sort the junk drawer, by looking inside the brains of these two sorrowful souls, both taking the same meds for God's sake.
PET Scans - Looking Under the Hood
Helen Mayberg and her team at Emory University School of Medicine used PET scans to look under the hood (to use John McManamy's favorite metaphor). PET scans use a radioactive tracer to determine where glucose is being used in the brain, i.e., what part of the brain is busy.
Maybe my writer's block is an Ecclesiastes issue. There is nothing new under the sun.
But finally, there is. No, not the DSM. Keep reading.
The DSM. Sigh.
But regarding the DSM, and it makes no difference at all which edition, you have to wonder when somebody who is suicidal, losing weight, irritated at the drop of a hat and can't sleep gets the same diagnosis as somebody else who is immobile, gaining weight, couldn't be bothered about anything anymore and sleeps the night and day away. It's all depression -- the DSM's junk drawer.
Finally, somebody thought to sort the junk drawer, by looking inside the brains of these two sorrowful souls, both taking the same meds for God's sake.
PET Scans - Looking Under the Hood
Helen Mayberg and her team at Emory University School of Medicine used PET scans to look under the hood (to use John McManamy's favorite metaphor). PET scans use a radioactive tracer to determine where glucose is being used in the brain, i.e., what part of the brain is busy.